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Iran considering ways to boost birth rate

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Iran considering different ways to boost dwindling birth rate
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An Iranian gold trader displays a gold coin in Tehran April 19, 2006. Government officials are toying with the idea of giving a gold coin to Iranian couples who have a child to increase the low birth rate. ATTA KENARE/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

AP January 8, 2014, 5: 00 PM

TEHRAN, Iran - In Iran, free condoms and government-backed vasectomies are out, replaced by sermons praising larger families and discussions of even offering gold coins to the families of newborns.

Having successfully curbed birth rates for two decades, Iran now is promoting a baby boom to help make up for its graying population. But experts say it is difficult to encourage Iranians to have more children in a mismanaged economy hit by Western sanctions and 36 percent inflation.

"A gold coin won't change couples' calculations," said Mohammad Jalal Abbasi, head of Demographics Department at Tehran University. "Many young Iranians prefer to continue their studies, not marry. Lack of financial ability to buy a house and meet expenses are among other reasons why the youth postpone marriage or have no interest in raising many children."

Iran's birthrate reached a peak of 3.6 children per couple after its 1979 Islamic Revolution, among the world's highest at the time. By 1990, experts estimated Iran could be home to 140 million people if the rate was left unchecked. To combat the rise, Iran's supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei endorsed birth control, while then-President Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani made controlling the birth rate a part of his development plans.

Mass-produced condoms reached Iranians, as a month's supply of birth control cost the equivalent of 10 cents in 1992. The birth rate dropped precipitously, now reportedly standing at 1.8 children per couple with a population of some 77 million people. Experts now say that drive might have been too successful, estimating that Iran's population growth could reach zero in the next 20 years if the trend is not reversed.

Fearing that population decline, the machinery of state in Iran has changed course entirely. Khamenei, who has final say over all matters of state, now says Iran should have a population of 150 million people or more.

"If we move forward like this, we will be a country of elderly people in a not-too-distant future. Why do some couples prefer to have one or two children? Why do couples avoid having children? The reasons need to be studied," the ayatollah recently said. "There was an imitation of Western life and we inherited this."

Sermons now urge worshippers to raise more children for Iran's future. Mahdi Sedqazar, who performed vasectomies at his government-sponsored Martyr Jafari clinic in central Tehran for a decade, now focuses on preventing AIDS and promoting factory workers' health.

"Vasectomy operations have totally stopped. They were eliminated eight months ago," Sedqazar said. "The budget on population curbs has been halted."

Some blame a drop in marriages and a rise in divorce for the falling birth rate. Others point to Iran's economy, battered by Western sanctions over its contested nuclear program. Inflation stands at 36 percent, President Hassan Rouhani recently said. Unemployment officially stands at 12 percent, though some private experts suggest nearly one in three working-age Iranians is out of work.

"Unemployment, a lack of housing and job insecurity are the top most important reasons for decrease in fertility rate," Abbasi said.

As part of a plan to encourage Iranians to have more children, the Iranian parliament approved a bill that allows the government to increase maternity leaves to nine months from six months and to give fathers a two-week leave. Iran's constitutional watchdog, the Guardian Council, made it a law in July. Government officials also have discussed offering gold coins to newborns.

But those incentives may not be enough. Ali Akbar Mahzoon, head of government statistics and demographic data, said family culture has changed irrespective of financial ability and job security. The average age for people to get married in Iran has gone from the early 20s to the late 20s, Mahzoon said. While some 23 million Iranians are eligible to marry, 11 million of them haven't done so, he said.

"Wealthy people or those who have a secure job also have no interest in having more than two children," Mahzoon said. However, he said that more jobs and housing will be effective tools in helping increase birth rates.

For Hossein Masoudi, a 43-year-old father of two, economics remain the reason why he doesn't plan to have more children.

"It's not logical. They need housing, education and a lot more. I barely make ends meet," Masoudi said. "Instead of having more children, my wife and I prefer to focus on giving our two children better education and improving the quality of their life."

Iran considering different ways to boost dwindling birth rate - CBS News
 
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the Jennie is out of the bottle and you can't put it back by a single gold coin

by the way you must be fool not to understand that the cost of having even one extra child is more than that single gold coin in just the first year unless they want to raise the children under the bush

also if they want to raise the number of the birth they must first solve many problem like water shortage , that we can't produce enough food for even our current population , that many young couple are living in 40m houses and both of the couple had to work from morning till night to manages the life and have no time at all for raising children

also you expect young couples to have children not old one and sadly I must say it's better not to mention unemployment in young generation here and also many of the young couple who has a job don't have security in that job and may loose it.
 
