Why the Rich World is Dying and How to Save It

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Money & Macro

Money & Macro

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 4 800
@MoneyMacro
@MoneyMacro Жыл бұрын
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@zhcultivator
@zhcultivator Жыл бұрын
Interesting video, I think free childcare, a sustainable work-life balance, more affordable housing, and a communitarian natalist religious revival across Global North countries or the ''rich world'' could help a lot.
@carkawalakhatulistiwa
@carkawalakhatulistiwa Жыл бұрын
what an irony, the richer a country, the more expensive it is to have children (society standard)
@carkawalakhatulistiwa
@carkawalakhatulistiwa Жыл бұрын
This video data does not count children out of wedlock (haram) where in many western countries it covers 30%. whereas in Asia it is something that is taboo. you have to get married (expensive). so the birth rate is lower than the west
@carkawalakhatulistiwa
@carkawalakhatulistiwa Жыл бұрын
This video does not include data on woke feminists, the social media movement for divorce, the movement for not marrying (South Korea), LGBTQ abortion and dating culture. access to birth control devices .effect on birth rates rate.
@drfelren
@drfelren Жыл бұрын
A massive factor is that the marriage rate has been in decline for decades now. Less marriages equals less families and so, less babies.
@untitledmixture1531
@untitledmixture1531 Жыл бұрын
I'm from Uzbekistan, we don't have any problems regarding reproduction. People get married early and have kids. The problem is that parents don't really consider or think about future of the kids like education or housing. Our parents' retirement plan is us, meaning kids. I myself came to South korea to study but I had to quit cuz of financial difficulties. There you go, rich people have 1 child, educated and provided. Poor people have 5 broke-ass kids and they will work for rich kids.
@Plukard
@Plukard Жыл бұрын
Lol, i've never seen 5 kids family in cities (Samarkand, Tashkent). Only in rural areas it's normal to have so much kids. In cities it is 2-3 i guess. And in very rare occasions it is 4. But statistics says that birth rate in cities and rural areas almost the same. I think the problem is that we don't know what they consider cities in statistics.
@Energine1
@Energine1 Жыл бұрын
Rich kids who are sad and lonely and have no real family which exacerbates as they age. Whos rich now?
@kingkamaro9442
@kingkamaro9442 Жыл бұрын
​​@@Energine1 How do you know that rich kids are sad and lonely in general? Where is the poll proving that?
@Plukard
@Plukard Жыл бұрын
@@Energine1 is this how you try to console yourself?
@dinglshingle
@dinglshingle Жыл бұрын
and that is a perfect society, the many will serve the few /s
@mrrolandlawrence
@mrrolandlawrence Жыл бұрын
the cost of property is a major factor. the idea of having a family where 1 parent looks after the children full time seems lavish today.
@aminek7693
@aminek7693 Жыл бұрын
Israel has the highest fertiliy rate by far among developed countries, and its property price to income ratio is much higher than european countries or even the USA. It has little to do with property price
@sawyersprott
@sawyersprott Жыл бұрын
That’s what me and my wife are currently, and plan on continuing to do. As long as you make certain sacrifices, and are willing to have your wife care for your children/family instead of working for a boss, it’s totally possible. Also, living in a lower cost of living area plays a huge role in affordability. I bought our house when I was 22 (currently 25). I grew up near Austin, and realized pretty quickly that there was just no way I’d ever be able to buy a house nearby where I grew up. We are also planning on homeschooling, and hope for 5 children (currently on #1), so it’s not like she wouldn’t be doing anything for 7-8 hours a day while the kids would be at school, so she’ll be more “productive” that way I guess.
@aquaxbat
@aquaxbat Жыл бұрын
@@sawyersprott your wife is eager to live the life you described? How old is she?
@aquaxbat
@aquaxbat Жыл бұрын
@@aminek7693there’s a religious/cultural component to this scenario that likely overrides certain economic incentives.
@MoneyMacro
@MoneyMacro Жыл бұрын
In the studies I read they couldn't really find a clear pattern to support that property prices are a good factor to include. Which surprised me as well
@thetrainhopper8992
@thetrainhopper8992 Жыл бұрын
Another social norm in many Mexican families is that the grandparents help out with childcare. My grandparents (and their siblings) took care of me and my cousins after school when we were little. Which kept our parents from having to pay for child care until we started getting hobbies. Social norms extend beyond just the immediate family in some cultures.
@july9566
@july9566 Жыл бұрын
In Mexico we’re doing just fine jajaja
@auspiciouslywild
@auspiciouslywild Жыл бұрын
Good point. In richer countries where people may have jobs that are less physically demanding, people are retiring later, and as the population gets older (due to having less kids) there’s a push to increase retirement age even further. We had kids quite late and yet my mother isn’t retired yet. She’s just about to, but then since she had me late, and I had kids late, I don’t think her energy level and health would’ve made it easy to take care of the kids. Kindergarten here is cheap and amazingly good though so I’m not complaining
@floridaman318
@floridaman318 Жыл бұрын
Yes this is key. Ultimately it's not actually about money or wealth. It's the fact that the rich world tends be incredibly atomized and individualistic. There is no family cohesion, everybody is spread apart. People in the rich world don't know how to work together. We have all been duped into thinking we can do everything on our own as if we were all self sufficient ubermenschen.
@neocortex8198
@neocortex8198 Жыл бұрын
honestly old people have to work and thas a good example old folks that dont work or help out dont have a place in society
@erenkur3832
@erenkur3832 Жыл бұрын
Similar in Turkey, in big cities it is hard since they Migrate without their Parents. But in small cities, my grandparents took care of us, they had a house as a retirement investment but they were doing good with their income so lended the house to us, we need not pay for rent when I was young so. They lended us interest free money to buy our car and house. With familiy help my family were able to buy their houses etc early and send both children to universty etc. Since they both were working they only had two children but they could raise 4 if they want easily
@unfairlive2
@unfairlive2 Жыл бұрын
As a dutchy (almost 30 now) I'm well educated (university) and when the issue of children comes up the number 1 thing I always hear is that they would if they could own a house. If pressed on the matter, it's about the monthly expenses and space availability. Rent is just crushingly high, owning a house would be cheaper. Plus most rentals are tiny, raising children in them is unappealing. My parents are sitting on a large house, and they want to sell, but new tiny appartments cost the same as what they (think) they can sell their current home form, so they do not sell, and thus teh next generation can't get a nice big house. Housing seems to me to be an absolute factor, we have treated it like investment property and to make sure the price keeps going up, we stopped building nearly enough nice houses.
@castirondude
@castirondude Жыл бұрын
The Dutch baby boomers grew up with cheap houses. I lived in Friesland and the median house price in the 70's was probably some 5000 guilders. In fact my dad bought a house in the early 90's for 15,000 guilders which is about 6000 dollars. Now these same >100 year old houses are like 200-300k euros which is absolutely insane. That's like 50x the price in 20-25 years. Now even my dad is saying well "we need to limit new construction and keep open space" etc. Well that's easy for you to say but we let all these migrants in and they get social housing and meanwhile young people have to sell a kidney to even get a downpayment for a house.
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 9 ай бұрын
How irreponcible of your parrents. The parrents house must go to their children. Also yea its prity hard to have sex when your parrents are in the other room.
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 9 ай бұрын
@@castirondude Yes. If you banish 25% of the population housing prices will fall to be affordable again. Reduce demand, decrease price.
@gregoryturk1275
@gregoryturk1275 7 ай бұрын
@@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714Of course you are too good to be part of that 25% right?
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 7 ай бұрын
@@gregoryturk1275 I dont live in the Nederlands.
@blakedake19
@blakedake19 Жыл бұрын
Damn, this is dedication: having a baby, living with them for some years and then making a video about fertility rates. I'm joking, excellent video as usual!
@MoneyMacro
@MoneyMacro Жыл бұрын
Hehe. 5 months
@carkawalakhatulistiwa
@carkawalakhatulistiwa Жыл бұрын
​@@MoneyMacrothe Soviet Union is a country with upper middle income but has a fertility rate of 2.3. but when Russia became a poor country the fertility rate dropped to 1.2 during the 90s. answer why
@laurencefraser
@laurencefraser Жыл бұрын
@@carkawalakhatulistiwa I seem to recall there being a fairly established thing that in times of significant hardship and disruption, fertility rates and either drop sharply or rise a Lot, depending on exactly what sort of hardship and disruption is going on and why (if more hands to do the work will improve things, it ends to go up, if more mouths to feed will make things worse, it tends to go down, just for the very obvious ones).
@jasonquigley2633
@jasonquigley2633 Жыл бұрын
@@carkawalakhatulistiwa Russia didn't revert to agrarianism (where you can put your children to work in the fields), it remained an industrial economy, but extremely disfunctional. Hence, the material conditions for having children did not exist, and the fertility rate plunged. Meanwhile, in the Soviet era, there was a cradle to grave welfare state, and having children was generally cheap and easy (education was one of the things the USSR did relatively well), so fertility rates were fairly high.
@CaedenV
@CaedenV Жыл бұрын
I can imagine how that conversation went "hey honey, could I get your participation in a practical economics experiment"
@brighthope246
@brighthope246 Жыл бұрын
This may be a US-only perspective, or just something within my own friend group. But when it comes to childcare, I notice a difference in generations from my own experience. When I was growing up, my parents relied on my grandparents for childcare. Both sets. Full stop. What I have noticed now is that for those in my age group who are having kids, grandparents aren't as available. The grandparents are still working, or they are busy with their own lives. So that free resource isn't there anymore.
@demonicaxeman7264
@demonicaxeman7264 Жыл бұрын
I'm an American and I married a British woman back in 2010 and I moved to the UK to be with her. I became a stepdad as she had a daughter. My wife's parents were very involved in my stepdaughter's life so it allowed me and my wife to have a date almost every week. in 2012, she decided to move to the US. When we got to the US with her and my stepdaughter, the whole support system collapsed. I had family, but they would never help with childcare. Because everything was about the child and lack of external family support, we went years without a date and eventually destroyed our marriage. To this day, I never want to get married again, let alone ever have another child.
@noeltaylor3594
@noeltaylor3594 Жыл бұрын
​@@demonicaxeman7264Damn, sorry to hear that.
@brazensmusings2738
@brazensmusings2738 Жыл бұрын
Exactly, its hard in my country to see old people, eyeing us like sheep to put out little ones every now and then to satisfy their hopes and desires... Yes, they are a massive support system. My cousins who have children (14 and counting) make use of them fully and they don't mind at all.
@impressiion
@impressiion Жыл бұрын
In my case, my grandmother took care of me and my siblings after school while both my parents worked, having a child today is no longer so feasible, because my parents are still working, in addition to all the expenses involved in having a child. And the thought is emerging that it is not fair that elderly people who should rest in their old age have to take care of children.
@brazensmusings2738
@brazensmusings2738 Жыл бұрын
@@impressiion Yes, and that's the problem, the thoughts. We are turning overly individualistic and away from conventional humanistic desires in the pursuit of ever greater freedoms and time for ourselves rather than the family. Its a very narcissistic and self-centred approach to life without any expert or scientific basis. The collective has slowly been killed off. In fact, it has been turned into something demonic, as if communal and societal responsibilities and I dare say, restraints are draconic concepts. Essentially all this happened because we wanted less conflict in our lives so we opted for the economic systems to evolve without oversight. Allow them to fleece us, left, right and centre in exchange for the prospective prosperity they promised. Though it was short term. And now the stick to the carrot is so long that we are not trying to correct the transgression, instead clinging on to sustain what we have achieved. In the meantime, we found these values as worthy sacrifices. In some schools, it is thought that such was intended by the system. The thing is, as this happened in only couple of decades in the past, the human psyche and societal systems have not caught up nor will they. They are built on millennia worth of slow changes and maturity. That's why we talk about children, even if its a self induced one-child policy or no children at all. Both have very apparent negative outcomes as is known from the Chinese, Japanese and South Korean versions. But it does not stop us, because we are not enduring harsh consequences of it yet, though it will happen in my lifetime. Will see whether humanity will be as fast in recovering from it as it was fast in dropping time tested values. History though dictates that we will not endure until absolute catastrophe hits.
