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First evidence from Spain: the impact of lockdown on fertility

March 8, 2021 - 10:49am

It’s been nearly a year since western countries imposed lockdowns on their populations, and the details of its effects are beginning to emerge. A report in El Pais, a Spanish newspaper, has revealed that there was a 23% decline in childbirths in Spain for those born in December or January compared to the year before. This decline maps onto the period in which Spaniards were put under lockdown in March and April, resulting in an astonishing 13,141 babies fewer babies being born:

In those months, 45,054 babies were registered as a result of those days when the country was locked up at home, according to information from 3,929 computerised civil registries, corresponding to 93% of the population. There are 13,141 fewer children.
- El Pais

23% decline in childbirths in Spain for those born in December or January compared to the year before

Equally concerning is that the lockdown appears to have accelerated an existing downward trend in Spanish births:

The 360,617 births in 2019 were the lowest figure in the entire historical series of the National Institute of Statistics, which begins in 1941, a record that also reached the first half of 2020. Just last January, the first full month in which the consequences of lockdown can be calibrated, 6,889 fewer babies were registered in the civil registry than in the same month of 2020. The difference is notable because in January 2020, 511 fewer children were registered than that month of 2019. The fall from 2019 to 2020 was 1.7%, but the following year is 23%. That is the pandemic.
- El Pais

Nor is this decline in birthrates confined to just Spain:

“…the data agrees with what we expected and what we are seeing in other countries,” explains Diego Ramiro, director of the Institute of Economics, Geography and Demography of the Higher Council for Scientific Research (CSIC). In December, the reduction in Italy was 21.6%. In January, births fell in France by 13%. “In some states of the United States such as Florida, California or Hawaii, there have been falls from 5% to almost 20%,” he adds.”
- El Pais

And contrary to a report in today’s Times, a post-pandemic baby boom is not expected:

Ramiro does not expect a rebound when the storm passes: “Apart from the epidemic crisis, we will have an economic crisis and we have already seen the effects of 2008, which has caused a sustained decline. Now we are entering a year of hiatus and we will have the lowest fertility levels ever in Spain”
- El Pais

First-time Spanish mothers, who at the age of 32 are already delaying pregnancy due to difficult economic conditions, are now trying to delay it for another two years because of the pandemic, which makes fertility “more complicated” and limits the opportunity to have a second child.

Given that the world is suffering from a global fertility shortage, it seems like the effects of the pandemic — and specifically lockdown — are going to make the situation far worse.

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Sue Julians
Sue Julians
3 years ago

Funnily enough, if you make it illegal for sexual partners who don’t live together to have sex, fewer babies are born.

Alison Houston
Alison Houston
3 years ago
Reply to  Sue Julians

You might like my poem from earlier in the year:

http://www.readmypoems.co.uk/search?q=sex+covid+19

Dennis Boylon
Dennis Boylon
3 years ago
Reply to  Alison Houston

Nice. LOL

Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
3 years ago

it’s better-than-good odds that the pandemic is going to make a lot of things worse, not just fertility. It’s almost as if that was the plan.

Christopher Wheatley
Christopher Wheatley
3 years ago
Reply to  Alex Lekas

Hm! I guess that’s just a hunch?

Alex Lekas
Alex Lekas
3 years ago

the longer that the elected class clings to mandates that harm people, the more intentional the results appear to be. In the normal world, when we’re doing something that ends badly, we stop doing it.

Christopher Wheatley
Christopher Wheatley
3 years ago
Reply to  Alex Lekas

Which people are we talking about? I speak to ‘people’ and they are happy to be saved from Covid 19. If you say there is nothing to be worried about, you become a Covid denier. It is fine to have such an opinion but could a government form that opinion for everybody?
If you look at this thing ten years from now you will see rights and wrongs highlighted as ‘history’. Here, in the middle of it you can’t be sure.
(Just to get things straight I have always been anti-lockdown but I am surrounded by people who don’t agree with me – I am in a minority of one until I log onto UnHerd.)

Dennis Boylon
Dennis Boylon
3 years ago

It is really interesting in the USA. The Red State/Blue State divide is very real. I honestly don’t know how democrats can look at the South and not tell they are overreacting. I’ve never been a supporter of either party until now. I am now supporting Republicans. Considering the totalitarian embrace of big pharma and the tech oligarchs, I just can’t stomach Democratic leadership. For the first time in my life the “lesser evil” choice isn’t exactly lesser anymore. The phone call between Fauci, Biden, and DeSantis is pretty shocking if true. I believe it was reported to the public by DeSantis… so of course it depends on your political beliefs if you think it is true or not. His CPAC speech was something too…if you haven’t watched it keep in mind it came after the phone conversation with Fauci and Biden. I am in a red country in a blue state. Washington State. We are ignoring both Biden and Inslee (Our governor) dictates. Open restaurants and bars. No mask requirements but some people do wear them. I was at a place with live music this weekend. I’ve routinely been in places with near 100 percent precovid capacity. We are not following the rules here. It has been this way since they started rolling out the vaccines. I think what put people over the edge was the doubling down on masking, the fear mongering over variants, and the Pharma oligarchs insisting we still had to social distance, etc. That did not go over well at all here.

