Incentives in Population Law expected to reverse birth rate decline

Vietnam’s population has already topped 100 million, but the 2025 population report reveals trends accelerating well beyond earlier forecasts. Fertility has nosedived to all-time lows: the total fertility rate slipped from 2.01 children per woman in 2022 to 1.96 in 2023, then plunged to a record 1.91 in 2024.

Illustrative image (Photo: VNA)
Illustrative image (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi (VNA) - This year’s Vietnam Population Day on December 26 arrives with heightened significance after the National Assembly passed the landmark Population Law on December 10, opening a new era of demographic work, with hard-won past gains increasingly overshadowed by pressing challenges.

Population landscape: rapid changes beyond forecasts

Vietnam’s population has already topped 100 million, but the 2025 population report reveals trends accelerating well beyond earlier forecasts. Fertility has nosedived to all-time lows: the total fertility rate slipped from 2.01 children per woman in 2022 to 1.96 in 2023, then plunged to a record 1.91 in 2024. Even more troubling, only 17% of provinces and cities still maintain the replacement-level rate of 2.1 children, signaling that most localities have entered a period of low fertility.

At the same time, the sex ratio at birth remained abnormally high at 111.4 boys per 100 girls in 2024, stoking fears of a looming male surplus and the social disruptions that could follow.

Aging is another trend picking up speed. Vietnam entered its “aging phase” back in 2011 and is projected to become an “aged society” after 2036. Life expectancy reached 74.7 years in 2024, but healthy life expectancy hovers around just 65 years, exposing a growing gap between living longer and living well, while piling pressure on the nation’s long-term healthcare infrastructure.

Beyond changes in size and structure, regional disparities in population quality are clearer. In mountainous and ethnic-minority regions, early marriages, consanguineous unions, child malnutrition and restricted access to healthcare and education remain prevalent, directly hampering physical development and the future labour pool.

Le Thanh Dung, Director of the Department of Population, said future efforts will centre on encouraging two-child families, targeting low-fertility areas and ethnic minorities, sustaining replacement-level fertility and restoring a balanced sex ratio at birth. Policies for elderly care, aging adaptation and broader population quality improvement will also be further refined.

A legal turning point in national population policy

Dung noted that the Population Law’s flagship policies will roll out in lockstep across agencies. Improving population quality requires true cross-sector teamwork, not just the health ministry’s burden alone, starting with premarital check-ups, prenatal and newborn screenings to catch congenital issues early, and postnatal interventions for optimal child development.

To bolster childbearing and rearing, the law extends maternity leave to seven months for women delivering a second child and grants fathers 10 days off when their wife gives birth. Targeted groups, including women from ethnic minorities, those in low-fertility regions or bearing two children before the age of 35, may qualify for extra financial incentives under defined criteria.

Notably, the law offers preferential access to social housing for families with two or more biological children, fast-tracking purchases, rent-to-own options or rentals. Such incentives tackle a key deterrent to larger families, particularly in big cities grappling with skyrocketing housing and cost-of-living pressures.

Finally, to deal with the skewed sex ratio, the law lays down tough bans on all forms of fetal sex selection and revealing fetal gender if the intent is abortion./.

VNA

See more

The Security Investigation Agency of Hung Yen province executes a search warrant. (Photo: congan.hungyen.gov.vn)

Man prosecuted for abusing democratic freedoms to infringe upon State interests

Anh, born in 1958, frequently filed complaints and denunciations with authorities at various levels. The contents mainly concerned the land management and use by officials of People’s Committee of Nghia Hiep commune over a long period. Many of the complaints and denunciations were found to be unfounded, lacking evidence, speculative, accusatory, defamatory, and prolonged.

Hanoi waives public transport fares during the Lunar New Year (Tet) holiday. (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi waives public transport fares during Tet holiday

During the same period, the Hanoi Traffic Operation Centre, in coordination with bus operators, will also waive fares on subsidised bus services. The programme will apply to 128 subsidised routes citywide over the nine days, with passengers granted tickets according to route pricing but paying no fare.

A community centre within the Vietnam Village (Photo: VNA)

RoK locality hastens Vietnam Valley project

The K-Vietnam Valley project envisions an international exchange hub focused on culture, tourism and education, leveraging RoK-Vietnam cultural and historical links rooted in Bonghwa county.

UNFPA Representative in Vietnam Matt Jackson (Photo: UNFPA Vietnam)

UNFPA works to contribute to Vietnam’s health, demographic priorities

UNFPA supports the government of Vietnam to achieve its goals in areas such as maternal healthcare, gender equality, prevention of gender-based violence, population issues, including demographic data and Vietnam’s rapidly ageing population as well as sexual and reproductive health and youth empowerment.

Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh (left) extends New Year greetings to former State President Truong Tan Sang. (Photo: VNA)

PM extends Tet greetings to former Party, State leaders

The PM also affirmed that in line with the consistent policy of the Party and State, the Government has paid special attention to ensuring a warm and caring Tet for all, with the spirit of “leaving no one behind.”

A rest stop along the North–South expressway’s eastern section (Photo: VNA)

More expressway rest stops ready for Tet travel peak

To meet rising travel demand during the coming Lunar New Year (Tet) holiday, the VRA reported that several rest areas along segments of the North–South expressway’s eastern section have completed essential public service facilities and commenced operations.

Visitors at the photo exhibition “The Sea Within Us” (La mer en nous) at the City Hall of Châteaudun. (Photo: VNA)

Love for Vietnam’s seas and islands spreads among French friends

The exhibition in France guides visitors through the beauty of the East Sea - not only vast and rich in resources, but also deeply intertwined with the cultural and spiritual life of coastal communities. Through simple yet evocative images, everyday scenes of labour are vividly portrayed, from offshore fishing and seafood trading at the wharves to rustic bamboo boats closely associated with fishing villages.

Noi Bai International Airport activates plans to accommodate rising passenger volumes during the 2026 Tet holiday. (Photo: VietnamPlus)

Transport plans ready for Lunar New Year peak

Surveys of airlines and interprovincial coach operators show that despite added trips and expanded capacity, most services are fully booked on peak days close to Tet and the post-holiday return period.

Vice Chairwoman Nguyen Thi Thanh visits Vietnamese Heroic Mother Nguyen Thi Thom. (Photo: VNA)

NA Vice Chairwoman presents Tet gifts in Ninh Binh province

Thanh handed over 1,564 gift packages, each worth 1 million VND (about 37 USD), to policy beneficiary families, the poor and those in difficult circumstances. The gifts were distributed through the provincial Vietnam Fatherland Front Committee, socio-political organisations, relevant associations and local authorities.

Japanese Ambassador to Vietnam Ito Naoki (first row, left) and UNICEF Representative in Vietnam Silvia Danailov exchange the notes at the ceremony. (Photo: VNA)

Japan, UNICEF join hands to strengthen children’s resilience to natural disasters, climate change

Natural disasters in Vietnam have been increasing in both frequency and intensity. Typhoon No.3 in 2024 (Yagi), along with severe floods, inundation and landslides in 2025, caused significant human and material losses. This underscores the need for targeted and sustainable investments in disaster risk reduction and early warning, particularly for children and vulnerable communities.