@mrparts
@mrparts Жыл бұрын
Lol. Every time an economist asks me that question I return the question back at them. “ why aren’t you and your spouse having 3-4-5 kids? “. 😂
@neocortex8198
@neocortex8198 Жыл бұрын
we need to have massive tax hikes on those with less kids especially retirees, id even argue banning retirement for anyone with at least 3 kids.
@NityaStriker
@NityaStriker Жыл бұрын
Elon Musk has 10 kids. 😂
@neocortex8198
@neocortex8198 Жыл бұрын
@@NityaStrikerBASED
@miguelcebriancarrasco1907
@miguelcebriancarrasco1907 Жыл бұрын
@@neocortex8198 how many kids do you have?
@AlxM96
@AlxM96 Жыл бұрын
​@@neocortex8198yeah that's a great idea, create a system where the majority of the people can barely live and also punish them for being unable to effectively bring children into the world and raising them. What we need is affordable housing, accessible education and healthcare, and welfare, for a functional society
@SystemBD
@SystemBD Жыл бұрын
The issue is that kids take time and a secure home, the same things young people struggle to find for themselves. Unless we give young people more time (e.g. 4 day work week, longer parental leaves, easier access to childcare, etc.) and a secure nest (an affordable home, job security, decent salary, etc.) these societies are simply going to destroy themselves. No matter how many immigrants you want to bring to a country with a failing social model... because, if they properly integrate, they'll just have a similar birthrate after 1-2 generations. And if they don't integrate and continue having too many kids... then you have big social problems that make people *not* have kids.
@jbmurphy4
@jbmurphy4 11 ай бұрын
We might have AI freeing up our time to have children in a generation or two but then a lower population would become desirable!
@clipkut4979
@clipkut4979 11 ай бұрын
@@jbmurphy4 Nope. The benefit of automation doesn't get passed on to the working class, it stays in the pockets of the company. Automation has already 10x productivity since the 70s, so technically we could have already afforded the workers to work less for the same money. But instead, we decided that all this benefit should go into the pockets of the shareholders and that's how we got billionaires, while everyone else worked just the same, if not harder doing new tasks that are not yet automated.
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 9 ай бұрын
@@jbmurphy4 How very naive. AI will result in people getting fired and poverty growing. And it will have no effect on the population exposion in the third world.
@domthiers6598
@domthiers6598 5 ай бұрын
​@@jbmurphy4clipkut makes a very good point, also the need for a stable and slightly increasing population is needed to keep economy growth through consumption, high numbers of people means many consumers
@АлексейПлакхин
@АлексейПлакхин 4 ай бұрын
​@@clipkut4979no we can't because this automatisation was only by name. Maintenance of those "automotised" systems required shitton of extraskilled labour. The only place where you actually can get more for the same price is AI and Biotechnology.
@myowncomputerstuff
@myowncomputerstuff Жыл бұрын
I think a strong reason why East Asian and Southern European countries don't invest as much in childcare facilities is because they tend to have some of the highest life expectancies in the world, leading to elder care facilities being a more pressing matter. Also the social norms of these two cultures expect grandparents to play a MUCH more active role in childcare. Higher life expectancy means more healthy grandparents, which means less demand for institutional childcare programs, which means less government investment in such programs.
@alessiogiuffrida6172
@alessiogiuffrida6172 Жыл бұрын
Italian here: you hit the point in full
@aleferrari227
@aleferrari227 Жыл бұрын
I'm also an Italian man and yes, what you wrote is true.
@TheValdevor
@TheValdevor Жыл бұрын
I'm from Spain and u nailed 👌👌
@Speedy300
@Speedy300 Жыл бұрын
Besides higher life expectancy, in Eastern cultures, family stay together and community helps with child rearing but in the West, it is about individualism and the nuclear family.
@robertleon4323
@robertleon4323 Жыл бұрын
​@@Speedy300The West is not the United States. I have only seen that individualistic lifestyle in the USA
@allenpradhan2063
@allenpradhan2063 Жыл бұрын
As an Indian I have seen this happen first hand. My great grandfather had 13 children, my grandfather has 5 and am the only child of my parents. As India as gotten richer the number of children families have has drastically reduced.
@kappaprimus
@kappaprimus Жыл бұрын
Always😂 my parents have like 10-15 first cousins while I have 4. My sister is my only sibling whereas both my parents have 2. And to Continue the trend, I plan to have no children😌👍
@qizhu6913
@qizhu6913 Жыл бұрын
However unfortunately India’s GDP per capita is still low and can’t be considered as rich country
@tylerclayton6081
@tylerclayton6081 Жыл бұрын
@@qizhu6913Yeah India is still a sh*thole but much richer than when I grew up there in the early 2000’s
@sidkings
@sidkings Жыл бұрын
Does that include UP and Bihar? 😂 I think your situation is definitely true for middle class, but the poor continue to have kids in the hope of getting a boy (the child sex is not revealed to avoid female infanticide) as result some people can have multiple girls before they stop at a boy.
@marlonbryanmunoznunez3179
@marlonbryanmunoznunez3179 Жыл бұрын
@@qizhu6913 But that's the point, this guy's demographic musings are bunk. Everywhere in the Global South you are starting to see the same phenomenon of slower demographic growth after a boom. That demographic boom is increasingly looking like an aberration not a normal to world demographics. It's a good thing actually. Less resource depletion and pressure over Earth's environment. If you see these demographic alarmists the only problems they point are economic in nature. The reason is Capitalist economy is not compatible with demographic contraction just eternal expansion. These guys twist themselves into pretzels to explain away this reality and that is Capitalism what is not working anymore.
@todo9633
@todo9633 Жыл бұрын
Cost of life is the real issue. As a Canadian about to enter the job market I have no clue how I'm expected to ever be able to afford a house and two whole children, even if I get married and split costs.
@eliasGreek1982a
@eliasGreek1982a Жыл бұрын
🇪🇺🇪🇺🇪🇺🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷🇬🇷👋👋 FEMINISM FETISH KINK IN RICH COUNTRIES ANTI DEPRESSANT PILLS
@algarve8287
@algarve8287 Жыл бұрын
This is a typical first-world issue related to overthinking and rationalizing. I bet with you that an immigrant from a more traditional country (India, Africa, Middle East, ....) will have 2-3 children easily having a very basic or even lower salary than yours..Because if people in Canada can't have children, what should a Brazilian, Moroccan, or Indian say? So it's cultural in a first instance, unless you really can't buy them to eat or get dressed....And this is rarely the case!
@gc.96
@gc.96 Жыл бұрын
@@algarve8287 maybe he doesnt want to have children in poverty ? not everyone wants to struggle in order to have kids
@beautifullights8484
@beautifullights8484 Жыл бұрын
@@algarve8287 You do realise it's completely possible to become homeless in Canada. It's not as if Africans don't understand finances.
@thedarkenigma3834
@thedarkenigma3834 Жыл бұрын
"Canada" is not a real "country".
@superhans2467
@superhans2467 Жыл бұрын
When traveling in the Austrian Alps I noticed how three generations live in a single farmstead. Grandparents would raise the grandchildren, where the parents would work. This seems to be a hybrid between the poor economy / rich economy model explained in this video. Personally I am rather charmed by this model, although it will probably not survive modern developments.
@blueodum
@blueodum Жыл бұрын
Notice also that most rich countries are highly urbanized, which increases the costs of raising children and often results in being isolated from extended family.
@klauspendl6950
@klauspendl6950 Жыл бұрын
As someone who originated from the Austrian Alps (but an expat since a long time), I would add that this kind of co-living is in my view (still) much more frequent in agricultural families (which often have plenty of space in farmhouses which previously had rooms for many labourers). However, agriculture only represents 3.5 percent of e.g. the Austrian workforce, so I would say it is rather an outlier. Another reason may be that daycare for pre-school children is much more difficult to find in the (still more traditionalist) countryside than in towns, so this kind of three generational co-living can come in handy. That is IF there is available space, which for most families is lacking due to exorbitant property prices and rents (due to tourism and scarcity of land in valleys).
@n.m6249
@n.m6249 Жыл бұрын
This model is why African people have big families
@unconventionalideas5683
@unconventionalideas5683 Жыл бұрын
It works this way in China, when people there still have families. That’s becoming less common because of how screwed up the economy of China is and the severity of crime and pollution.
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 9 ай бұрын
Oh it will survive, this is how those who will be alive 50 years from now will be raised. The birthrate isnt high enough but among those who dont practice it it will be even lower.
@Bleifuss88
@Bleifuss88 Жыл бұрын
Child on a poor farm for centuries: An investment that will start to pay off as soon as halfway grown up, save retirement plan Child in a modern urban society: A liability that costs money, time and nerves
@samuelroselli138
@samuelroselli138 Жыл бұрын
Exactly.
@muhammadhaque3448
@muhammadhaque3448 Жыл бұрын
This is still a factor in poor countries. In the urban centres and cities, the same pattern is seen in the labor, house work class.
@sinoroman
@sinoroman Жыл бұрын
question is. did the Roman Republic have a birth crisis when farmers were bankrupted and forced to move into the city?
@luk0904
@luk0904 Жыл бұрын
@Tracchofyre brilliant piece of history. Any books you can reccomend me on the matter?
@DudeWatIsThis
@DudeWatIsThis Жыл бұрын
And when the pensions system collapses eventually, my kids will take care of me, and you will be a starving, freezing old man.
@bealotcoolerifyoudid7217
@bealotcoolerifyoudid7217 Жыл бұрын
Living in japan for quite a while as a european i can tell you their approach to this problem is - non existing. Its a fricking nursery home and having even birth is extremely expensive let alone all the expenses down the road. Zero support from government they are busy making sure everything is great for corporate and elderly - since elderly are their voter base. Everywhere. Atrocious, really. No work/life balance also doesn't help. They are dying out and they did it to themselves.
@Mark-in8ju
@Mark-in8ju Жыл бұрын
White birthrates are below replacement level because of gynocentric divorce law and female economic empowerment. Now that divorce has catastrophic risk to a man’s wealth, men are avoiding marriage completely. When a woman has a career, she has few to no children. If you want to raise the white birthrate, these two obstacles must be removed. This means banning women from education and abolishing alimony and child support.
@henkvandervossen6616
@henkvandervossen6616 Жыл бұрын
One wonders why many younger people just are not leaving Japan to find a better life elsewhere
@bealotcoolerifyoudid7217
@bealotcoolerifyoudid7217 Жыл бұрын
@@henkvandervossen6616 They are trained to be japanese every step of the way. The stranglehold of old traditional way of behaving is immense. You can really think of it as a religion. And they are (for the most part) discouraged to do this. And often told they are useless and could not make the leap. (Their confidence and personal dignity is taken away early and replaced by ranks, ego, artifice authorities. Their individuality is crushed at school. Traditions do the rest.) It is truly a society of old and decrepit traditions. (Its getting better now, but with their unwillingness to change its going to take another 100 years) Just awful.
@robertnomok9750
@robertnomok9750 Жыл бұрын
@@henkvandervossen6616 They do. Japanese friend of my friend left Japan and married a guy from Turkey. But most japanese are timid. They cant and want look outside of the well. Parents, TV, goverment tell them to live as slaves. Just study and work. For god sake they have FEMALE\MALE ONLY universities let alone schools. Some young people have barely no chance to interact with opposite gender till 25+. And after that they have to work 6 days a week. No one including goverment wants you to have kids. Maternity leave? Prepare to insults and losing your job. Social welfare for children? Good luck.
