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Indonesia'€™s annual births nearly equaling Singapore'€™s population

  The rising number of young marriages has become a contributing factor to the soaring population in Indonesia, where local National Demography and Family Planning Agency (BKKBN) data reveals that the average age for a woman’s first marriage is 18

The Jakarta Post
Tue, September 29, 2015 Published on Sep. 29, 2015 Published on 2015-09-29T18:12:44+07:00

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Indonesia'€™s annual births nearly equaling Singapore'€™s population The rising number of young marriages has become a contributing factor to the soaring population in Indonesia, where local National Demography and Family Planning Agency (BKKBN) data reveals that the average age for a woman’s first marriage is 18.6 years. (Tribunnews.com) (BKKBN) data reveals that the average age for a woman’s first marriage is 18.6 years. (Tribunnews.com)

 

 The rising number of young marriages has become a contributing factor to the soaring population in Indonesia, where local National Demography and Family Planning Agency (BKKBN) data reveals that the average age for a woman'€™s first marriage is 18.6 years. (Tribunnews.com)

 The government is set to revitalize its family planning (KB) program as roughly 4.5 million new babies, equal to 85% of Singapore'€™s population, are born in the country annually.

The government'€™s target population growth rate is 1.1 percent, whereas it currently sits at 1.49 percent.

The head of the national population and family planning board (BKKBN), Surya Chandra Surapaty, said that Indonesia'€™s growth rate of 1.49 percent per year was worrying, especially if such massive growth was not accompanied by global manpower competitiveness.

'€œThe population growth rate of 1.49 percent means Indonesia has 4.5 million new babies [each year], equaling Singapore'€™s population. If [we look at] a 10 year period, that'€™s 10 Singapores,'€ he said after a meeting with President Joko '€œJokowi'€ Widodo, as quoted by kompas.com.

The fastest growth rates, he further elaborated, were recorded in East Nusa Tenggara, West Nusa Tenggara, Maluku and in Riau Islands. It is feared that the babies were going to be a low-income, low-skilled generation since they were mostly born in under-developed or poor regions.

Lack of education is listed as one reason why the KB program failed in those regions. To combat this, the President approved a KB pilot village in West Java set to be inaugurated in January 2016, Surya said.

The BKKBN will also launch several programs to control population growth and at the same time improve the quality of the '€œprosperous families'€ program, the children'€™s education campaign and the parenting campaign. (ags)(++++)

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