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You don't see the Daiwanese govt worsening the situation by screwing their people with FTrash. Of course, the Daiwanese are smart enough to let their govt know who's the real boss at the polls!
Apr 2, 2010
Pay couples to have babies
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The island's birth rate stood at 8.29 per 1,000 people last year, according to official figures. -- PHOTO: AFP
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TAIPEI - TAIWAN said on Friday the government may start paying people to have children in order to boost the island's dwindling birth rate, one of the lowest in the world.
Among the proposals being considered is a monthly subsidy of NT$5,000 (S$224) for all children under the age of three, the interior ministry said, a move which would cost NT$36 billion a year.
'The ministry hopes to raise the public's willingness to have children with measures that help them look after their children and improve their living standards,' it said in a statement.
Taiwan's authorities have been offering various incentives to encourage births, amid growing concerns that a severe manpower shortage will trigger serious social and economic problems.
The ministry last month kicked off an online contest for a slogan that would 'make everybody want to have children' with a cash prize of NT$1 million for the winner.
The response was overwhelming, with more than 1,000 entries only hours after it started, causing the ministry to upgrade its systems after its website was temporarily paralysed by the traffic. The island's birth rate stood at 8.29 per 1,000 people last year, according to official figures. That compares with a global average of more than 20 births per 1,000 people, according to the United Nations. -- AFP
Apr 2, 2010
Pay couples to have babies
<!-- by line --><!-- end by line -->
<!-- end left side bar -->
<!-- story content : start -->
TAIPEI - TAIWAN said on Friday the government may start paying people to have children in order to boost the island's dwindling birth rate, one of the lowest in the world.
Among the proposals being considered is a monthly subsidy of NT$5,000 (S$224) for all children under the age of three, the interior ministry said, a move which would cost NT$36 billion a year.
'The ministry hopes to raise the public's willingness to have children with measures that help them look after their children and improve their living standards,' it said in a statement.
Taiwan's authorities have been offering various incentives to encourage births, amid growing concerns that a severe manpower shortage will trigger serious social and economic problems.
The ministry last month kicked off an online contest for a slogan that would 'make everybody want to have children' with a cash prize of NT$1 million for the winner.
The response was overwhelming, with more than 1,000 entries only hours after it started, causing the ministry to upgrade its systems after its website was temporarily paralysed by the traffic. The island's birth rate stood at 8.29 per 1,000 people last year, according to official figures. That compares with a global average of more than 20 births per 1,000 people, according to the United Nations. -- AFP