@blueodum
@blueodum Жыл бұрын
@@henkvandervossen6616 Japan is much more insular than Europe or North America, and it works both ways - Japanese mostly wish to live among other Japanese.
@baron_mijail7752
@baron_mijail7752 Жыл бұрын
I'm Spanish and I can say that most people here don't have kids due to economical reasons. Housing unavailability and not being able to keep a home with one income are the main ones. You just can't expect youngsters living in a room to start building families.
@shatzco
@shatzco Жыл бұрын
It's either Spanish or Vanish
@ivannipaidea970
@ivannipaidea970 Жыл бұрын
¿Tus padres lo tuvieron más fácil que tú para tener hijos?¿Y tus abuelos?¿Tus bisabuelos?¿Tus tatarabuelos?¿Tus tatatarabuelos? ¿Que país es más rico: España o el Congo?¿España o la India?¿Donde se tienen más hijos? En España, los que más hijos tienen son los nacionales o los inmigrantes?¿Quienes son los más ricos y quienes los más precarios? Con muchos matices pero mayor desarrollo = menor natalidad
@millevenon5853
@millevenon5853 Жыл бұрын
You guys can invite Latin immigrants who share your culture
@blueodum
@blueodum Жыл бұрын
@@millevenon5853 Many are coming to Spain and many more will in the coming decades. They will replace the Spaniards who choose to emigrate, mostly to parts of Europe with lower unemployment.
@yucol5661
@yucol5661 Жыл бұрын
@@ivannipaidea970si. Tus abuelos lo tuvieron más fácil. La gente en países pobres lo tiene más fácil. Ya que sus hijos no son tan caros. Pero si vives en España del día moderno (o hasta en una ciudad en el Congo) los padres normales quieren darle una mejor vida a sus hijos. Y eso es mucho más caro que tener un hijo en los años de tus abuelos y solo pagar ropa y comida. La situación de cientos de millones de padres hoy no es como la situación como la de abuelos que parieron para sacar trabajadores. Hoy en día se tiene hijos para quererlos y darles una mejor vida, no para sacarles provecho económico como tú propones
@MofoMan2000
@MofoMan2000 8 ай бұрын
In the US, nothing will change as long as our politicians and their donors are doing well. There are extremely strong forces in this country working against any kind of social policies that would benefit average people. We pay the most of any country in the developed world for the worst healthcare. Childcare is so expensive, you actually save money by not working and watching the child yourself. Our nutrition is obscenely bad, our streets are dangerous for anyone outside a car, we have more guns than people leading to crazy amounts of shootings, we allow train companies to derail trains and poison communities, minimum wage hasn't been raised in 16 years and corporations have bought the government to make sure nothing improves. The USA is a hellhole, and if we want people to have kids then things need to improve.
@sinatra7407
@sinatra7407 5 ай бұрын
Your analysis are spot on. Do you know, the audited figure of gun massacre deaths are 42,000 deaths in I think 2021. Thats year after year of heartbreak for the families. USA is virtually disfunctional.
@juddyyoutube
@juddyyoutube Жыл бұрын
Condoms and birth control changed everything. I don't think people necessarily wanted to have a lot of kids in the past. It was just a lot harder to prevent. People got horny, had sex, and accidents happened. Now it's much easier to prevent unplanned children.
@almilall
@almilall Жыл бұрын
true also they had children to use them as workers on the farm etc
@almilall
@almilall Жыл бұрын
one of my friends has 9 siblings. his mom did not want to give birth to him and try to kill him while he was still in her womb. she and her husband are uneducated people so they dont know birth control
@aSome1
@aSome1 Жыл бұрын
not only this one you've quoted, but lots of cultural changes, risks regarding relationships for men in general and liberal values drifting away from the traditional ones...it looks like it was properly planned to reduce the world's population by force, I mean, no one wants to live in a "planet wide Kowloon", for sure, but neither want we to live in a world with a "last generation of elders" and men afraid of dating/marrying due to laws regarding relationships (alimony check, pension checks in which men pay most of the part and go to jail in case of not doing so, divorce bills in which you literally have to "pay a fee" just because your marriage/life with your girlfriend didn't go as expected)...
@valerietaylor9615
@valerietaylor9615 Жыл бұрын
People had to have a lot of children in the past, because so many of them died before their fifth birthdays.
@worndown8280
@worndown8280 Жыл бұрын
My grandmother had two kids. It wasnt difficult for them to plan it. On average American women, through most of American history have average around 3.1 children. Even during the early period they had more, but on average 3.1 children survived to adulthood.
@casteddu6740
@casteddu6740 Жыл бұрын
I live in a poor region in Italy where the fertility rate per woman is close to 0 While I believe this can be attributed also to the mentality of some people who simply do not wish to raise a child, the main issue is that here young people simply can't find a job neither afford an house for themselves. I know people who already in their 50's are still paying the loan for the house they live in and generally young people still live with their parents in their 30's or just move abroad. Yesterday I was talking to a friend that suggested building more houses could make them more affordable as their price would decrease but I am not totally convinced, especially because with the extreme levels of bureaucracy and taxation there is very little incentive for entrepreneurship.
@MrMonkeybat
@MrMonkeybat Жыл бұрын
You must mean below 1 you can't get a "fertility rate per woman below 0" unless they are sucking people into their wombs.
@LucasFernandez-fk8se
@LucasFernandez-fk8se Жыл бұрын
If you get rid of the pension system eventually the old people will die, Italy won’t have debt from paying for their asses and you can buy homes again once they die 🤷‍♂️
@greenSTEMforall
@greenSTEMforall Жыл бұрын
A fertility rate below zero would mean that the average woman kills someone else's kid and never gets pregnant. I think you meant to say the fertility rate is below two. The fertility rate is the average number of children that women have. How else could that go below zero?
@casteddu6740
@casteddu6740 Жыл бұрын
@@greenSTEMforall simply a lot of women just don't have children Most of the population is old people who already had children back in the days while the people that are in the age to have them today just won't, or in some cases move to other countries. I know the number is crazy but that's just how bad things are here
@duartesilva7907
@duartesilva7907 Жыл бұрын
It can't be below zero.. you can say that is maybe less than 0.5 babies per woman but not negative babies per woman..
@aditya-ml6km
@aditya-ml6km Жыл бұрын
A point to note is that India's fertility rate is 2.1 which is barely at the replacement level. And it is expected to go even further down as people have stopped marrying and having kids. The population of India will continue to rise as fewer people are dying due to an increase in life expectancy but after some decades India will witness a colossal decline in population once the boomers, Generation X, and millennials begin to die. For example - I am a single child to my parents and I am still unmarried (30M) and I have no plans to get married and have kids in the future.
@goncalocarneiro3043
@goncalocarneiro3043 Жыл бұрын
It is what Japan is facing now, pretty much. Many other countries will have this happen sooner or later in different intensities.
@shivaanrambally9611
@shivaanrambally9611 Жыл бұрын
That's only for the developed areas, in rural parts the avg family size is still like 5-8 kids.
@aditya-ml6km
@aditya-ml6km Жыл бұрын
@@shivaanrambally9611 The Indian average is 2.1 which includes urban and rural areas. Use your brain.
@m.s.8927
@m.s.8927 Жыл бұрын
In the case of India it will be more like in the western world, difficult but manageable. China and even more Korea are fucked
@mdaniel5384
@mdaniel5384 Жыл бұрын
India's newborns this year will be as many as newborns in Americas (both North and South) + Europe + Russia + Australia + New Zealand and Oceania. If Bangladesh and Pakistan are added, it's even funnier.
@davidmays8974
@davidmays8974 Жыл бұрын
My largest issue with this topic is why it's even considered a problem in the first place. The human population can't grow exponentially forever, it's an inevitability that we'd decrease in population at some point in time. Increasing forever without end is unsustainable, this is just the natural course of things taking route.
@LJinx3
@LJinx3 Жыл бұрын
This. From an environmental view, less people are great! Could our economies not adapt to no growth?
@shinichigojir12
@shinichigojir12 Жыл бұрын
It’s a problem from government’s point of view. Discounting social security issues, As you become smaller, you also have less leverage in global negotiations.
@NapoleonTrotski
@NapoleonTrotski Жыл бұрын
In a way, yes, but you could also argue than slow decline or stability in population is the ideal goal. A brutal decline will occurs if you have only 1 child (or less) per women
@kellharris2491
@kellharris2491 Жыл бұрын
But that's what happens when nobody can afford to have kids. The government just wants more labor. It's wants should come second to what the people need.
@vittoriadesiderato9216
@vittoriadesiderato9216 Жыл бұрын
@@kellharris2491 scusa, rifletti un attimo sul tuo pensiero. Io preferisco creare con le mie scelte una societa dove i lavori faticosi e degradanti siano fatti da macchine create e istruite da pochi abitanti colti. Io non voglio fare figli con l'idea che poi saranno costretti a una vita di miseria e rinuncie per servire una piccola elite. Questo non significa essere alruisti, ma solo creare nuovi schiavi che vivono solo per essere manodopera. Non penso sia giusto come accade ora, e continuare a fare così, solo perché si è sempre fatto, senza ragionare lo trovo profondamente sbagliato
@lours6993
@lours6993 Жыл бұрын
The differences in Europe are not just about social policies but social attitudes: I live in France where it is considered normal for professional women to have 2 - 3 children AND to hold down their jobs thanks to generous and generalised child and after school care; I have close friends in Germany and have noticed the opposite: if you have children there seems to be more of an expectation that you be at home and raise them and not 'outsource' the task. Guess who has the higher birth rate?
@ANEEAMA
@ANEEAMA Жыл бұрын
Further, a lot of jobs are now becoming hybrid, thanks to COVID. So, women can manage both family and career if adequate support system is there. The IT and finance sectors are the best example. Further, lot of women don't want more than two children, not due to career. Bringing up a child is stressful once they start to go to school. There was no social media 50 years back. Even the child is not safe inside the home today.
@indrinita
@indrinita Жыл бұрын
wow that's a great point! I live in Germany (but I'm Canadian) and they have incredibly regressive attitudes towards women, career and childcare here. I would have thought these attitudes would have been even worse in France, but it sounds like it's also counteracted by good and available child care. In many parts of Germany, childcare is almost impossible to access, partly because of reasons mentioned in the video (e.g. those working in childcare are paid very badly, and therefore there's not enough people working in this field).
@mam0lechinookclan607
@mam0lechinookclan607 Жыл бұрын
i never have noticed something like this in germany, most people send their kids very early into daycare. Daycare workers also get payed ok in comparison.
@lours6993
@lours6993 Жыл бұрын
@@mam0lechinookclan607 Not saying there is no day care there; I've just noticed a contrast with France in terms of attitudes towards raising children: France seems more open to a collective effort vs a more private effort, based on some observations.
@indrinita
@indrinita Жыл бұрын
@@mam0lechinookclan607 I have lived all over Germany and the availability of childcare is highly variable as well as the salaries/wages of those working in childcare. Friends/family of mine who live in NE or northern Germany don't seem to have so much of an issue with finding affordable or even free childcare in a formalized setting. In contrast, in southern and especially SW Germany childcare costs significantly more (if you can even find a spot) and those working in publicly funded facilities are paid middling - as in not really well in comparison to the cost of living in those locations, but not necessarily minimum wage. But "not minimum wage" doesn't mean "good salary". In most parts of eastern Germany childcare is relatively affordable and decent quality, but this also has historical reasons. Perhaps in the part of Germany you live in and in your circle, people don't have issues with finding and using childcare and somehow some of the workers don't get paid the worst. But I've lived all over Germany, and I can definitely say this situation is highly variable depending on where you are. The most sexist attitudes towards career women using childcare tend to be where childcare is hardest to access and/or is most expensive. In many places there, I've heard some women be called "Rabenmutter", which is frankly ridiculous and outrageous. On top of it all, no matter which way you cut it, childcare workers are definitely not paid enough such that it's an attractive field for many young people to get into, so they don't.
