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If 2026 rates held for a lifetime, a woman in Taiwan would have about 0.86 children, below the 2.1 needed to sustain the population. Over the preceding five years it has fallen by 0.11 children per woman. About 123 thousand babies are born a year, a crude birth rate of 5.3 per 1,000. Its net reproduction rate sits at 0.41, far below the 1.0 that marks generational replacement. Women are having children later in life, at a mean age of 32.3 years, up from 26.1 in 1980. By 2100, projections see it reaching 1.33 children per woman.
Fertility rate
0.86 children/woman
Birth rate
5.3 per 1,000 people
Total births
122.6K
Mean age at birth
32.3 years
Taiwan's fertility rate has fallen dramatically from 6.7 children per woman in 1952 to 0.86 today, below the 2.1 replacement level. Women are also having children later: mean age at childbearing has risen from 26.1 to 32.3 since 1980.