Last edited 3 years ago by Dennis Boylon
Christopher Wheatley
Christopher Wheatley
3 years ago
Reply to  Dennis Boylon

Thanks for that answer. A few years ago I worked in Europe for a company in Louisville, KY. I last saw my ex-colleagues in the spring of 2016 and we talked about the forthcoming election. To a man they were Trump fans.
I had heard of Trump but never thought of him in politics. They were fans because he wasn’t in politics. After that I followed the election and I saw the point. Trump seemed to be actually talking to real people through his tweets and his gaffes. The others were just boring, grey, faceless people – which is what I think of Biden.
We can only follow things in the USA through news channels like Al Jazeera but Trump performed well. If he had communicated better about Covid 19 he would still be President.
But now, after focussing on the situation in the USA, as an impartial observer, you really need to change your systems. There are too many grey men and the voters do not want them. Now, I think, it is time for real people .

Dennis Boylon
Dennis Boylon
3 years ago
Reply to  Alex Lekas

Haha. Yeah. Just do a google search on Prince Andrew population control, Prince Philip population control, Prince Charles population control. Listen to Bill Gates’s innovation to zero TED talk. Read all about Klaus Schwab’s Great Reset agenda. It is nothing to them. It isn’t a secret. It is a well thought out plan. Of course we are called conspiracy theorists. This crap is going down. This is WW3 which will be even worse than WW1 and WW2. Private intelligence firm Deagal’s forecast for the population is frightening. I have to only wonder what they know about it. Putin on the other hand wants population growth for his country. He seemed to indicate that the US needed to work with China and Russia on developing Fusion technology to address energy and pollution concerns. He seemed to indicate that the west was more focused on depopulation as the goal. Do not resuscitate orders, Denying medical care for dementia patients, shutting down cancer and heart screenings, etc… with the average age of death near 80 did we really have a pandemic? Or did we just kill off our elderly? How would we know? That would let us visit them in nursing homes and they wouldn’t let us into hospitals to monitor care and advocate for care. We don’t know what happened. We’ll see what happens in the US. States are splitting into covid fascists states and old normal states. Hell… even in Blue states the red counties are ignoring covid fascism. I am in that category. I’ve been going into bars and restaurants mask free. I watched live music this weekend and it was glorious! We better fight back. This crap isn’t going to get any better if we don’t.

Last edited 3 years ago by Dennis Boylon
PHILIP LEONE-GANADO
PHILIP LEONE-GANADO
3 years ago

Over the past year it has been very difficult for singles to form new relationships given that meeting up indoors has been banned for most of the year.
For many women in their thirties this may in effect mean they will have lost their chance to have babies, at least naturally.
So the impact on fertility may live on for several years.

Charles Stanhope
Charles Stanhope
3 years ago

In 18 & 9 BC, The Roman Emperor Augustus passed legislation that produced the “ ius trium liberorum”- the right of three children.
Those citizens who produced three children (four if you were a Freedman/woman) were entitled to certain legal privileges as an incentive to breed. It seems to have worked rather well.

However today, everyone in Europe including the UK have been subjected to a continuous horror attack about he lethality of Corona Virus by their respective Governments for nearly a year.
Is it any wonder that Lockdown has not produced a ‘bonk fest’, but rather the very reverse, as the responsible Demos, terrified of imminent death have correctly decided to desist from copulating?

Last edited 3 years ago by Charles Stanhope
Fraser Bailey
Fraser Bailey
3 years ago

Today’s leaders could offer the following incentives to breed on a large scale:

  • A personal visit from Matt Hancock upon the delivery of the third child;
  • A special pass to leave the house once a week;
  • Covid jab delivered by Katie Price.
Last edited 3 years ago by Fraser Bailey
Gordon Black
Gordon Black
3 years ago

Fertility is a measure of the ability to produce babies: surely lockdown has not affected that. What lockdown has affected is the frequency of non-contraceptive sexual intercourse.

Last edited 3 years ago by Gordon Black
Andrea X
Andrea X
3 years ago
Reply to  Gordon Black

AKA, casual sex.

Gordon Black
Gordon Black
3 years ago
Reply to  Andrea X

no, all sex, casual or formal.

Annette Kralendijk
Annette Kralendijk
3 years ago
Reply to  Gordon Black

Does the sperm know if it’s casual or formal?

Chris Milburn
Chris Milburn
3 years ago

“Global Fertility Shortage” in a world heading up to 9billion humans and beyond? Odd take on that issue. It may be local, it’s certainly not “Global”.

David Uzzaman
David Uzzaman
3 years ago

Men and women who spend twenty four hours a day together don’t have much sex! Who would have guessed? Practically everyone. Absence may not make the heart grow fonder but it works for other organs.

Dennis Boylon
Dennis Boylon
3 years ago

Gates, Schwab, Prince Andrew, Prince Charles, and Prince Philip will be thrilled! It is working!!! Killing off old people, lockdowns and anti socializing reducing babies. Next steps? Just need the vaccine to sterilize or kill people. The eugenicists agenda is looking great. Welcome to WW3.

Brendan O'Leary
Brendan O'Leary
3 years ago

Are we still blaming the Catholic church for overpopulation?

Stephen Follows
Stephen Follows
3 years ago

A global fertility shortage? Really? More like massive over-population, which the pandemic is helping to cure. At least it’s had one positive effect.