SHARE
COPY LINK

BABIES

French named best baby-makers in all of Europe

France led Europe with the highest fertility rate in 2014 with Greece and other crisis-hit countries suffering the lowest rates on the continent, the EU's latest data showed on Tuesday.

French named best baby-makers in all of Europe
Photo: Joel Saget, file picture / AFP

At 2.01 births per woman, France's fertility rate is followed by Ireland on 1.94, Sweden on 1.88 and and Britain on 1.81, the EU's Eurostat data agency said.

All the levels were below the 2.1 births per woman mark considered by statisticians to be the replacement rate in a developed country.

“The good result for France, but also for Europe's northwestern countries in general, is explained by more generous family and social policies than found in southern and eastern European countries,” said Gilles Pison, researcher at the INED demography institute in Paris.

Since 2006 France has been the only country among its neighbours to record a high and stable birth rate.

Most of the other European countries saw declining birth rates that matched their countries' gloomy economies in the face of the financial crisis.

In an interview with The Local in November, Insee's Chief of Social Studies, Laurence Rioux, said that France was managing to maintain a high and stable birth rate much thanks to the fact that the country’s wages had remained fairly stable. She also said that the unemployment rate France – although being at a record high – hasn’t risen as dramatically, and within as a short space of time, as it has in many other European countries.
 
The lowest fertility rate was observed in Portugal at 1.2 births, just ahead of Greece, Cyprus and Spain.

“These countries were hit hard by the economic crisis and there lacked incentives to build families, contrary to France where social policies cushioned the blow,” the researcher of Tuesday's report said.

Eurostat said France also continued to record the highest number of births in Europe with 819,300 births in 2014, beating out Britain, Germany and Italy.

Pison said that after years of slow birth rates, Germany and Austria seemed to be reversing the trend “no doubt due to these countries also embracing generous incentives as seen in France,” Pison said.

In 2014, the average age for a first child in Europe was around 28 years old with the youngest mothers found in Bulgaria at 25.8 years and the oldest in Italy at 30.7 years.

Across the EU, over 5.1 million babies were born in 2014. The total EU population that year stood at 506,944,075 according to Eurostat.

NAMES

Adolf, Alexa, Greta: These are the names Germans don’t want to give their kids

History, technology and current political trends all seem to have an influence when German parents decide on names for their children, a new survey shows.

Adolf, Alexa, Greta: These are the names Germans don’t want to give their kids
File photo: dpa | Fabian Strauch

Perhaps unsurprisingly, Adolf is the least popular name for Germans to give their children. 

While Adolphus was a relatively popular name in the first part of the 20th century, its association primarily with Adolf Hitler has since made it taboo.

A survey brought out by YouGov on Thursday shows that 89 percent of Germans say it is “unlikely” they would call their child Adolf, although 8 percent still say it is “likely” they would do so.

READ ALSO: What it’s like to share a name with the world’s most notorious dictator

Alexa, the name of Amazon’s virtual assistant, is also rather unpopular, with 79 percent of respondents saying they would probably not pick this as a name for their child.

Kevin, a name strongly associated with the fashion of giving children American names during the communist era in East German, is also now unpopular. Some 80 percent say they wouldn’t give their child this name.

According to a survey done in 2011, men called Kevin also have less luck in finding love online, presumably because of the negative associations of the once popular name.

For girls, Greta seems to be unpopular, with three quarters of respondents saying they wouldn’t use it as a name for their child. YouGov says that “perhaps people have the polarizing climate activist Greta Thunberg in the backs of their minds.”

Asked what they believed has the most impact on how names are chosen, the respondents said that family and ethnic background have an overwhelmingly positive influence.

Politics and current trends on the other hand were seen to have a generally negative impact on the favourability of names.

The survey also found out that Germans are generally very happy with their given names, with 84 percent voicing satisfaction and just 13 percent expressing dissatisfaction.

The results come from a representative study of 2,058 people in Germany between February 12th and February 15th.

SEE ALSO: These are Germany’s most popular baby names for 2020

SHOW COMMENTS