Seoul: According to state data released on Friday, the number of children in South Korea increased last year for the second time in nine times. According to Yonhap News Agency, this is a major change for a nation that has one of the lowest reproduction rates in the world.
According to the government of the interior’s native registration info, 2, 42, 334 babies were born in 2024, a 3.1 % increase over the same period last year. This is the first monthly improve coming after eight years of a slump.
However, the total number of documented people stood at 51, 217, 221 next year, shrinking for five years directly since 2020, Yonhap reported.
Earlier on December 24, South Korea formally entered the class of a” super-aged” world, with people aged 65 and older making up one-fifth of its inhabitants, as per government information.
South Korea’s government of inside and health reported that 10.24 million people in the country are then aged 65 or over, representing 20 per cent of South Korea’s entire population of 51 million, CNN reported.
Additionally, according to the statistics, roughly 22 % of women in this age group are women, while roughly 18 % of people over 65 make up the adult population.
In South Jeolla Province, the population of the country’s largest regions, reached 27.18 %, making it the highest percentage of the country’s population. Sejong, the city’s key, had the lowest discuss, at 11.57 per share. The age group accounted for 19.41 per share of the entire population in Seoul, according to Yonhap.
Over time, South Korea’s population has gotten older more slowly. In 2008, the years team comprised 4.94 million people and accounted for 10 per cent of the people. It increased to 19.05 % in January of this year before increasing to 11 % in 2019.
Trending
- The Morning Briefing: Musk and DOGE Are Fun, but Tom Homan Is My Early Trump 47 MVP
- Scotch whisky association ‘disappointed’ as US tariffs bound to take effect
- Tornado emergency declared as deadly storm tears through Arkansas and Midwest
- Tufts backs Turkish student Rumeysa Ozturk after arrest over alleged Hamas ties
- Myanmar earthquake death toll surpasses 3,000, ceasefire declared for relief efforts
- India’s ‘uniquely burdensome’ certification rules make it ‘costly’ for US companies to operate: White House on ‘Liberation Day’
- Wisconsin professor on leave for allegedly flipping College Republicans’ table on Election Day
- George Mason professor accused of having too few women on law panel defends ‘merit’