Live births
There were 64,340 live births registered in New Zealand in the December 2008 year, up 300 (less than 1 percent) from the December 2007 year. The latest figure is 10 percent higher than the annual average of 58,300 births per year over the last decade, when the number of births varied from a low of 54,020 in the December 2002 year to this year's high of 64,340.
The highest number of births registered in any December year was 65,390 in 1961. At that time New Zealand's population numbered just 2.5 million, compared with 4.3 million in 2008.
During the December 2008 year, the births of 33,100 boys and 31,240 girls were registered to mothers resident in New Zealand. Normally, there are more boys born than girls, with an average of 105 boys born for every 100 girls.
Live births registered in the December 2008 quarter totalled 15,830, a decrease of 200 (1 percent) compared with the December 2007 quarter (16,030).
Annual fertility rates
Annual fertility rates for the December 2008 year indicate that New Zealand women averaged 2.18 births per woman, up from 2.17 in the December 2007 year and equal to the most recent peak in the December 1990 year. The level required by a population to replace itself in the long term, without migration, is 2.1 births per woman. However, fertility rates of close to or higher than 2.1 births per woman need to be sustained over many years before 'replacement level' fertility can be claimed. Since 1980, fertility in New Zealand has been slightly below the replacement level, with the exception of short periods around 2008 and 1990.
Despite the recent upturn, New Zealand's total fertility rate has been relatively stable over the last three decades, averaging 2.01 births per woman. During this period, the total fertility rate varied from 2.18 births per woman in 1990 and 2008 to 1.89 in 1998 and 2002. In contrast, during 1949–1978 women averaged 3.44 births, with the fertility rate peaking at 4.31 births per woman in 1961 and then dropping to 2.07 in 1978.
A number of other low-fertility countries have experienced slight recoveries in their fertility rates in recent years, including Australia (up from 1.7 births per woman in 2001 to 1.9 in 2007), England and Wales (up from 1.6 in 2001 to 1.9 in 2007), Denmark (up from 1.7 in 2002 to 1.8 in 2007) and Sweden (up from 1.5 in 1999 to 1.9 in 2007). France's total fertility rate hovered around 1.9 births per woman between 2000 and 2005, but rose to 2.0 in 2007.
The current upturn in fertility is not expected to continue. Statistics New Zealand's mid-range population projections (series 5) assume that the total fertility rate will average 2.09 births per woman in the five-year period 2007–2011, dropping to 2.00 in 2012–2016, then to 1.94 in 2017–2021, 1.91 in 2022–2026 and 1.90 thereafter.
Fertility rates and mother's age
In the December 2008 year, 88 percent of babies were born to mothers aged 20–39 years. Compared with the December 2007 year, there were more births to women in most age groups, except those aged under 15 years, 30–34 years and 40–44 years. In 2008, women aged 30–34 years still had the highest fertility rate (126 births per 1,000 women aged 30–34 years), followed by those aged 25–29 years (112 per 1,000) and 20–24 years (78 per 1,000). In 1968, women aged 20–24 years had the highest fertility rate (218 per 1,000), followed by those aged 25–29 years (208 per 1,000) and 30–34 years (107 per 1,000).
Between the 1998 and 2008 December years, fertility rates for women of all ages increased: those aged 30–34 by 17 percent and those aged 35–39 by 50 percent. However, between 2007 and 2008, fertility rates for women aged 25–29 and 30–34 decreased by 1 percent. Fertility rates for women aged 40–44 years dropped from around 20 births per 1,000 in the early 1960s to around 4 per 1,000 in the mid-1980s, before increasing to 14 births per 1,000 in 2008. Among women aged 40–44 years who registered a baby in the December 2008 year, around two-thirds were aged 40 or 41 years. In the December 2008 year, the fertility rate for women aged 15–19 years was 33 births per 1,000, half the 1968 rate (66 per 1,000). Among women aged 15–19 years who registered a baby in the December 2008 year, around two-thirds were aged 18 or 19 years.
