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Monday July 14, 2025

EU saw record drop in births in 2023: data

By AFP
March 08, 2025
Newborn baby Leonardo rests on his mums Viviana Valente arms, inside a room of the Santo Spirito Hospital, after the UN forecast the world would reach 8 billion people around November 15, 2022. Rome, Italy, November 14, 2022. — Reuters
Newborn baby Leonardo rests on his mum's Viviana Valente arms, inside a room of the Santo Spirito Hospital, after the UN forecast the world would reach 8 billion people around November 15, 2022. Rome, Italy, November 14, 2022. — Reuters

BRUSSELS, Belgium: The number of babies born in the EU was down 5.4 percent to 3.67 million in 2023, the largest drop in decades, official data showed on Friday, underscoring the bloc´s demographic issues.

The fertility rate across the EU´s 27 countries stood at 1.38 live births per woman, down from 1.46 in 2022 and well below the “replacement level” of 2.1, at which a population is stable.

“This is the largest annual decline recorded since 1961”, the first year for which EU-wide aggregate data is available, the bloc´s statistical agency, Eurostat, said of the drop in births. Births have steadily declined in Europe since the mid-1960s, recording only modest occasional recoveries over the past 20 years, according to the EU statistical agency. As a consequence, the bloc´s population is ageing fast, and some countries face labour shortages at a time where hard-right gains have pushed many governments to crack down on migration.

In 1964 a record 6.8 million children were born in the bloc, almost twice as many as in 2023, according to Eurostat. Bulgaria reported the highest total fertility rate of 1.81 in the EU in 2023, followed by France with 1.66 and Hungary with 1.55.

At the other end of the scale was Malta, with 1.06 births per woman, trailed by Spain with 1.12 and Lithuania with 1.18. The mean age at which women have their first child continued to rise, standing at 29.8 years, up from 28.8 in 2013, Eurostat said.