Advertisement
Advertisement
Malaysia
Get more with myNEWS
A personalised news feed of stories that matter to you
Learn more
A Chinese couple pictured with their newborn baby at a hospital in Heshan, south China’s Guangdong province, on February 10, the first day of the Year of the Dragon in the Chinese zodiac. Photo: Xinhua

Birth rates among Chinese falling everywhere, not just China, Malaysian Chinese official says

  • Malaysian Chinese Association President Dr Wee Ka Siong said a ‘trend’ in many parts of the world was ‘causing the Chinese population to be declining’
  • He was responding to an MP’s concerns about data showing just 40,000 Malaysian-Chinese were born in 2022, and the effect of this on school enrolment
Malaysia
Chinese communities worldwide are facing a decline in their birth rate, including in Malaysia, according to the president of the Malaysian Chinese Association.

“The Chinese in many parts of the world, they don’t have many kids,” Dr Wee Ka Siong told reporters after launching the Dato’ Teng Gaik Kwan Centre for Early Childhood Education in Tunku Abdul Rahman University of Management of Technology on Monday.

“This is the trend that is causing the Chinese population to be declining,” he said, adding that the birth rate for ethnic Malays is also dropping. “This is a very personal [choice].”

Wee Ka Siong (centre, left) pictured with Malaysia’s then-prime minister Ismail Sabri Yaakob (right) in June 2022. Wee has served as president of the Malaysian Chinese Association since 2018 and was Malaysian transport minister from August 2021 to November 2022. Photo: Bloomberg

Wee said that declining birth rates were caused by the challenges young couples face when caring for their children.

This includes ensuring they can afford to send their children for a tertiary education, he said, adding that when Chinese couples calculate the expenses, they tend not to have more children.

“You have to think twice because you have to nurture the younger generation,” Wee said.

As Asia grapples with declining birth rates, Philippines wants fewer babies

Wee said that while his parents would have had around 10 siblings, members of his generation would only have two or three brothers or sisters on average.

However, he said that the lunar Year of the Dragon tends to see an increase in the birth rate among ethnic Chinese.

While agreeing that the number of ethnic Chinese students in Chinese schools would drop, he said that such schools cannot stop other students of other ethnicities from enrolling.

Around 20 per cent of students in these schools are currently non-Chinese, Wee said.

Malaysia in 2050: old, poor, sick and without children?

Wee was responding to Bayan Baru MP Sim Tze Tzin, who had expressed concern in a Facebook post on February 13 over the declining birth rate among the Chinese community in Malaysia and the effect of this on school enrolment.

Sim said data from 2022 showed that only 40,000 Malaysian-Chinese were born that year.

This article was first published by The Star
Post