@C1K450
@C1K450 Жыл бұрын
In America at one point, one man’s income was enough to provide for a family of 4. Now it’s one man with 2 jobs and a woman with one full time job to provide for a family of 4.
@antinatalistwitch111
@antinatalistwitch111 Жыл бұрын
Does a system like that deserve for u to create more humans into it? No.
@MustraOrdo
@MustraOrdo Жыл бұрын
​@@antinatalistwitch111Preach. You don't give me the needed conditions to plant, I'll withhold my seed(s).
@danny-fu2zd
@danny-fu2zd Жыл бұрын
Not familiar of four but three
@momchi98
@momchi98 Жыл бұрын
@@antinatalistwitch111 Absolutely not, my fellow antinatalist.
@WR-NC-ASPL
@WR-NC-ASPL Жыл бұрын
Effect of feminism... feminism increased supply of workers and decreased their salary
@sproo6412
@sproo6412 Жыл бұрын
It almost seems like you could simplify the theory to simply the opportunity costs for the women of having a child. Poor countries don't have much in opportunity costs because there's not much opportunity in the first place. Rich countries generally have more opportunities including future career opportunities, so there's more to lose by having kids. Thus those with more available childcare (whether institutional or shared social) can lower those costs and hence see better fertility rates.
@BigHenFor
@BigHenFor Жыл бұрын
FYI The trade off in poor countries is a lower chance of surviving childbirth. Rural families have land and space if they are lucky, to house large families. As soon as they can migrate to the cities, the birthrate drops. As having lots of children in the city is actually an issue, as jobs and housing that make having lots of children possible is very expensive.
@YoutubeModeratorsSuckMyBalls
@YoutubeModeratorsSuckMyBalls Жыл бұрын
Basically. Women in rich countries basically become a man, while men don't find them attractive and don't want to marry them
@rake483
@rake483 Жыл бұрын
Many western countries are doing the opposite. They go for austerity and cut social programs like free child care. Then they complain about low fertility rate.
@RiskyDramaUploads
@RiskyDramaUploads Жыл бұрын
You will find that poor countries have just as much inequality (meaning potential "opportunities") as rich countries. "List of countries by income equality" says that richest 10% in India make 8.6 times the poorest 10%, which is less than the 18.5 to 14.0 ratio in the US but higher than the 6.9 in Germany. So arguably, there is a higher (relative) opportunity cost from having children in India than in Germany.
@hainleysimpson1507
@hainleysimpson1507 Жыл бұрын
But why do women complain about having to work nowadays and in their forties regret not having kids.
@khyeli
@khyeli Жыл бұрын
I’m turning 30 this year, and I’m still wondering how I can afford to have children. Both my partner and I are middle-class income earners. Our student loan debt accounts for 10% of our total wages, 40% goes towards mortgage and auto loans. Grocery prices have increased by 20%. It may seem like we have 30% left, but unfortunately, we always need to pay for unexpected expenses like car repairs and house maintenance. I’m living paycheck to paycheck with no savings, and i don’t want my children to experience the same financial situation as we’re currently facing.
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 9 ай бұрын
Yesterday I turned 23 and Ive never even had a job. There just arent any in the area and Im completely unwilling to abandon the place my ancestors have lived for 1000s of years.
@TheTrooper1878
@TheTrooper1878 8 ай бұрын
@@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 You know online jobs exist, right?
@gregoryferraro7379
@gregoryferraro7379 Жыл бұрын
I am the father of two children. My wife would like a third. In my heart of hearts, I would too. But that is NOT going to happen. Why? We can barely afford to live. Basic expenses are too high. We don't earn enough on two incomes. School is expensive. And childcare is extortion. We're in the US, and to expect the "government" or private enterprise to do anything productive about it in the near future is futile.
@henkvandervossen6616
@henkvandervossen6616 Жыл бұрын
I live nowadays mostly in Kenya as a retiree. To my astonishment and delight young(er) women seem eager to have me and my babies. Those children will grow up to be Europeans and will inherit a good future.
@konstantinrebrov675
@konstantinrebrov675 Жыл бұрын
Why would you ever send your children to school? Just home school, educate your children by yourself. I know you can do it. It's the job of a father to educate his kids.
@selenazamora4133
@selenazamora4133 Жыл бұрын
​@@konstantinrebrov675 I know a little english but, if we educate tour children in own house when they go to labour market.. what college degree will they have to get a regular job? and a good university education is very expensive, the salary is stagnant since time and the inflammation goes very fast
@konstantinrebrov675
@konstantinrebrov675 Жыл бұрын
​@@selenazamora4133 You don't have to go to school or college to get a good education for a career. A good university education can be for free, believe it! You don't have to pay anything. All the lectures from the university are available for free on KZbin. You can learn anything on your own, watch any lecture, read any textbooks on the internet for free. KZbin has videos about any topic, mathematics, physics, computer programming. The best US universities such as Stanford have their lectures on KZbin. There is no need to go anywhere or pay anything. You can get as good education as any university. But you need to create your own curiculum, you have to create your own learning plan. You have to know what is it that you need to learn, and what materials that you will use. You need to know how to google things, to find all the lectures and materials. You are responsible for your own education, you need to have the discipline, you need to have a dream, a purpose. This is not for the weak. If you need to be fed with a spoon, then go home. But I don't want to be a loser. If you are not among the best, then you are among the rest. That is not who I am.
@konstantinrebrov675
@konstantinrebrov675 Жыл бұрын
@@selenazamora4133 You don't need any degree to become a computer programmer. You just need enough discipline like a warrior to keep learning. It is possible to learn software engineering on your own, you don't have to go to university for it. And you can use university lectures on KZbin for free. But I do not like people who need to be forced with a stick or with a donut to do the work. Self discipline and the desire to learn must be from within.
@Khigha87
@Khigha87 Жыл бұрын
An issue I think about often is inflation. My grandma worked 8hrs a day as a single parent and raised 7 kids. My parents both worked my dad 8 hrs and my mom 12 as a nurse to raise 3 of us. The potatoes my grandma used to feed her family only required 8hrs a day as a single parent. But the potatoes to raise me and my siblings require 20hrs (would be 40hrs for 6 kids). The potatoes haven't changed but the cost to acquire them has, drastically. Which is weird because we're more advanced in farming and technology now which was supposed to reduce costs and increase yields through economies of scale, but the opposite has happened. Let's ditch the technology and go back to the old affordable ways. The majority of us are not benefiting from the new ways. What is inflation and who benefits from it? Where is it located exactly and why are we all so accepting of it. A practical discussion is required not textbook justifications, we don't live in textbooks.
@mohdshariq5814
@mohdshariq5814 Жыл бұрын
I agreed
@marcinski5201
@marcinski5201 Жыл бұрын
ITS TOOO MANY PEOPLE on Earth Stop believing in stupid propaganda
@johnbrown7911
@johnbrown7911 Жыл бұрын
I was going to bring up the devaluing of the nations currency (inflation). My dad had 9 siblings, I have 3 siblings and amoungst us we have zero kids (we are all in our 30s).
@jaideepshekhar4621
@jaideepshekhar4621 Жыл бұрын
Inflation is because the rich are taking money from us. Earlier, they actually used to reinvest in the market. Not the case anymore.
@marcinski5201
@marcinski5201 Жыл бұрын
@@johnbrown7911 and somehow its 8 billion people in the world ... still remember "only" 6 billion
@AceChina
@AceChina Жыл бұрын
You're map needs to include Greece, Taiwan and Poland. They have a birth rate lower than mainland China. Tbf a lot of Western countries would probably be even lower if it wasn't for immigration.
@yytyytg
@yytyytg Жыл бұрын
​@@secretname4190immigrant increase fetility but decrease the quality of the citizen. Lot of them dont know how to function in a society which eventually led to disassemble of social struture.
@shaileshvaidya9865
@shaileshvaidya9865 Жыл бұрын
Greece is not rich country... they have huge debt per citizen and was saved by EU. Taiwan soon may become part of China.
@bader3677
@bader3677 Жыл бұрын
@@secretname4190 How?
@MoneyMacro
@MoneyMacro Жыл бұрын
Greece and Poland where quite a bit higher in my dataset.
@patrickmcclanahan2856
@patrickmcclanahan2856 Жыл бұрын
@@yytyytgat least in America, immigrants are very high quality citizens. Much more so than the blue haired 350lb heroine shooting McDonald’s eating losers with no appreciation for their country that make up a lot of native born Americans
@charlottelee259
@charlottelee259 Жыл бұрын
I live in Hong Kong. Had dinner with my girl friends in our 30s last night. The one with 2 kids said kindergarten alone for one kid already costs US13000/year. Rent costs US3000/month. This is why our birth rate is 0.8 which is the lowest in the world.
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 9 ай бұрын
If you cant afford kindergarden just take your kids to work. Its been done before, kindergardens where invented so children wouldnt be running arround the factory, if people have kids and have no choice but to bring their kids to work the company might increase wages or subsidize kindergardens.
@thailux6494
@thailux6494 Жыл бұрын
Portugal made all kindergartners/day care centres free recently. I'm no parent, but I think that, while it's a good step, it's not enough. Wages are incredibly low in Portugal. It doesn't really matter much if you get that specific cost reduced if you still can't afford the extra food costs, books, clothes, etc. that a child needs.
@Mpl3564
@Mpl3564 Жыл бұрын
They may be free, but they aren't easily available. There is a shortage of both institutions and staff.
@KiKfilms
@KiKfilms Жыл бұрын
"Free" aka "funded from taxes you are forced to pay".
@thailux6494
@thailux6494 Жыл бұрын
@@KiKfilms Americans don’t know the first thing about economies of scale and it shows. That’s quite an ignorant statement.
@KiKfilms
@KiKfilms Жыл бұрын
@@thailux6494 Lol dude I am not even American. And I really don't know how being ignorant about basics of economy is not believing a fairy tale that government can give you anything for free.
@thailux6494
@thailux6494 Жыл бұрын
@@KiKfilms it’s free at the point of use and a lot cheaper for society as a whole due to the bargaining power of government, degree of scale and universality of the operations and lack of interest in profit. No, it’s not the same having to pay out of your own pocket or letting the government do it for you. You’ll pay way more if you do it alone and the societal outcomes will be worse. That’s a major reason why we have “free” stuff in all developed countries. It makes no economic sense not to - and plus, advanced countries value human lives so we believe in taking care if one another, so there’s that. And this is not even considering all the externalities of having free to access services. Which come from increased producitivy to health of the population
@ambition112
@ambition112 Жыл бұрын
0:23: 🌍 The population of rich countries is declining due to low fertility rates, threatening their economies and retirement systems. 4:24: 📚 As a society becomes wealthier, the cost of raising children increases, leading parents to have fewer children. 7:30: 📚 The compromise between quantity and quality of fertility is influenced by women's ability to balance family and career. 11:45: 📚 The difficulty for women in low fertility countries in Asia and Southern Europe to combine a career with a large family is attributed to the availability and cost of childcare, social norms regarding gender roles, and the time commitment required for parenting. 14:42: 💡 The low fertility rate in rich countries can be explained by a combination of insufficient social policies, restrictive social norms, and precarious labor markets. 18:27: 🌍 The world can be saved by implementing policies that support work-family balance and address the barriers to having more children. Recap by Tammy AI
@wafercrackerjack880
@wafercrackerjack880 Жыл бұрын
"As a society becomes wealthier, the cost of raising children increase" What's odd with this is raising children in poorer countries is more expensive if you ratio down the income. I am from a poorer country and now living in a well developed economy country. All the people here complaint about how expensive it is to have a child when in fact I will be more comfortable to raise a child here than in my home country. More developed country people keep misleading themselves about this problem. It is not a matter of cost, but the unwillingness of people in more more developed countries to sacrifice their own leisure and luxuries that hinders them from raising children. Im not going to debate if that's right or wrong, I am jus here to point out how most western countries view this incorrectly.
