Family ties make Danish Faroe women Europe's top baby makers

A woman poses on 3 June 2018 in a traditional Faroese outfit during a festival in Klaksvík, on the island of Borooy, one of the Faroe Islands located between the North Atlantic Ocean and Norwegian Sea. Photo: AFP
A woman poses on 3 June 2018 in a traditional Faroese outfit during a festival in Klaksvík, on the island of Borooy, one of the Faroe Islands located between the North Atlantic Ocean and Norwegian Sea. Photo: AFP

Gunnhild Helmsdal's mailbox has six names printed on it and will soon add a seventh: having a big family is nothing unusual in the Faroe Islands where women have the most babies in Europe despite also having the highest rate of employment.

The economically prosperous and autonomous Danish territory in the middle of the North Atlantic Ocean has had the highest birth rate in Europe for decades, with around 2.5 children per woman, according to World Bank figures.

In the rest of Europe, women usually give birth to less than two children on average, its data shows.

When Helmsdal, 41, gives birth to her fourth child a few weeks from now her family will grow to seven members, including her husband and his daughter from a previous union.

"Children are the greatest gift of all, I think. I've always wanted to have several kids," Helmsdal, who is a doctor, tells AFP at her home.

Gunnhild Helmsdal (L) and her husband Eli Joensen (R) have diner with their children at their home on 5 June 2018 in Hoyvik, on the Streymoy Island, the largest of Faroe Islands in this Atlantic ocean archipelago nation. Photo: AFP
Gunnhild Helmsdal (L) and her husband Eli Joensen (R) have diner with their children at their home on 5 June 2018 in Hoyvik, on the Streymoy Island, the largest of Faroe Islands in this Atlantic ocean archipelago nation. Photo: AFP

"Large families are maybe a bit chaotic but, in the end, happy families," she says, with a smile while her two-year-old son Brandur seeks her attention. His name means "sword" or "fire" in the Old Norse language.

Her two neighbours, who live across the street in this residential area of Hoyvik, near the capital Torshavn, have six and seven children respectively.

- Shortage of women -
The archipelago has long suffered from a deficit in women as many have emigrated since World War II and not returned.

The trend has changed in the last five years as the job market, which was historically heavily focused on fishing, has diversified.

Faroese society, traditionally dominated by conservative values, has also become more liberal -- same-sex marriage was legalised on 1 July 2017.

When asked about the reason for its remarkable fertility rate, locals often jokingly say: "There's nothing else to do here."

However, the throwaway remark does not reflect the reality: participation in the Faroese labour force is the highest in Europe, especially among women, according to Hans Pauli Strom, a sociologist at Statistics Faroe Islands.

Eighty-three per cent of the Faroese hold a job, compared to 65 per cent in the European Union -- of which the territory is not a member -- and 82 per cent of Faroese women work, compared to 59 per cent in the bloc.

More than half of Faroese women work part-time, Strom said, adding that "it's not because they're struggling to find a full-time job but a preference and a life choice".

A picture taken on 4 June 2018 shows old houses with vegetal roofs in the old city of Torshavn, on the Streymoy Island, the largest of Faroe Islands in this Atlantic Ocean archipelago nation. Photo: AFP
A picture taken on 4 June 2018 shows old houses with vegetal roofs in the old city of Torshavn, on the Streymoy Island, the largest of Faroe Islands in this Atlantic Ocean archipelago nation. Photo: AFP

Local authorities highlight favourable social measures to partly explain the phenomenon: a 46-week parental leave, which authorities want to extend to one year, abundant and affordable kindergartens and tax allowances, among others.

Incidentally, taxes on seven-seat vehicles were reduced a few years ago.

- SOS families -
Faroese family policies may seem generous compared to the rest of Europe, but they are not very different from the measures in place elsewhere in the Nordic region, where fertility and labour activity are significantly lower.

So what is the secret to their formula?

A child poses on 3 June 2018 in a traditional Faroese outfit during a festival in Klaksvík, on the island of Borooy, one of the Faroe Islands located between the North Atlantic Ocean and Norwegian Sea. Photo: AFP
A child poses on 3 June 2018 in a traditional Faroese outfit during a festival in Klaksvík, on the island of Borooy, one of the Faroe Islands located between the North Atlantic Ocean and Norwegian Sea. Photo: AFP

The Faroese have an extremely strong family bond and they live very close to each other, making it easier to get extra help from relatives, say sociologist Strom, as well as residents.

"In our culture, we perceive a person more as a member of a family than as an independent individual," Strom said.

"This close and intimate contact between generations makes it easier to have children," he said, adding religion only played a marginal role.

Working up to 50 hours per week at her own medical practice, Gunnhild Helmsdal often worries she won't be able to leave on time to pick up her children.

Luckily, her parents are a last-minute phone call away from helping out and taking the children to their activities.

"Because we have such close family ties, we help each other a lot... my parents live only a five- to 10-minute walk from here, so that helps," she says with a chuckle.