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This is an archive article published on January 29, 2007

Japan minister calls women ‘birth-giving machines’

Japan's health minister drew criticism for describing women as “birth-giving machines” in a speech on the falling birthrate

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Japan’s health minister drew criticism for describing women as “birth-giving machines” in a speech on the falling birthrate, as the government announced a council to craft strategies to tackle the country’s shrinking population, news reports said on Sunday.

“The number of women between the ages of 15 and 50 is fixed. The number of birth-giving machines (and) devices is fixed, so all we can ask is that they do their best per head,” Health, Labour and Welfare Minister Hakuo Yanagisawa said in a speech on Saturday, the Asahi and Mainichi newspapers reported.

Yanagisawa reportedly apologised even as he made the remarks, and later told Kyodo News agency the language he used was “too uncivil.”

But Democratic Party leader Yukio Hatoyama was unmoved by his expression of regret. “It was extremely rude to women. Having children or not having children is naturally a matter that women and households are free (to decide themselves),” Hatoyama told reporters on Sunday.

Japan’s population of 127 million contracted for the first time on record in 2005, mostly because of a drop in the birthrate, raising the prospect of severe labour shortages and difficulties in paying health bills and pensions for large numbers of elderly.

The country’s birthrate was 1.26 babies per woman in her lifetime in 2005, a record low, and Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has said his government wants to develop measures to encourage more couples to have children.

A proposal adopted in June calls for increasing child care, promoting greater gender equality, and encouraging companies to allow staff time to take care of family responsibilities.

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But the high cost of raising children, as well as the lingering notion that women should quit their jobs after giving birth, has meant many opt to have few or no children.

The strategy council, to be chaired by Chief Cabinet Secretary Yasuhisa Shiozaki, will hold its first meeting in early February and focus on issues such as employment patterns and resources available to families with children, the Asahi and The Nikkei newspapers said in unsourced stories on Sunday.

The council will be comprised of bureaucrats and experts in various fields and is expected to present an interim report to the government in mid-June, and a basic strategy plan later in the year.

 

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