One-tenth of babies born to Maltese and foreign parents
In 2014, 431 children were born to couples made up of a Maltese-born parent and the other parent born in another country
Malta’s latest demographic review reveals that in 2014, 431 children were born to couples made up of a Maltese-born parent and the other parent born in another country.
80 babies were born to families in which either the mother or the father was African. The number of babies born to such “mixed” couples amount to 10% of the total number of children born in 2014.
The latest demographic review published by the National Statistics Office shows that 15% of all new-borns in 2014 had a parent born in another country. Of these 6% had a parent born in another EU country while 5% had a parent born in an African country.
A total of 627 babies had a foreign mother while 608 had a foreign father.
A total of 151 babies were born to families in which both parents hailed from an African country, 61 had an African father and a Maltese mother and 19 had an African mother and a Maltese father. This gender imbalance reflects the fact that most migrants from Africa arriving in Malta over the past years were males.
In contrast, while 46 babies were born to couples consisting of mothers from non-EU European countries and Maltese fathers, only 16 were born to non-EU fathers and Maltese mothers.
This suggests that Maltese men are likelier to have children with women from the Balkans and Eastern Europe than Maltese women are to have children with men from the same regions.
122 babies were born to parents both of whom hailed from other EU countries while 116 had a Maltese father and a mother from another EU member state. 110 had a Maltese mother and a father from another EU member state.
Interestingly, the number of babies born to couples where both partners were born in an EU country (122) is lower than the number of babies born to couples where both parents were born in an African country (151).
The British and the Italians were the most likely Europeans to have children in Malta in 2014.
The statistics show that 177 children (4.2% of all births) were born to “unknown fathers”. Of these 155 had Maltese mothers, 12 had African mothers and eight had parents from other European countries. This represents a sharp decrease from the 352 babies born to unknown fathers in 2008.
Election babies?
In 2014 the lowest number of babies were born in January. The number of babies born in January 2014 (321) was the second lowest since 2006. This suggests a dip in conceptions in April 2013 – a month after national elections. In previous years the lowest number of babies were born in April and May, which suggests a dip in conceptions in the summer months.
On the other hand December 2013 saw the birth of 371 babies, the highest number born in this month since 2006. This suggests a spike in conceptions during election month (March 2013).
The largest number of babies (387) were born in September, which suggests that most conceptions occurred in December 2013. The second largest number of babies were born in March (385) followed by October (379).
NSO statistics show that November had the most births in 2007, 2009 and 2010 while October had most births in 2006, 2012 and 2013. September also had the most births in 2011. This suggests that conception in Malta is most likely to occur in the winter months between December and February
But the number of babies born in March was the highest since 2008 and the second highest in the past decade. This suggests a spike in conceptions in June 2013.
Villages in decline
A number of Maltese locations are losing more people through death than gaining through birth.
These include the capital city Valletta, which lost 83 of its inhabitants in 2014, with just 45 new births to make up only partially for that loss, and Floriana which saw 18 births and 33 deaths.
Other towns in decline include Cottonera localities like Birgu and Isla where only 16 were born to make up for the 31 who died. Santa Lucija, Malta’s closest equivalent to British post war council housing, is also in decline, losing 28 of its residents and gaining only 19.
Marsa, Bormla and Sliema also saw more deaths than births. But while new entrants are compensating for the population decline in Sliema, the Cottonera towns are in decline. Mdina was the only Maltese locality not to register one single birth in 2014.
On the other hand the old capital lost three of its minuscule population. San Lawrenz in Gozo registered the second lowest number of births (three) while losing six of its residents.
Mixed Maltese
Babies born in 2014 to couples, who were a Maltese and a foreign spouse
| Place of origin of non-Maltese spouse | Number of babies born |
|---|---|
| EU | 226 |
| Africa | 80 |
| Other European | 62 |
| Asia | 46 |
| America | 11 |
| Oceania | 6 |
| Total | 431 |