On average, New Zealand women now have children about five years later than their counterparts in the mid-1960s. The median age (half are younger and half older than this age) of New Zealand women giving birth is now 30 years, compared with 25 years in 1968. Although there has been a significant increase in the median age since the 1970s, it has been relatively stable (around 30 years) since 2002.
Fertility rates by single year of age
Analysis of fertility by single year of age gives additional insight into changes in fertility over the last 40 years. In 1968, the total fertility rate was 3.34 births per woman. Women aged 24 years had the highest fertility rate (254 births per 1,000 women aged 24 years) followed closely by those aged 23 years (251 per 1,000). By 1988, fertility rates for women of all ages had fallen and the total fertility rate had dropped to 2.10 births per woman. Rates for women aged under 25 years where around half the 1968 levels. Decreases in the number of births to women aged under 25 years accounted for around 60 percent of the drop in the total fertility rate. In 1988, women aged 27 years had the highest fertility rate (153 per 1,000), followed closely by those aged 26 and 28 years (both 150 per 1,000).
Since 1988 there has been little change in the total fertility rate (2.18 in 2008 compared with 2.10 in 1988). However, there has been a significant change in the age-specific fertility rates. Fertility rates have continued to drop for women in their twenties. In contrast, rates for women aged 30 years and over have increased since 1988. Women aged 32 now have the highest fertility rate (131 per 1,000) just topping women aged 30 and 31 years (both 130 births per 1,000). Fertility rates for women aged between 31 and 41 years are now higher than in 1968, but rates have declined for all other ages.
Single-year-of-age fertility rates also show variation in fertility within age groups, especially for women beginning or nearing the end of the childbearing years. For example, there were 33 births per 1,000 women aged 15–19 years in 2008. However, within this age group, fertility rates increase with age, from 5 births per 1,000 women aged 15 years, to 65 births per 1,000 women aged 19 years. Conversely, for women aged 40–44 years there is a significant decline in fertility with increasing age, from 28 per 1,000 at age 40 years to 4 per 1,000 at age 44 years. The average rate for the age group is 14 births per 1,000 women aged 40–44 years.
Mother's age at first birth
The median age of women giving birth to their first child (based on children in the current relationship only) was 28 years in the year ended December 2008 and has been relatively stable over the last decade. In 2008, women aged 20–24 years made up 23 percent of women having their first birth, compared with 13 percent of women who had had a previous birth. One-quarter (25 percent) of first-time mothers were aged 25–29 years and 23 percent were aged 30–34 years, compared with 23 and 33 percent, respectively, for women who had had a previous birth.
Births by ethnicity
The 2006 Census showed that 10 percent of the census usually resident population identified with more than one ethnic group. Birth registrations for the December 2008 year show that 13 percent of mothers and 25 percent of babies identified with more than one ethnic group. This suggests that younger generations are becoming increasingly multicultural. Two-thirds of Māori babies and one-half of Pacific babies belonged to multiple ethnic groups, compared with just under one-third of babies within the European and Asian ethnic groups.
In the December 2008 year, the European ethnic group gained 44,530 babies, Māori 18,840, Pacific peoples 10,120, Asian 7,260, MELAA (Middle Eastern, Latin American and African) 1,170 and Other (including New Zealanders) 560.
The total fertility rate for Māori women in the December 2008 year was 2.95 births per woman, up from 2.94 in 2007 and 2.56 in 1998, and well above the rate for the total population (2.18 births per woman). In the December 2008 year, there were 14,840 live births registered to Māori women. Māori women giving birth tend to be younger, with a median age of 26 years in the December 2008 year. The median age for Pacific, Asian and European women was 27, 30 and 31 years, respectively.
Regional births
The Auckland region had the highest number of births in the December 2008 year (23,110), accounting for 36 percent of all live births registered in New Zealand. This region was followed by Canterbury (7,280), Wellington (6,970) and Waikato (6,420). Together, these four regions accounted for just over two-thirds of all live births registered in the December 2008 year. This is consistent with their share of New Zealand's estimated resident population.