@southcoastinventors6583
@southcoastinventors6583 Жыл бұрын
Artificial wombs and medically induced life expectancy will easily crack this nut this is one of these problems that will look old fashion in a few decades
@marlonbryanmunoznunez3179
@marlonbryanmunoznunez3179 Жыл бұрын
@@southcoastinventors6583 That's disgusting and leads directly to totalitarianism. If you accept mass production of Humans in tubes what's to stop the people in charge of those programs of selecting or modifying those individuals created like that to better mold to market needs or whatever they wish? Commodification of human lives leads to a very dark path. Better manage economic degrowth. Human beings aren't a natural resource for government and corporations to exploit. If people is sick and tired of rising workers for Capitalists to exploit for free, that's their right.
@royalroyal2210
@royalroyal2210 Жыл бұрын
​@@wafercrackerjack880very true! It's already rare to see even the top 100 richest people have 4+ childrens. Might i add, another reason is also because people from developed countries are becoming less hardy. What they perceived as stressful is not so for their poorer counterparts.
@wafercrackerjack880
@wafercrackerjack880 Жыл бұрын
​@@royalroyal2210 Yes, I have seen this at home too. When you grow up well off, it's really harder to imagine or endure a more stressful life. I can totally empathize with my richer counterparts though, but still, I feel so blessed to have had hardships given to me at a younger age and so as I grow older, I am more happy and ready to face the realities of life. My wife and I have just found out she is pregnant and we couldnt be more excited to face the challenge of raising a well adjusted human being! Is it scary? Absolutely. But is it worthwhile not only at a spiritual and personal level but also on a societal level, there's no doubt in my mind it is.
@lightweightben
@lightweightben Жыл бұрын
What amazes me is not that people are having fewer children, to me that seems quite logical and not a bad thing, but that a lot of people seem to be opting out of having children entirely - which was something that was very rare in my parents (baby boomer) generation. I know loads of people in their 30s who simply are choosing not to have kids or will not because they didn’t have the right partner at the right time or they just thought they’d think about it later in life once they have a home and stable career.
@Ealsante
@Ealsante Жыл бұрын
Look around you. Look at the cost of living, the incoming and increasingly serious climate crisis, and the rampant and rising inequality. If you are a wage serf, your beloved child will likely be a serf too, if they haven't recreated slavery by the time your child has grown. If you love your child, why would you bring them into this? To be someone else's slave until they die?
@lightweightben
@lightweightben Жыл бұрын
@@Ealsante people have always pronounced coming doom and it’s never stopped people having kids in the past. Things are much better today than in most of all history - people live now like kings did in the past. The fact obesity is more of a problem than starvation is now tells you something. We’re better off the media just don’t like to tell you that
@Rage_Harder_Then_Relax
@Rage_Harder_Then_Relax Жыл бұрын
@@lightweightben Well it's stopped people now from having kids, hasn't it LOL. You said nothing to counter what Ealsante said. So your argument is null and void.
@DavidVonR
@DavidVonR Жыл бұрын
@@lightweightben Why is it amazing to you that people don't have kids? I'm 35, don't have kids, and I know lots of people in their 30s that don't have kids.
@lightweightben
@lightweightben Жыл бұрын
@@DavidVonR it’s amazing because it’s a historical aberration. Despite the world being better than it’s ever been by multiple objective measures people are choosing childlessness. I’d have thought there had never been a time better to have children than this era. However the difficulty in getting a home and security now compared to the recent past (particularly the boomer generation) is probably having an effect on people deciding to be (or delay such that they don’t have a choice) parents. I do agree that climate doom may be influencing people as well, but like I say the end is nigh is an age old trope.
@CharMendoza
@CharMendoza Жыл бұрын
I live in the Southeastern US. My paternal grandma had 8 kids. My dad, aunts, and uncles from that side of the family each had between 3-5 kids each. I have three siblings. My older brother has 3 kids and my younger siblings are childless. In my culture, your extended family is your immediate family. My aunts, older cousins, and grandmother would take turn watching all of the kids in the family. At one point we lived in the same house or in the same neighborhood. My husband's family is large as well and has a similar dynamic. I'm pregnant with our first child. I would like to have 4 children. There are at least 10 different family members who will babysit for me once I return to work after maternity leave. I used to also babysit my nephew amd nieces if my mom or aunts were unavailable. I'm grateful and fortunate to have a large close-knit family. If I have grandkids, I will help my children out with childcare the same way my elders have helped me out. Gotta get our clan going and connected.
@jessicathompson236
@jessicathompson236 10 ай бұрын
This exactly. Our families also say "my kids/our kids" about all of the kids in the families.
@nickthurn6449
@nickthurn6449 Жыл бұрын
You didn't mention infant / child mortality. This was only conquered by vaccination and antibiotics in the 1950s. Prior to that the loss of one or more kids to disease was very common - in my own extended family two kids died in early childhood between 1930 and 1950 of what became preventable diseases before I was born.
@nicknickbon22
@nicknickbon22 Жыл бұрын
One of the theory of the baby boom is actually that it was a pre modern medicine mentality in a modern medicine world: as soon as people realized that their children are not going to die, they stop making a lot of them.
@TalwinderDhillonTravels
@TalwinderDhillonTravels Жыл бұрын
You are right but that’s not relevant to the topic of the video.
@thetrainhopper8992
@thetrainhopper8992 Жыл бұрын
@@TalwinderDhillonTravels actually it is. Vaccinations and medication aren’t free everywhere nor was that common in the 50s. So it would have been a trade off to some people on quality vs quantity.
@Ajibolaa
@Ajibolaa Жыл бұрын
The boom was because of the horny soldiers returning from world war 2. Nothing more nothing less.
@ArawnOfAnnwn
@ArawnOfAnnwn Жыл бұрын
​@@thetrainhopper8992This factor is overstated because it fundamentally misrepresents how people, including poor people, think. It implicitly suggests that people have more kids as 'spares' i.e. just cos they're familiar with lots of children dying young in their communities, so they have more kids so that at least some of them will survive to adulthood. NO. This is a clear case of the economic numbers being completely divorced the actual people it's studying. Even among the poor, people don't have have kids as 'spares', and you'll see that if you ever talk to them or attend one of their funerals - they're just as devastated by the deaths of their kids as any other parent would be. They aren't having more kids just account for some of them dying, it's just normal in their context for people to have that many kids. I bet even the economists who promote this idea don't really mean to say the poor are heartless homo economicus types, but their models implicitly assume that just to simplify the messy reality of how actual humans are. Improved healthcare does tend to lower fertility, but firstly it's very hard to untangle that effect from all the other effects that tend to happen alongside that (like increased wealth and education), and secondly the effect is far more subtle and vague than the pithy summary 'quality vs quantity' tends to suggest to people.
@emilnilsson1941
@emilnilsson1941 Жыл бұрын
Property markets, urbanisation, and the dating arena must surely not be forgotten
@Tesswrench111
@Tesswrench111 Жыл бұрын
In a world where both parents work, childcare is absolutely essential. Here in bulgaria the government has for 14 years not provided new kindergartens in the capital city, its absolutely untenable.
@Soldrakenn
@Soldrakenn Жыл бұрын
Your grandmother def worked on that farm though.... Working class women have been working throughout history, esp those on farms. It's for a very short period during the mid 1900s that true housewifes existed anywhere else than in the high class.
@merrymachiavelli2041
@merrymachiavelli2041 Жыл бұрын
I think another factor that I almost never see discussed is _actual_ desire to have lots of children. As in, remove all the practical barriers and imagine everyone can have as many children as they might theoretically want - how many kids _do_ people want, on average? In the developed world at least, I imagine the average comes out between 2-3. I can't really imagine myself or anyone I know _wanting_ 4+ kids. Take that 2-3 and add in biological constraints and even in a world devoid of socio-economic troubles, you are still going to struggle to keep the _average_ children per woman above 2.1. Practically, to maintain an average above 2.1 you need quite a lot of people choosing to have large families.
@baronvonlimbourgh1716
@baronvonlimbourgh1716 Жыл бұрын
There will also be a substantial group that just rather has no children and spend their time traveling, maintaining an exciting social life or just having a more luxurious life with an early retirement by redirecting the resources needed to raise children to wealth creation. And i suspect that group also grows as a society grows wealthier. Jobs are not the only thing competing with having kids anymore. There is so much more easilly available to people now then ever before that also competes for that time, resources and attention.
@neznaboh
@neznaboh Жыл бұрын
I have noticed that parents that have more than 2-3 children are ones that have 3 daughters or sons and they just want to have both son and daughter so much that they dont mind having 4, 5 or more children.
@PoeticMachineDreams
@PoeticMachineDreams Жыл бұрын
I've heard at least one anecdote of a woman who had two already moving to a country with much better social programs for kids, and ending up then pretty happy with four, without ever having thought of it before.
@lowwastehighmelanin
@lowwastehighmelanin Жыл бұрын
I wanted 5 when I was younger. I have one. I was gonna have more but my current spouse will make a terrible coparent. I'm getting myself a dog instead. Maybe I'll foster or adopt later.
@abrvalg321
@abrvalg321 Жыл бұрын
If you live in a post industrial society, kids cost a lot, plus you have alternatives like social security and investments. If you live in an agrarian society, kids are your investment, relatively cheap and actually generate income since adolescence (if not earlier).
@Julian-tu6em
@Julian-tu6em Жыл бұрын
Most surprising thing in this video is that US dads are one of the most active in their children in the world. Not that I believed we are absent in our kids lives, but fathers from other countries aren't that active at all.
@MoneyMacro
@MoneyMacro Жыл бұрын
It surprised me as well to be honest
@Executioner9000
@Executioner9000 Жыл бұрын
As an American dad, I try to help a lot with the kids but I never realized the US was in the vanguard of this trend...
@DrumToTheBassWoop
@DrumToTheBassWoop Жыл бұрын
That's why America leads the way in technology. Stimulated minds from a young age.
@ahmadfrhan5265
@ahmadfrhan5265 Жыл бұрын
Number 1 right? 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@ahmadfrhan5265
@ahmadfrhan5265 Жыл бұрын
​@@DrumToTheBassWoop😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
@Mr0o0o0o0o0o0o0o0
@Mr0o0o0o0o0o0o0o0 Жыл бұрын
this could be a hard to swallow pill about why economic inequality is a factor in national security
@robertwright4906
@robertwright4906 Жыл бұрын
But how could you maintain a strong economy with half the workforce? The key to security in todays world is economic strength
@Eodbatman
@Eodbatman Жыл бұрын
We had a super strong economy with half the workforce in the 50s and 60s. Wages were higher per worker because globalization hadn’t spread labor to lower income countries, women hadn’t entered the workforce en masse yet, etc. There are obviously trade offs for that, but median wages have been stagnant for quite some time, while the cost of essentials like housing, healthcare, and education have outpaced inflation.
@ndchunter5516
@ndchunter5516 Жыл бұрын
​@@EodbatmanIt's funny that now that the supply in people is declining, instead of increasing wages (price), now suddenly there's a cry for changes...
@TheVideoIsLongEnough
@TheVideoIsLongEnough Жыл бұрын
​@@Eodbatmanthis is just objectively wrong for a multitude of reasons
@conductingintomfoolery9163
@conductingintomfoolery9163 Жыл бұрын
Because your citizens are more incentive to kill you then other nations
@KyurinDiary
@KyurinDiary Жыл бұрын
Would love to hear about aging population’s impact on elderly care. Thank you!!
@BlastBoyX
@BlastBoyX Жыл бұрын
People who grew up poor don't want to bring kids into an even poorer world than the one they grew up in. I watched the American Dream wither and die on the vine as the stable middle-class family my grandfather built crumbled into a ruined diaspora of lost people.
