Canadians Discuss the Roots of Canada’s Declining Birth Rate
Lack of success in finding the right partner and rising costs are among the main reasons Canadians are waiting to have children or not having any at all, a new poll suggests.
Yet-to-be parents aged 35 to 44 were the most likely to say they have waited longer than they wanted to, nearly 75 percent of them.
“Canada’s fertility rate hit its lowest rate in recorded history for a second consecutive year in 2023,” wrote the study’s authors. “The spinoff impacts of this are already being felt – with Canada’s aging workforce joining a swelling retirement-age population and increasing economic pressure to meet this group’s needs and entitlements.”
Among those who do not want to have children (37 percent), child care and cost of living were also determining factors. A quarter said a top reason is that child care is too expensive, while 18 percent said it is too difficult to get proper housing to raise a child. Still, the most popular reason among participants who don’t want to have children was it’s simply not something they’re interested in, at nearly 70 percent.
For the study, the authors surveyed 1,300 Canadian adults younger than 50.
Is There a Birth Rate Crisis?
In another poll that surveyed 4,063 Canadian adults, the institute found no consensus on whether Canada’s fertility rate is a crisis, with 43 percent of respondents saying it is, and 42 percent saying it is not.