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Why not Iran offer coins to the exiled Iranians, in exchange for their return home?
this will be much better way to accomplish the set target!
 
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Why not Iran offer coins to the exiled Iranians, in exchange for their return home?
this will be much better way to accomplish the set target!

According to the opposition in exile in the UK, they claim that over 3 million Iranians had fled the country since the brith of the so-called Islamic revolution
 
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In all seriousness then this is not a laughing matter. We Arabs and Iranians might have some differences but I surely hope for all the best for the ordinary Iranians that just want a better life like anybody else. Like many Arabs also need and want to have. A lot of similar problems.

The Mullah's though I will never have any respect for. I am sorry. But I am sure that the Mullah supporters here could not care less about this fact but that is fine with me. We all have our own views.

I think as @JEskandari said then the least of solutions in Iran is a bigger population as he argued well against.
 
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According to the opposition in exile in the UK, they claim that over 3 million Iranians had fled the country since the brith of the so-called Islamic revolution


Number of Iranians living outside of Iran is probably close to 5 million. And It's very misleading to call it "fleeing" Iran, In fact out of all the Iranian immigrants very small percentage ( like 0.00001%) "fled" Iran for political reasons. Majority of these people want to live in Europe or America, because they want first world living standards. Majority of young people leave Iran due to educational and career opportunities in America and Europe.

It's all the same reasons why people come to America from Mexico, Asia, and Africa.
 
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Well, at least this is what Ali Nori Zadah was suggesting.

Number of Iranians living outside of Iran is probably close to 5 million. And It's very misleading to call it "fleeing" Iran, In fact out of all the Iranian immigrants very small percentage ( like 0.00001%) "fled" Iran for political reasons. Majority of these people want to live in Europe or America, because they want first world living standards. Majority of young people leave Iran due to educational and career opportunities in America and Europe.

It's all for the same reason why people come to America from Mexico, Asia, and Africa.
 
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Number of Iranians living outside of Iran is probably close to 5 million. And It's very misleading to call it "fleeing" Iran, In fact out of all the Iranian immigrants very small percentage ( like 0.00001%) "fled" Iran for political reasons. Majority of these people want to live in Europe or America, because they want first world living standards. Majority of young people leave Iran due to educational and career opportunities in America and Europe.

It's all for the same reason why people come to America from Mexico, Asia, and Africa.

Most statistics are estimating about 5-6 million Iranians have left the country. BTW, Iran's case is obviously different. In contrast to immigrants from Mexico, ... mass emigration of Iranians just started after the Revolution, we did not have such a thing before revolution. Most of Religious minorities, liberals, highly educated persons or the rich Iranians have left the country, since they could not tolerate the situations anymore.
 
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Well, at least this is what Ali Nori Zadah was suggesting.


Iran's birth rate is reflective of the way Iranian society thinks. Most Iranian people like to have one or two kids. Most people from Upper and Middle class end up having two kids. It's actually the poor and more religious families that end up having big families (6-8 kids). This whole gold coin for kids is not gonna change the way people think and behave. So it's useless.
 
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Most statistics are estimating about 5-6 million Iranians have left the country. BTW, Iran's case is obviously different. In contrast to immigrants from Mexico, ... mass emigration of Iranians just started after the Revolution, we did not have such a thing before revolution. Most of Religious minorities, liberals, highly educated persons or the rich Iranians have left the country, since they could not tolerate the situations anymore.

Religious minorities like Iranian Jews left Iran when Israel was created which is way before 1970's. Even during Shah's time Iranian Jews were leaving Iran in big numbers. I do agree that after the 1979 revolution the process was accelerated.

I think it's ridiculous to say that most "rich" and "educated" people have left Iran.

Again, number 1 reason why people leave Iran is due to educational and job opportunities available in western societies not due to political or religious reasons.
 
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Well, at least this is what Ali Nori Zadah was suggesting.

I don't like Nori Zadeh. He has relations with both mullahs(some people say that he has relations with the Rafsanjani clan) and some Arab countries at the same time. I don't trust this guy. he is like a multiple sided agent for me.
I don't know how you know this guy, probably you have read some of his articles or watched his interviews, but I suggest you to always check his words with another sources as well ;)
 
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