@BrotherHood-xh9sg
@BrotherHood-xh9sg Жыл бұрын
Not even close, as a lot of poor people do have many children. So your entire mindset is wrong.
@yucol5661
@yucol5661 Жыл бұрын
@@BrotherHood-xh9sgwhat are you basing this on? Your eyes? Cause that’s misleading. Sure “a lot” have many children. But how does that compare to most people? Even the poorest countries are seeing big falls in their population growth. Because the people there are richer, more educated, and want more for their children than their own parents or hard parents who had way more kids
@n.m6249
@n.m6249 Жыл бұрын
@@BrotherHood-xh9sg exactly I'm from Africa and poor people have most children
@alastairhewitt380
@alastairhewitt380 Жыл бұрын
@@n.m6249 Yeah but it is not comparable because life is different there. Cost of living is a factor our standards of living and what we define as a healthy upbringing are different for better or worse. To be able afford what we consider healthy and modest is extremely expensive. The parameters are completely different
@Ghostrider-ul7xn
@Ghostrider-ul7xn Жыл бұрын
As someone who moved to America a long time ago, I can clearly see that more and more people are unmarried even at the age of 30 and above, both men and women. This is even true in deeply religious states like Alabama where I currently reside. Literally everyone in my social circle is hardcore Christians, yet they are all unmarried. Economic reasons aren't the main cause here, its more to do with social and cultural factors.
@SunseedStarchild
@SunseedStarchild Жыл бұрын
If you don't mind my asking, what is your opinion on why hardcore Christians aren't marrying? Of all the demographics I figured they'd have the fewest issues finding partners and starting families, so your assessment is really surprising to me.
@Ghostrider-ul7xn
@Ghostrider-ul7xn Жыл бұрын
@@SunseedStarchild My assessment is based on what I see here in Huntsville, AL where I live. There are many guys including women, who are not marrying, for reasons I can't fully pinpoint. What I do notice is that not only do people find it hard to find eligible dates, but the relationships they get into hardly last long enough to end up in marriages. One reason from what I've noticed is that many people now have unrealistically high standards than what they had in the past. Like, I know a guy in my social circle whose relationship ended within a month because the girl didn't like "his tone" about something..makes me wonder, have people become so uptight and intolerant of each others? Seems like it. I see people breaking up over trivial, silly reasons which can be talked over. My close friend has msged random girls on Facebook, tried christian dating apps, approached girls irl ( including where he works, and church) totalling to 900+ women over the span of 3 years, and he's still unmarried at the age of 29. He's your typical, conventionally attractive guy, close to 6 feet, makes close to 6 figures, charming, laidback personality, no debts, literally no flaws i can think of, but he can't find a relationship that ends in marriage. Its wild to me how people like him find it difficult to marry..by the way, are you aware of the fact that conservative states have a higher divorce rate than liberal states?
@kaymartin2807
@kaymartin2807 Жыл бұрын
​@Ghostrider-ul7xn If the guy really is tall, attractive, makes good money and has a good personality, it is likely that he acts badly to those he dates, or approaches them in a creepy way, because no matter where you live, if you have all of those traits and have asked about 900 women out, then it's most certainly something wrong with you, actually, even if you were just completely average and asked 900 women out, you would have to have some serious flaws to not be able to keep a single one.
@Ghostrider-ul7xn
@Ghostrider-ul7xn Жыл бұрын
@@kaymartin2807 I'm 99.9% positive its not his fault here, I'm his close friend, I know every single thing about him because he also shares all the screenshots of his approaches with me. In most cases, he gets ghosted at the texting stage eventhough there's absolutely NOTHING creepy in his interactions. Dude, he's a hardcore christian, how could you possibly draw the conclusion that there could be something 'creepy' in his interactions? That doesn't add up even if you don't know the person. I haven't seen or heard him say anything sexual or weird even in real life that could come off as creepy. He follows the Bible to a T. Note that I said "most" cases, there are those few cases where he goes on dates after some interactions ( using the same template and approach, so you can't really argue that there's something creepy in his approaches), but by the end of first or second, he rejects them on the grounds of not following some of his biblical principles. Those principles are his ONLY dealbreakers. But if you want to compare the "no"s he gets vs the "no"s he gives, that's like 95% vs 5%, that's the key difference in this conversation here. Besides, this isn't just about him. As I mentioned, there are many others in our social circle who are very similar in his stats but are still single. There's another guy who is literally a millionaire and unmarried at 40. That dude already gave up.
@SunseedStarchild
@SunseedStarchild Жыл бұрын
@@Ghostrider-ul7xn I wasn't aware that conservative states had higher divorce rates, that's genuinely fascinating. I'll have to look into that, thanks for letting me know! To sum up what I gathered from your assessment, it sounds like the Christian sphere is suffering from issues with expectations and communication (the same thing we're all having issues with regardless of how we identify), which makes sense all things considered. Thanks for your input!
@konfunable
@konfunable Жыл бұрын
Another very important issue is housing. For larger families you need bigger houses and not many can afford it.
@subcitizen2012
@subcitizen2012 Жыл бұрын
Back in the times of the highest fertility rates people loved in huts or single unit Manhattan squats lol. The solution is more poverty and less space, pile everyone on top of each other.
@MoneyMacro
@MoneyMacro Жыл бұрын
The evidence for that was inconclusive in the studies I read... Which surprised me as well
@InnuendoXP
@InnuendoXP Жыл бұрын
I dunno about bigger houses so much as affordable houses & cost of housing as a proportion of income.
@wafercrackerjack880
@wafercrackerjack880 Жыл бұрын
lol no you don't, you just need a big enough house. American houses are stupidly big.
@KingUnKaged
@KingUnKaged Жыл бұрын
Parents also need to plan with an eye towards paying for their kids houses in the same way they need to plan to pay for their educations since, in countries like Canada, buying a house without parental support is largely impossible.
@adamthefrog2602
@adamthefrog2602 Жыл бұрын
In Australia we used to have a "baby bonus" where the government would pay the mother $5000 per child. This ended on 1st July 2013 and in the days leading up to this policy cancellation doctors were inducing labour in the mothers to give birth to the child before this date, less the mothers miss out on the $5000 baby bonus. It was quite appalling really, but really showed how desperate parents/mother's are for money. I've got 1 child, and i can confidently say that we cannot afford another if we want to maintain that both parents have good and fulfilling careers, and simply more time to enjoy our lives. Daycare/childcare availability and affordability are also an issue here
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 9 ай бұрын
"have good and fulfilling careers" Theres no such thing. Work is a means to an end. Nobody likes working. "Daycare/childcare availability and affordability are also an issue here" Doesnt matter. Why would you have children if you wont raise them?
@GreenLarsen
@GreenLarsen Жыл бұрын
I am surprised you did not mention inequality. Back in the 60's you was able to raise a family on 1 working class fulltime job. Today doing so on 2 working class fulltime jobs is not or only barely possible in many countries. When we look at studies from the US on why young women wait with having children, the one point that come up again and again is cost.
@nicknickbon22
@nicknickbon22 Жыл бұрын
It’s the cost opportunity thing explained at the beginning of the video… why people comment replying the exact same things said in the video?
@LucasFernandez-fk8se
@LucasFernandez-fk8se Жыл бұрын
@@nicknickbon22he said “muh woman job make me no want baby”. He didn’t detail that the cost of living is becoming untenable for young people. It used to be a 20 year old male could buy a house and raise 4 kids with his 19 year old wife. She’s fertile for 15 years and has plenty of ability to have children. By the 90s it started becoming harder to buy a home. It was a 26-30 year old homebuying duel income couple having 2-3 children instead of a single earner 20 year old having 3-5 children with his spouse. By 2023 it’s impossible for anyone young to buy. House prices doubled since Biden got into office and wages didn’t double
@nicknickbon22
@nicknickbon22 Жыл бұрын
@@LucasFernandez-fk8se he said that in rich countries the cost to maintain a baby is much higher than in poor countries and that a baby is not much of an opportunity because it is the state to take care of you when you’re old through pensions. The housing cost is simply another child cost. Second of all, the us is not declining, so why talk about it anyway? The housing cost is a problem in few us cities and maybe in some European city of comparable size to major us cities (maybe in a country capital) but alone it doesn’t explain why you have a sharp decline in population in countries such as Italy and Spain. Anywhere, if you interested someone in the comments has linked some research linking housing cost and fertility rate, but again, the research seems to be focused on the us mostly.
@bristoled93
@bristoled93 Жыл бұрын
Housing cost is still a problem in Spain and Italy, families can't afford housing costs so have less children.@@nicknickbon22
@AmirTaheri1986
@AmirTaheri1986 Жыл бұрын
1. Cost of buying and maintaining a home. When homes cost 10 times the annual salary of the average wage for a decent family home, why have more than one child and live with bickering and arguments over sharing a room? 2. Size of homes for larger families. Average home sizes are getting smaller as developers try to squeeze every penny they can put of buyers for the smallest possible footprint. Not only that, but homes are poorly designed and not laid out in a manner conducive to family life. 3. Cost and flexibility of childcare. Working hours for parents are 9-5; school is 9-3. One parent will often be working full time just to pay for childcare if they are low earners. If you are a shift worker, then good luck finding cover. 4. Cost of living. Food, energy, clothing and transport are all costing more. Activities and hobbies for children also cost more than they used to. Those swimming lessons, admission fees etc also have to be factored in not to mention the increased food bills. Who can afford to have more than two kids these days? I will also admit that as we grow more affluent, the definition of needs and wants changes but why should we look to downgrade our standard of living in the interests of producing more workers for business owners and companies to exploit?
@noneofyourbizness
@noneofyourbizness Жыл бұрын
" Average home sizes are getting smaller as developers try to squeeze every penny"....that's true in the UK, not elsewhere (in fact it's the opposite in USA, Australia, Canada, NZ) Only true in UK because when EU introduced minimum floor space home sizes for new builds...tory refused* to adopt that policy or to introduce anything similar for our already badly undersized and over priced housing. *tory refused to adopt ALL EU policies that sought to improve the lot of the average person...likely because of its hopeless obsession with protecting corporate profits, no matter what the cost to the rest of the economy, the country, the vast majority of citizens... (who do productive work for a living, as opposed to those who derive all/most of their income from corporate handouts, aka: share dividends.)
@LucasFernandez-fk8se
@LucasFernandez-fk8se Жыл бұрын
@@noneofyourbiznessit’s true in the US to some extent too. Smaller yards, narrower houses, smaller plans. American homes went down from a 2016 average of 2600 sqft (260 sqmt I think) to 2300 sqft (230 sqmt). They’ve also doubled in price in that time
@robsoncamposdelima2963
@robsoncamposdelima2963 Жыл бұрын
One thing that must be taken into account when looking at the US's highest fertility rates is the impact of immigration and inequality. The US manages to maintain a rate of 1.62 on average, but this average hides that while Latinos, Middle Easterners and Asians, poor, have 3-4 children on average, a middle class white American will have similar birth rates. from Japan and Korea. That is, immigration hides the very low birth rate of the natives, and this applies to France and several other rich countries that have adopted immigration as a method of combating the lack of manpower.
@--julian_
@--julian_ Жыл бұрын
the natives? the children of those people are natives to the US. the only true natives are the Native Americans
@josh2482
@josh2482 Жыл бұрын
One correction, the average asian american is wealthier than the average white american and they have similar birth rates.
@carkawalakhatulistiwa
@carkawalakhatulistiwa Жыл бұрын
​@@josh2482averege Indian not Asia. this data is misleading
@josh2482
@josh2482 Жыл бұрын
@@carkawalakhatulistiwa Not just Indian all South Asian, East Asian, and some South East Asian groups (like filipinos, their average household income is over 100k) out earn whites. Read the data again.
@dv4497
@dv4497 Жыл бұрын
The wonderful thing about American immigration is that once the child is born in the US, they are a native of the country. No ridiculous hoops to jump through.
