December 18, 2009 in Nation/World

Americans adopting fewer foreign children

David Crary Associated Press
 
File Associated Press photo

An unidentified woman holds a child for adoption as she waits outside the attorney general’s office in Guatemala City, Guatemala, in May 2008.
(Full-size photo)

Most sources show decline

The top 10 source countries for U.S. foreign adoptions in fiscal year 2009, with the new number followed by the number for 2008:

China: 3,001, down from 3,909

Ethiopia: 2,277, up from 1,725

Russia: 1,586, down from 1,861

South Korea: 1,077, up from 1,065

Guatemala: 756, down from 4,123

Ukraine: 610, up from 457

Vietnam: 481, down from 751

Haiti: 330, up from 302

Kazakhstan: 295, down from 380

India: 297, down from 307

NEW YORK – The number of foreign children adopted by Americans plunged more than a quarter in the past year, reaching the lowest level since 1996 and leading adoption advocates to urge Congress to help reverse the trend.

Big declines were recorded for all three countries that provided the most adopted children in the previous fiscal year. In China and Russia, government officials have been trying to promote domestic adoptions, while in Guatemala, a once-bustling but highly corrupt international adoption industry was shut down while reforms are implemented.

Figures for fiscal year 2009, released by the State Department on Thursday, showed 12,753 adoptions from abroad, down from 17,438 in 2008 – a dip of 27 percent and nearly 45 percent lower than the all-time peak of 22,884 in 2004.

The last time there were fewer foreign adoptions to the U.S. was in 1996, when there were 11,340.

China was the No. 1 source country in 2009 – but U.S. adoptions from there dropped to 3,001, compared with 3,909 in 2008. China has been steadily cutting back the numbers of healthy, well-adjusted orphans being made available for adoptions; a majority of Chinese children now available to U.S. adoptive families have special physical or emotional needs.

Guatemala was the No. 1 source country in 2008, with 4,123 adoptions by Americans. But the number sank to 756 for 2009, virtually all of them in the final few months before the Central American country’s adoption industry was shut down while authorities drafted reforms. It’s not known when adoptions to the U.S. will resume.

Chuck Johnson, chief operating officer of the National Council for Adoption, said the new figures dismayed him and other advocates of international adoption.

“This drop is not a result of fewer orphans or less interest from American families in adopting children from other countries,” he said. “All of us are very discouraged because we see the suffering taking place. We don’t know how to fix it without the U.S. government coming alongside.”

© Copyright 2009 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

No comments on this story so far. Add yours!

    You must be logged in to post comments.
    Please create a profile or log in here.