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This Week in AsiaLifestyle & Culture

Will Singapore’s birth rates get a boost in ‘auspicious’ year of the dragon?

  • A belief that those born in dragon years have ‘auspicious qualities’ has led many ethnic Chinese, in Singapore and the region, to try to conceive dragon babies
  • Singapore PM Lee Hsien Loong, in his annual Lunar New Year message, urged residents to welcome a ‘little dragon to your family’ this year

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A child poses with a dragon-shaped balloon at a market for Lunar New Year in Singapore. Photo: Xinhua
Kimberly Lim

While being a “dragon baby” – being born in the auspicious year of the dragon in the Chinese zodiac – has made her feel “special”, Singaporean Laura Lee, 24, said it came with a price: fiercer competition throughout her academic life.

“I like to read about [the Chinese zodiac] and check my fortune, so it’s quite fun but at the same time it’s quite annoying having so many people to compete with academically,” Lee said, pointing to the larger cohort sizes in primary and secondary schools due to a preference for dragon babies.

“We had two or three classes [in the cohort] more compared to our seniors,” she said.

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Like Lee, Stephanie Ho, 37, who is eight months pregnant with her second child, is also worried that her child would have to compete with more people in school.

People pass the God of Fortune statue and dragon sculpture, as part of festive decorations welcoming the Lunar New Year 2024, Year of the Dragon, among the Supertrees at Gardens By The Bay in Singapore. Photo: Reuters
People pass the God of Fortune statue and dragon sculpture, as part of festive decorations welcoming the Lunar New Year 2024, Year of the Dragon, among the Supertrees at Gardens By The Bay in Singapore. Photo: Reuters

Ho, a teacher, said there would typically be “at least one more class” for primary school kids born in past dragon years – such as 1988, 2000 and 2012.

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