|   From dating shows to propaganda posters, Vietnam is prodding young couples to have more babies to reverse falling fertility rates. Changing
 demographics and financial demands are fueling a shift toward people 
choosing to have smaller families. Young people who move to major cities
 no longer have the support of extended families, and with both partners
 often working — and an increasing desire for a flashier middle class 
lifestyle — having children can be prohibitively expensive.  Like other countries across Asia, and as far as
 the US, Vietnam is increasingly concerned about the long-term impact of
 declining births and an aging society. One Tokyo suburb’s child care initiatives garnered nationwide attention across Japan as it became one of the few areas seeing a rising birth rate. China’s President Xi Jinping has even called on women to have more babies for the good of the country.  Like China, whose one-child policy ended
 in 2016, Hanoi previously embraced policies aimed at curtailing the 
number of children per family. Now, Vietnam is loosening regulations 
limiting couples to one or two children except in “special cases,” with 
the health ministry saying families need to be allowed to make their own
 reproductive decisions.  To
 reach people, this country of about 100 million is using pop culture. 
State television here is broadcasting dating shows that culminate with 
marriage proposals. Authorities are hoping those wedding bells will one 
day lead to parties traditionally held a month after a baby’s birth. In 
commercial center Ho Chi Minh City, officials are offering financial 
support for women during maternity leave, along with school tuition, 
according to a Vietnam Television website report. And propaganda posters
 lining the streets that once promoted no more than two children per 
family have been replaced with those encouraging women to have more 
offspring. Vietnam’s
 fertility rate has dropped to the lowest in the past 12 years and is 
predicted to continue falling in the following years, according to a 
post on the health ministry’s website. The birth rate dropped to 1.96 
children per woman last year, and authorities want to eventually boost 
that to 2.1 children per woman.  Prolonged
 low birth rates could lead to labor shortages, a rapidly aging 
population and strains on social security. Those age 60 and older made 
up 11.4% of Vietnam’s total population in 2019 — but that will roughly 
double by 2039, according to
 the United Nations Population Fund. Vietnam is expected to become an 
aged country by 2036, when the number of people 65 and older will 
account for more than 14% of the total population, the UNFPA says.  Still, it’s likely to take more than the new posters and dating shows to get couples to plan for larger families.  “If
 you don’t have money, don’t have children,” one Vietnamese woman wrote 
in a comment about a news story on the low birth rate. “This is a 
straightforward but true statement. It’s time for the next generation to
 understand that.”  —John Boudreau and Nguyen Dieu Tu Uyen  |