Births increased in 11 regions during the December 2008 year when compared with the December 2007 year. Ten regions had higher percentage increases in birth numbers than the average for New Zealand (less than 1 percent). These regions were West Coast (up 12 percent), Marlborough (up 11 percent), Gisborne (up 3 percent), Waikato (up 3 percent), Manawatu-Wanganui, Hawke's Bay and Bay of Plenty (all up 2 percent), and Wellington, Otago and Tasman (all up 1 percent). Waikato had the highest numerical increase (up 190), followed by Auckland (up 110).
Deaths and longevity
Deaths registered during the December 2008 year totalled 29,190, up from 28,520 in the December 2007 year. There were 14,540 male deaths and 14,650 female deaths.
Deaths continue to be increasingly concentrated in the older age groups. The median age at death in the December 2008 year was 77 years for males and 83 years for females, compared with 72 for males and 78 for females in 1988. Only 5 percent of the deceased were aged under 40 years in the December 2008 year, compared with 9 percent in 1988.
The crude death rate (deaths per 1,000 mean estimated resident population) was 6.8 in the December 2008 year, down from 6.9 in 1998. Because the crude death rate is influenced by the age structure of the population, it does not provide a true measure of the trends in mortality. For example, the crude death rate for the Māori population was 4.4 in the December 2008 year, much lower than the total population. This lower rate is due to the much younger age structure of the Māori population. Only 4 percent of the Māori population is aged 65 and over, compared with 13 percent for the total population.
Age-standardised death rates provide an alternative summary of the mortality experience of populations with very different age structures. They are calculated by applying the age-specific death rates of the subject populations to a standard population. They give the overall death rate that would have prevailed in a standard population if it had experienced the age-specific death rates of the subject populations. Using the mean estimated population for the December 1961 year as the standard population results in a standard death rate for the total population of 4.1 deaths per 1,000 mean estimated population for the December 2008 year. In comparison, the standardised death rate for the Māori population is 7.0 per 1,000. This means that once the younger age structure of the Māori population is taken into account, the Māori death rate is significantly higher than that of the total population. Standardised death rates for both the Māori and total populations have dropped over the last 40 years, down from 9.0 and 15.4 per 1,000, respectively, in the December 1968 year.
It is important to note that standardised death rates can only be used to compare mortality trends for populations that have been standardised against the same standard population. Life tables give a more accurate and detailed description of the mortality experience across populations and time.
According to the latest complete New Zealand Period Life Tables: 2005–2007, a newborn girl can expect to live, on average, 82.2 years, and a newborn boy, 78.0 years. These levels represent longevity gains since 2000–2002 of 1.0 years for females and 1.7 years for males. While female life expectancy is still higher than male life expectancy, their longevity gap has narrowed from 6.4 years in 1975–1977 to 4.1 years in 2005–2007. Since 1975–1977, life expectancy at birth has increased by 9.0 years for females and 6.7 years for males.
Māori life expectancy is significantly lower than life expectancy for the total population. Life expectancy at birth for females of Māori ethnicity in 2005–2007 was 75.1 years, while for Māori males it was 70.4 years. The difference of about 7.4 years between Māori and the total population in 2005–2007 is slightly less than the difference of 7.6 years in 2000–2002.
Life tables for other ethnicities, such as the broad Pacific and Asian ethnic groups, have not been produced because of the small number of death registrations and the uncertainty associated with ethnic identification and measurement.
Infant mortality
During the December 2008 year, the number of infant deaths (under one year of age) registered in New Zealand totalled 320. The infant mortality rate (infant deaths per 1,000 live births) has dropped over the last 40 years. In the December 2008 year, the infant mortality rate was 5.0 per 1,000, down from 5.5 in the December 1998 year and 18.7 in 1968. The Māori infant mortality rate was 6.7 per 1,000 in the December 2008 year, down from 27.8 in 1968.
