Politics
Canada’s total fertility rate dropped to its lowest point in more than a century of data keeping in 2022, hitting just 1.33 children per woman, Statistics Canada said Wednesday.
The rate of 1.33 children per woman is the lowest total fertility rate in more than a century
Peter Zimonjic · CBC News
· Posted: Jan 31, 2024 12:49 PM EST | Last Updated: January 31
In 2022, the total fertility rate in Canada hit a low of 1.33 children per woman. (Dragan Grkic/Shutterstock)Canada’s total fertility rate dropped to its lowest point in more than a century of data-keeping in 2022, hitting just 1.33 children per woman, Statistics Canada said Wednesday.
The 7.4 per cent decline in the rate from 2021 to 2022, the agency said, was the steepest drop since the 7.6 per cent decline from 1971 to 1972, which took place at the height of the baby bust following the 1946-1965 baby boom.
The 1971-1972 decline also took place three years after Parliament passed legislation that legalized birth control pills and therapeutic abortions.
The trend of decreasing fertility rates affected all provinces to varying degrees. Fertility rates were highest in Saskatchewan (1.69), Quebec (1.49), and Alberta (1.45) and lowest in B.C (1.11), Nova Scotia (1.18), and Newfoundland and Labrador and P.E.I., both of which recorded a rate of 1.22.
StatsCan said the pattern of decline from 2020 to 2022 — an initial drop, then an increase, followed by a second drop — is similar to what many other countries experienced, “suggesting the COVID-19 pandemic may have temporarily disrupted fertility behaviours” around the world.
While every G7 country apart from the United States posted a decline in fertility in 2022 (the U.S. rate actually rose slightly to 1.67), Canada’s “decrease was one of the largest among high-income countries,” Statistics Canada said.
Despite that decline, Canada’s fertility rate was still higher in 2022 than the rates in South Korea (0.78), Spain (1.16), Italy (1.24) and Japan (1.26).
Comparable countries with higher fertility rates include France (1.8), the United Kingdom (1.52) and Germany (1.46).
Sarah Brauner-Otto, the director of McGill University’s Centre on Population Dynamics, told CBC News that people are acutely aware of problems and challenges affecting the rest of the world, which lead to feelings of uncertainty about the future.
“We’re all experiencing the same sort of economic situation and with globalization, political situations are quite similar,” she said.
Delaying decision to have first childCanada’s fertility rate has been sliding since 2009.
Statistics Canada said that Canada’s five lowest annual total fertility rates were recorded over the last five years: 2022 (1.33), 2020 (1.41), 2021 (1.44), 2019 (1.47) and 2018 (1.51).
“It is low but it does seem to be a continuing trend that we’re seeing so I think it shouldn’t be so surprising to us demographers, people who have been thinking about this for a while,” Brauner-Otto said.
The average age of mothers at childbirth also changed significantly between 1976 (when it was 26.7) and 2022, when it hit an average of 31.6.
Brauner-Otto said the declining fertility rate can be explained in part by more women and couples choosing to delay having their first child.
COVID-19’s impact”Given the COVID-19 pandemic initiated a period of public health crisis, as well as economic and societal shocks, it is possible that a segment of the population responded to this period of widespread uncertainty via their childbearing choices,” Statistic Canada said Wednesday.
StatsCan said pandemic related factors that could hypothetically influence fertility rates, but were likely negligible, include pandemic-related travel restrictions and lockdowns and reduced social contacts that made it harder for young adults to find partners.
The agency also said when these factors are considered jointly with health concerns, heightened stress and mental illness brought on by the pandemic, financial issues facing new families, such as increases in the cost of living and job losses brought on by pandemic lockdowns, they could have had an impact on fertility rates on a macro level.
“I think that the pandemic made people a little more uncertain about what the world is going to be like,” Brauner-Otto said. “When there is a lot of uncertainty, fertility tends to be lower. People aren’t eager to go and start families when they are not sure what their job prospects are going to be like.”
Brauner-Otto said there’s no need to worry about population decline because Canada’s “incredibly vibrant immigration system” was responsible for 98 per cent of the country’s population growth last year.
To reverse the trend, Brauner-Otto said, governments need to address underlying social issues that may be prompting people to put off having children.
“Whether it is uncertainty, whether it’s financial strain, whether it’s difficulty in getting housing … I think that this fertility decrease is a symptom of these bigger social problems,” she said.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Peter Zimonjic is a senior writer for CBC News. He has worked as a reporter and columnist in London, England, for the Daily Mail, Sunday Times and Daily Telegraph and in Canada for Sun Media and the Ottawa Citizen. He is the author of Into The Darkness: An Account of 7/7, published by Random House.