Singapore to add 30,000 citizens annually to counter aging population crisis

Singapore to add 30,000 citizens annually to counter aging population crisis


Addressing the Parliament last week, Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong warned that without intervention, Singapore’s citizen population could begin to contract by the early 2040s. He noted that low birth rates and an aging population will “profoundly reshape” Singapore, as well as its society and economy, in the coming years.

Reversing this demographic trajectory is becoming increasingly difficult as the number of women of childbearing age continues to shrink.

Recent statistics highlight the severity of the decline, as Singapore’s total fertility rate (TFR) dropped from 1.24 a decade ago to a historic low of 0.87 in 2025. This downward trend saw the TFR fall below 1.0 for the first time in 2023 to 0.97, remaining steady in 2024, according to a Straits Times report.

Singapore saw about 27,500 resident births in 2025, the lowest number in its recorded history.





Read Full Article At Source