@mrleenudler
@mrleenudler Жыл бұрын
Interesting. Doesn't seem to explain Norway, though. We have very affordable and available child care, free education, scoring high on home labour sharing, strong worker rights and low unemployment. Yet, birth rate is about 1.5.
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714
@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 9 ай бұрын
Ban all dating apps and make a state run one. A long term relationship forming is 2 customers lost to the private firms. A long term relationship forming is 2 people voting for the programms continuation for a government branch.
@andrewharris3900
@andrewharris3900 8 ай бұрын
@@baltulielkungsgunarsmiezis9714 tie the pension to the number of children you’ve had.
@dogood8750
@dogood8750 8 ай бұрын
I know this is a long time ago and I'll admit this is from Wikipedia but looking up Norwegian demographics on their the demographics of indigenous born Norwegians seemed pretty stable it's just foreign born migrants and their children that have declined significantly but something more nuanced would be a deeper dive
@siddharthgoyal4008
@siddharthgoyal4008 6 ай бұрын
​@@dogood8750 Norwegians are NOT stable. They look stable as people are living longer so in absolute terms population is not declining. If you look at actual number of kids Norwegians are also in perpetual decline.
@sas_quatch
@sas_quatch 6 ай бұрын
The argument would prob be that if you took away those things while still maintaining an inustrialized economy, you’d have a lower birth rate than what you have rn.
@-haclong2366
@-haclong2366 Жыл бұрын
My main issue with the "women working lowers fertility" hypothesis is both its metahistoric context and modern statistics. The "working women have less children" idea was created when both Feminism was at its peak and the idea that overpopulation was a threat to global food supply was mainstream, meaning that it was thought of as an idea to give praise to a movement that specifically wanted women to work more. The idea that "women work less in poor countries" is often false, in fact we have statistics from countries like Nigeria, Tanzania, Mali, Etc. in Tanzania fertility rates are lower than in Niger despite women working considerably less there. In fact, many high fertility countries have higher female labour force participation, including full time, than countries like those U.S.A. and here in the Netherlands. I'm not saying that it's not a factor, I just doubt that it's as big of a factor as many claim. Urbanisation basically explains way more than the female labour force participation hypothesis.
@leonardoleo5740
@leonardoleo5740 Жыл бұрын
Exaclty.
@truth-uncensored2426
@truth-uncensored2426 Жыл бұрын
Nope, it's about female labor participation, even in Africa there's a clear correlation, in countries where women participate more in the workforce the fertility rate is lower and is falling faster.
@anastasia10017
@anastasia10017 Жыл бұрын
The more educated a woman is, the less children she has.
@robertnomok9750
@robertnomok9750 Жыл бұрын
You dont understand what you are talking about. Working as a clerk in a supermarket 4 hours a day it not a real job. It still counts as "working women" but its not the same as woman working as construction engeneer, having a proper education and working 8-12 hours a day. How exactly you expect family to raise kids if both parents come home 7-8 PM when most kindergarders are already closed their doors? Their kids are already waiting in the police station and parents get sued for bad parenting.
@offensivearch
@offensivearch Ай бұрын
It's wild that you think the literal biggest factor is not as big of a factor as many claim. Those few countries you mentioned had female labor force participation increase relatively recently, such that cultural trends hadn't adjusted to the trend of women working (ie the women already had a lot of kids or were having kids). Within a few decades, all countries with high female labor force participation experience drops in fertility as young women decide against having kids so that their lives will be easier. Look at the USA in the 1960's and 1970's when women started working full time in large proportions. At the time, you could have believed labor force participation wasn't a big issue. However, the trend eventually works out exactly as it does in every other country: new women stop having kids. This effect is etremely reliable, it obviously just can't happen overnight becuase culture takes time to change. But, on the scale of culutral change a few decades is actually a very short period of time for such drastic change.
@jroig824
@jroig824 Жыл бұрын
I am from Spain and I am very shocked how this topic is never really discussed on political debates. Also my friends, who are most of them well above 30 and only one third of them have kids, don't seem to care. It's very discouraging.
@SweBeach2023
@SweBeach2023 Жыл бұрын
Promoting Spaniards having children instead of importing millions of Africans is not a part of the major plan of turning Europe into an extension of the Middle East.
@thewhiteEagle
@thewhiteEagle Жыл бұрын
Spain dads should have kids better than depend on immigration and instead of drinking alcohol they should focus on have kids and their families…
@alessioatta762
@alessioatta762 Жыл бұрын
Italy, same story here
@PlayWaves1
@PlayWaves1 Жыл бұрын
Spain used that have an very high fertility rate centuries ago which is a big reason Latin America is so populated. I hope the culture changes and they start having more kids.
@brandicunningham7243
@brandicunningham7243 Жыл бұрын
*Hot take:* For countries like my own, (Canada) rising the immigration rate doesn't help. It is only contributing to the housing crisis and cost of living crisis. We are importing 1 million people per year, with nowhere to house these people, let alone housing Canadians. If they want more Canadian's (and other G7 nations) to rise the birth rate, we need infrastructure, housing, and to address better supports for young people owning homes and child benefits. Reduce the barrier to entry on owning a home, and increasing the supply of homes. Canada has a lot of land to which we can expand our city limits. Another problem is how independent our culture and mindset is here. Canadian's are generally polite, but very flakey people when it comes to dating and romance. It comes with historically being such a large nation land-wise, but most provinces being isolated. This makes it hard to meet people in general, and creates unique sub-cultures and politics within each province. I don't have a solution for this one in particular, as hook-up culture is a phenomenon that exists globally, but effects the west to a greater extent. The biggest elephant in the room is we need. More. Affordable. Housing. The Bank of Canada keeps raising mortgage rates and new houses aren't being built to sustain Canadians and/or the mass influx of immigrants we have coming into our country. The Trudeau Government keeps pushing for this with no plan to help these newcomers into our country. We need to reduce the land taxes and interest rates. The Government can only blame climate change for so long before one realizes that a carbon tax only harms the middle and lower classes as it raises gasoline and cost of living. The massive corporations can pay these no problem, or just invest or move elsewhere. Not to mention the insane income tax rates we have in Canada which make it impossible to invest securely. There should also be more investment into housing in cities that aren't Montreal, Toronto, or Vancouver. This way, the housing markets in these cities won't be so insane, and provide growth in other cities provinces. TLDR: Make childcare cheap and accessible, accessible and plentiful affordable housing, less taxes.
@holz_name
@holz_name Жыл бұрын
If you "import" 1 million people per year then that means that Canada needs 1 million people per year. It doesn't matter if 1 million people per year come from immigration or from naturally born people. The housing crisis is easily solved: just build more houses. How difficult is this? We are not in the middle ages anymore we can build 10 store high buildings. And immigrants help you with the cost of living crisis by fueling the economy. *infrastructure, housing, and to address better supports for young people owning homes and child benefits* Yes, but why do you think those are only problems with native born people and not with immigrants? Of course you need to improve all of that for immigrants then you won't have the perceived problems immigration brings. *Reduce the barrier to entry on owning a home, and increasing the supply of homes.* Yes, for immigrants. *Canada has a lot of land to which we can expand our city limits.* Exactly. For immigrants. No more housing crisis. *The biggest elephant in the room is we need. More. Affordable. Housing.* Yes, for immigrants. No more housing crisis. Seriously, why do you think that immigrants are somewhat different from native born? Immigrants and native born need infrastructure, housing, better supports for young people owning homes and child benefits, increasing the supply of homes, More. Affordable. Housing. They all equally apply to immigrants and natives because they are all just people. The problem is that your government is not solving those problems for people, but then you blame the immigrants.
@estuardo2985
@estuardo2985 Жыл бұрын
There are many parts of the housing crises but a major factor is the rise of single parent households where you now need two residences instead of one. And the second residence still needs extra rooms for regulations on visitation. We also don't build enough midrise buildings that could hold more people.
@brandicunningham7243
@brandicunningham7243 Жыл бұрын
You're misconstruing me mentioning immigrants as if I don't want immigrants in the first place. My gripe isn't with people coming in, it is with the government who keeps "opening the flood gates" for people to come here without housing security. There are height restrictions to high rises in Canadian cities that limit how high we can have buildings. My government is 100% responsible for its citizens, and those coming in new to the country. They are allowing people in at a rate that isn't sustainable with the shape of our economy and resources at the moment. There are many reports of immigrants coming to Canada and mentioning it was a mistake and that they never should've left their home nation. Re-read my TLDR section. Immigrants are just by-products and victims to our current problems exasperated by our incapable government (i.e. the government and supply. It's the government both provincial and federal that approve extra land use, and compensating the original owners and farmers on city limits). Immigrants are not the problem themselves, they are just being given the short end of the stick while our government pretends to help them and welcomes them with open arms.@@holz_name
@neocortex8198
@neocortex8198 Жыл бұрын
maybe deregulate housing and make nimbys traitors and just allow people to build massive housing complexes and just ban any opposition to such construction
@petrpalecka5932
@petrpalecka5932 Жыл бұрын
Been there, seen the situation. The problem is that Canada does not invest enough in improving or extending its infrastructure and housing. You can build a lot of housing in the middle of nowhere, but without a suitable means of transportation (I am not talking about cars), it will result in clogged roads which happens in big cities.
@pipebomber04
@pipebomber04 Жыл бұрын
A culture concerned more with "fun" and "self" is not appropriate for having or raising kids.
@carlitoxb110
@carlitoxb110 Жыл бұрын
I live in a developing country, my grandparents had 8 kids, my fathers had 4 children and now that im 35 years old i have decided not to have any kids at all, my reasons: the world is fcked up, racism, inequality, intolerance and hate are here to stay
@enderan27
@enderan27 Жыл бұрын
Something that was not mentioned is young unemployment. E.g., Spain is very high. This for, the Spanish leave parent homes after their 30, while biologicalfertility for women falls sharplyafter 35. This leaves women with a very small time window.
@alexgodeye3031
@alexgodeye3031 Жыл бұрын
Maybe parents should have less hangups about their adult children having sex and people shouldn't necessarily dismiss a partner for living with their parents.
@enderan27
@enderan27 Жыл бұрын
@@alexgodeye3031 Well I'm pretty sure that they have sex with people before their 30s. That is not the issue. The point is if as parent you want/can have a kid in the same place you grown up considering you have your parents and siblings. It just not enough space for a family of 8 in an apartment for 4 (considering each son/daughter has 2 kids in a family with two parents and two adult "children")
@robbykurnia9671
@robbykurnia9671 Жыл бұрын
because there is a decline in living standards, in developed countries, many people do not commit to marriage for financial reasons, instead of fixing solutions to lower living standards in developed countries, developed country governments instead import cheap labor from poor and developing countries.
@jermunitz3020
@jermunitz3020 Жыл бұрын
My take is that breeding aged people have fewer kids if we're _feeling_ poorer because every generation is getting poorer. It now takes two incomes to afford a house whereas generations ago it took only one. While productivity has increased and the pie is now larger it doesn't matter for the average young adult since the boomers and a few extremely wealthy people are scoffing down most of it. 'Poorer' countries are feeling richer every generation and this hope gives them motivation to have kids since their kids will be better off than they are.
@jonrussell739
@jonrussell739 Жыл бұрын
I knew what the punchline of the video would be as I think the cost of childcare is the obvious fix, but I still enjoyed the journey of you delving into this problem space. The question I have is: How do we get a government to incentivize policy that only has an ROI decades into the future when all of the people who need to implement such policies won't be around to "take credit." Forget that most of congress in the US won't be alive, even "younger" politicians don't think in such long view strategy.
@MyOrangeString
@MyOrangeString Жыл бұрын
Politicians only do what they can. They are constrained by their electorate (most of whom are close or at retirement in developed countries), the geopolitical context, and people of high influence. For any substantial change, we would need a strong cultural moment that would transform into a political movement. Wanna start? I'm down.
