Kosovo natality declines

According to the Kosovo Statistics Agency in all maternityities in Kosovo, the number of births has marked decline annually. In 2014, 32,087 births were registered in 2015, 31,116 births were recorded in 2016, 30,069, 30,025 east, and 22,761 were registered in 2017. This [...]
In 2014, 32,087 births were registered in 2015, 31,116 births were recorded in 2016, 30,069, 30,025 east, and 22,761 were registered in 2017.
This decline for only 5 years is considered too dangerous for the state, for the family and for society, and is the largest decline in the history of Kosovo, the Balkan states and Europe.
The main factors seen as responsible for the decline of nightiness in Kosovo are difficult economic conditions, the law of leukemia, family planning, state policies and the largest migration in the Balkans and Europe.
Statistics of the University Clinic of Kosovo's University Clinic, according to the decline in 2014, were 10 thousand and 307 births, in 2015, 9 thousand and 443 births, in 2016, 10,000 and 139 births, 10 thousand and 161 births, in 2018, 9 thousand and 963, and in the 9th month of 2019, 7 thousand and 256 months of birth.
Gynecology Clinic Director Jakup Ismajli told Kosova Prees, that it has become a kind of <x0ndrend”, in developed countries where couples decide to have children as well as they can bear.
The range of nighthood is a trend of developed countries, which means that in developing countries we have a decline in nighthood. That is because family planning is primarily family because each mate wants to have children as much as he can bear. This differs from developing countries where each couple had 4 to 5 children, and in modern times, married couples plan their families and usually have 1 or 2 children. This, I think, is one of the main causes of the decline in nightiness, which includes our country Kosovo”, he said.
Ismaili added that it had been good for the state to stimulate births by extending the leavelessness and helping to boost them.
And sociologist Ferdi Kamberi has said of KosovaPress, that this decrease is very dangerous for both family and society because, according to him, it's not family planning and the postponing of marriage, it makes the possibility of fertility smaller, and if there's no nightiness, it's only a burden to the state because it's old people and there's no youth working.
Kamberi said that the political aspect of nighthood also has to be influenced by the government's support.
We consider that initially there will have to be popular night-stimulating policies from relevant institutions, then family planning should be adequate because we see that a large part of the couple is pushing family planning, then there may be different consequences, and in this direction we consider that an adequate planning can result in increased nighthood, but perhaps more concrete policies are needed that stimulate the new mothers, but other families have the rise of NAT1).
The decline of nightiness according to connoisseurs in this area is an alarming situation and endangers Kosovo society. In their view, the state needs to invest more in this area by helping financially to raise children.
We remember that in Kosovo, the labour law predicts that for each child born, the mother will meet a one-year lehonia vacation, where during the first three months of the Lebanon rest, the payment is paid by the employer for seventy percent of the basic salary, then the next six months, the retirement of leukemia paid by the Kosovo government with 50 percent compensation of the average wage in Kosovo.
Meanwhile, the employed woman is entitled, according to this law, to extend her leave off for another three months free of charge.