Neonatal deaths (under four weeks of age) made up 58 percent of infant deaths in the December 2008 year. The neonatal mortality rate (neonatal deaths per 1,000 live births) was 2.9 in 2008, down from 3.1 in the December 1998 year. The post-neonatal mortality rate (infant deaths over 27 days of age per 1,000 live births) dropped slightly, from 2.4 in 1998 to 2.1 per 1,000 in 2008.
Australia has also experienced a drop in infant mortality rates in the last decade. In 1997, New Zealand's infant mortality rate was 6.5 per 1,000 live births, compared with 5.3 per 1,000 in Australia. By 2007, New Zealand's infant mortality rate had dropped to 4.9 per 1,000 and Australia's rate had dropped to 4.2 per 1,000.
Scotland (4.7 per 1,000 live births), and England and Wales (4.8) had similar infant mortality rates to New Zealand's in 2007. However, a number of other low-fertility countries had lower infant mortality rates: Sweden (2.2), Finland (2.7), Norway (3.1), France (3.6) and Denmark (4.0).
Regional deaths
During the December 2008 year, there were 7,400 deaths of residents in the Auckland region. Although the Auckland region is home to approximately one-third of New Zealand's population, it only accounted for about one-quarter of New Zealand's deaths. This is due to the region's relatively young age structure. Only 10 percent of the Auckland region's population is aged 65 years and over, compared with 13 percent for the national population.
Based on the 2000–2002 abridged life tables for regions, life expectancy at birth across the regions ranged from 72.6 to 77.5 years for males and 78.9 to 82.2 years for females. The reasons for subnational differences in longevity and mortality are difficult to identify precisely and are probably due to a combination of interrelated factors, including the proportion of the population who are Māori, the proportion of the population who smoke (or have smoked), the proximity to health and hospital services, the degree of urbanisation and socio-economic factors.
More information about regional mortality can be found in Statistics NZ's report New Zealand Life Tables 2000–2002. Updated regional life tables will be released in the first half of 2009 as part of the report New Zealand Period Life Tables (2005–2007).
Natural increase of population
Natural increase of population represents the excess of births over deaths. Births outnumbered deaths by 35,160 in the December 2008 year. This is 1 percent lower than the 35,520 natural increase recorded in the December 2007 year. The 2007 figure was the highest since 1972 (38,410). The rate of natural increase was 8.2 per 1,000 mean estimated resident population in the December 2008 year, down from 8.4 per 1,000 in 2007. The 2006-base national population projections show that natural increase is likely to decline over the next 50 years. Deaths are projected to outnumber births from 2055.
All regions in New Zealand had more births than deaths in the December 2008 year. Auckland's natural increase (15,710) made up 45 percent of the national natural increase. Auckland's large share of New Zealand's natural increase is due to the small number of deaths relative to the number of births and the size of its population.
Final figures and revised demographic rates
The vital statistics and infant mortality rates for the December 2008 year quoted above, and contained in the appended tables, are final. Fertility rates and crude death rates for the December 2008 quarter and year are provisional. For further details see the technical notes of this release.
INFOS and Infoshare
The time series that were previously available only to subscribers in INFOS are now available free of charge in the new online database Infoshare. Vitals (births and deaths) series are listed under the category 'Population'.
Changes to tables
Statistics NZ has made changes to the Hot Off The Press tables. The major change is the discontinuation of quarterly numbers and rates. These include the quarterly birth and death counts, crude birth and death rates, infant mortality rate and total fertility rate. Current annual series (for March, June, December and December years) will continue to be published in the quarterly Hot Off The Press. Quarterly birth and death rates are no longer available because they do not accurately reflect seasonal changes, while quarterly birth and death counts are still available in Infoshare.
For technical information contact:
Anne Howard
Christchurch 03 964 8700
Email: demography@stats.govt.nz
Next release ...
Births and Deaths: March 2009 quarter will be released on 19 May 2009.