@neocortex8198
@neocortex8198 Жыл бұрын
the approach is to simply abolish pensions if people want to live comfortably in their old age more kids would help. also make college tuition the same rate per family potentially even not even siblings but first cousins also abolishing most regulations on commerce would make starting a company easier
@ArawnOfAnnwn
@ArawnOfAnnwn Жыл бұрын
"I think the cost of childcare is the obvious fix" - it isn't a 'fix', it's a bandaid. It'll only have a small effect, perhaps raising fertility to 1.8 at most, if that. Everyone loves bemoaning costs while implicitly pretending things are easier for the poor and/or in the past. No it isn't and wasn't. Relative to their income it's much harder, yet they still have kids (and saying 'child labor' just makes you seem outdated and ignorant). Costs are a much more popular excuse than they are a factor. They play a role, but a fairly limited one. Just look at the ultra-rich for instance - how many kids do they tend to have? Money isn't all there is to this, not even close.
@jonrussell739
@jonrussell739 Жыл бұрын
@@ArawnOfAnnwn " Everyone loves bemoaning costs while implicitly pretending things are easier for the poor and/or in the past. No it isn't and wasn't." Have any sources to back this claim?
@RiskyDramaUploads
@RiskyDramaUploads Жыл бұрын
@@jonrussell739 US household spending data. Families with higher income save (i.e., aren't spending) a lot more of their income. Of course, the aggregate data also includes people who are retired, who spend $30k (through their savings) but only make $5k, but the general trend makes sense. Of course rich people can afford to save more of their income. And those savings could theoretically be used to raise children. You get €250 per month per child in Germany. Incentives are probably not the problem. People 200 years ago had children without getting paid anything for it.
@abhinavmankotia9867
@abhinavmankotia9867 Жыл бұрын
Scariest thing is this data is outdated. Even a behemoth like India has fallen below replacement rate. Things are looking dire.
Жыл бұрын
Great video, great analysis. I think it makes sense. I live in the one of the southern european countries with ultra low fertility and what you said fits whats going on. There are a non-neglectable number of companies that have a toxic work culture of "number of hours worked > quality of the output" that leads to a lot of overtime. In addition to this, when you quit your job you have to give a whooping 2 months to the company after your notice. This means that there are a lot of people with very little time to raise children (due to the overtime) and it's difficult to change jobs to a better offer due to the 2 months period. I've had international job opportunities go down the drain when they learn they'd have to be waiting 2 months for me.
@freazeezy
@freazeezy Жыл бұрын
Just curious, what are the consequences for just... leaving? A fine, jail?
@middleagebrotips3454
@middleagebrotips3454 Жыл бұрын
Decline in population is not a problem at all as we automate and increase our productivity without more people. Its only a problem for the ruling class having less people to rule over, thus less power.
@Slav4o911
@Slav4o911 Жыл бұрын
It's not even a problem for them, because more people is not equal to more power. India already is the most populous country in the world... but on the power level they are 6th or 7th.... and they also have very low power projection (which is something different from raw power). For example the Netherlands has a lot less population than India, but has more power projection. The same is valid for example for France in even more pronounced way, France is both more powerful and has more power projection than India.... with a lot less population. I took India for the examples because it's an extreme case, to show how "raw population" by itself doesn't automatically give you more power.
@middleagebrotips3454
@middleagebrotips3454 Жыл бұрын
@@Slav4o911 I'm not talking about international power, but internally how many people you rule over.
@dontaskmewhy266
@dontaskmewhy266 Жыл бұрын
One of the overlooked factor in deciding fertility is the people are not willing to lower their lifestyle to start a family.
@neocortex8198
@neocortex8198 Жыл бұрын
then maybe the solution is a childless tax that makes it more expensive to not have a family then to have a family
@bristoled93
@bristoled93 Жыл бұрын
Or maybe make housing cheaper and build more housing so people don't waste so much on rent and mortgages and have space to start families. @@neocortex8198
@snorttroll4379
@snorttroll4379 Жыл бұрын
I think the solution is alllowing cheap energy(fracking, oil etc. No co2 bs) and planning permission increase so housing can become cheaper
@sonapazderova2555
@sonapazderova2555 Жыл бұрын
However, that could lead to child neglect and abuse if people who don´t want children are forced to have children for finacial reasons.@@neocortex8198
@valemedina4473
@valemedina4473 Жыл бұрын
​@@neocortex8198 is already expensive to be childfree by itself, so a tax wouldnt help that much to people deciding to start families when in The first place they didnt had The mean for it.
@AlexDahl
@AlexDahl Жыл бұрын
Something you really missed on for the US is that our high replacement rate isn't really driven out by dads being more helpful around the home but it also still provides a decent case study for your previous mentioning of socioeconomic status as a big indicator for reproductive rate. Most fertility in the US is driven by immigrants either directly replacing dying people or immigrant families having more children on average than citizen (or if we want to get more granular, it's broken up by race typically) where latin american families as a whole tend to have more kids than white families. It's expected that with time this will taper off as they further become integrated into the fabric of our society.
@conductingintomfoolery9163
@conductingintomfoolery9163 Жыл бұрын
Really helpful when them and there children are even larger then old people
@timbruns1636
@timbruns1636 Жыл бұрын
The higher the competitive pressure, the lower the birth rate. Long working hours in white collar jobs cause stress and mental load, long education times shorten the time window for children significantly, and top, everyone is looking for the most perfect partner. Rich economies need to re-learn how to chill and redistribute more, especially towards child-care.
@danielating1316
@danielating1316 7 ай бұрын
In the part of Nigeria that I live in, few people work on the farm yet most parents have more than 5 children. Unemployment is high, inflation is 29%, and few children contribute to family income.
@thanasis-_-
@thanasis-_- Жыл бұрын
Having children has become too expensive in rich countries.
@ToneyCrimson
@ToneyCrimson Жыл бұрын
And in poor countries, this video didnt mention that the fertility rate is nose diving all over the planet.
@thanasis-_-
@thanasis-_- Жыл бұрын
@@ToneyCrimson not in Africa
@ToneyCrimson
@ToneyCrimson Жыл бұрын
@@thanasis-_- Yes in africa too, the feritility rate is going down.
@benjinlama8108
@benjinlama8108 Жыл бұрын
@@ToneyCrimson Yes but not to the point where they have to worry about. Average age in many african countries is below 18.
@CarloRossi54523
@CarloRossi54523 Жыл бұрын
The expectation are too high and the values nihilistic
@gj1234567899999
@gj1234567899999 Жыл бұрын
In the U.S. there is a lot of “informal” childcare like relatives and grandparents helping out, a “friend” watching a bunch of kids, or shady-ass daycares that are cheap. Also some parents just let their kids run wild and nobody watching them and you have these feral kids running around who don’t know right from wrong and commit disproportionate amount of crimes.
@comecorrect1
@comecorrect1 Жыл бұрын
I am from the US, you are right, about childcare and parenting. That's why logical-thinking people are deciding to have kids later in life once they are ready not by society's standards. It's actually quite empowering.
@g-rexsaurus794
@g-rexsaurus794 Жыл бұрын
@@comecorrect1 >when they are ready If people are not ready to have kids when 95-99% of the human population throughout history was maybe that's on them and not "society".
@designedbyheinz.ginkulmwes2948
@designedbyheinz.ginkulmwes2948 Жыл бұрын
This video is the reward for finishing my next exercise sheet. Thank you for bringing great content as always. I love how you present data and viewpoints!
@TheCatslock
@TheCatslock Жыл бұрын
First problem is beleiving any system can have infinite growth in a finite world. The second is beleiving that anyone wants to have kids when their incomes don't even take care of them when they are single. The third problem is lack of affordable starter housing, minimum 2 bedroom homes, are not being built in favor of bigger home size ventures and without adequate space people feel trapped and more stressed and no one wants to have a child while renting an apartment. Then we have the lack of time which means parents are constantly working and they have to put off having children or a parent has to willingly give up their career which most wont do because more money = more freedom of choice. Its why women dont want to go back to 1950's because having to beg your husband for money to buy groceries or hair dye or a nail job is degrading, and being forcefully tied to someone financially and can't escape when they are beating you behind closed doors is simply a no go. Fun fact the happiest demographic for women is single and childless and tend to live longer then their married counterparts, while men who are single tend to die earlier then their married counterparts.
@cad5017
@cad5017 Жыл бұрын
💯 correct it’s not affordable to have kids anymore and my husband and I never wanted to raise a child in a small apartment. And both of us have full time jobs and still can’t afford a house. So yeah WTF! 😬 But that’s okay we both came to with terms that we will NOT be having children and quite frankly WE ARE LOVING THE DINK LIFE!!
@johndoh5182
@johndoh5182 Жыл бұрын
This is a really simple one. Really. Like REALLY simple. The RICH countries' wealth is held by mostly the top 10% for household wealth, and then if you break that out to the top 20% that's almost all the wealth of the country. When the wealth distribution is that small, the VAST majority of the country is about one emergency away from losing everything they have. IF the wealth is distributed like this, then INCOME is going to decide what 80% of the population is doing. I can use the US as an example. Go from the beginning of the 60s to now and cost of living vs. income is not sustainable for that 80% to be producing many babies. And cost of living is a fickle thing, because while many people can afford stuff they couldn't in the 60s because of the access to cheap goods, the cost for what would be considered mandatory bills and expenses is such that most people don't have much money left at the end of a month, and many already had to be creative JUST to live month to month, with both the husband and wife working at least one job, and probably one of them working two jobs. Yeah there's just not much time for making babies there. No one in the US should need a 20 minute video to figure this one out because they're living in the worst time I can remember in my 60 years for two things, cost for a vehicle and cost for a place to live. US citizens pretty much need both.
@shadinio
@shadinio Жыл бұрын
One thing that wasn't mentioned here - but that would be a much more difficult topic to research - is that is that a lot of friends in my generation (late 30s) and the newer generation are absolutely freaked out about climate change and what it means for the planet in the coming few decades. It's usually people from richer countries who have the "luxury" and education to worry about such matters rather than poorer people with less or no education who can only afford to worry about tomorrow's meal.
@EPK123
@EPK123 Жыл бұрын
Freaked out about climate change, thats fucking delusional lmao
@Slav4o911
@Slav4o911 Жыл бұрын
I also think education is the defining factor. When you start to think about the world and not only about yourself. Even without climate change, there are too many people on Earth as it is. If we don't change anything we'll destroy our planet.
@a_ricart
@a_ricart Жыл бұрын
Let’s not forget a sentinel event in the history of humanity, June 23, 1960, the oral contraceptive pill was approved in the US. 4 years later the baby boom ended.
@MELVINSINCLAIR-o4w
@MELVINSINCLAIR-o4w 8 ай бұрын
Why is the Western Union the Western world now claiming to be worried about brith rate when why had spent so much years becoming O'mo and the disruption of the family life. And are now telling Africa that they need to be the same Gate men
@Itsunobaka
@Itsunobaka Жыл бұрын
wow! what a thorough analysis. certainly the best ive seen on youtube. i love how you stick to the data, and don't speculate about sperm count, abortion, or the religious/secular divide. well done!
@MoneyMacro
@MoneyMacro Жыл бұрын
Thank you. I indeed didn't find much evidence that this stuff can explain the differences between countries.
@pakalupipitopal4485
@pakalupipitopal4485 Жыл бұрын
@@MoneyMacroi call bullshit
@kangarupisejs
@kangarupisejs Жыл бұрын
Except you can actually find conclusive data which shows how religion can directly correlate with fertility rates. Take ultra orthodox jews in Israel for example@@MoneyMacro
@neocortex8198
@neocortex8198 Жыл бұрын
i think banning abortion would def help birth rates
@ArawnOfAnnwn
@ArawnOfAnnwn Жыл бұрын
He also doesn't speculate on other popular explanations favored by people on the left, like the cost of housing. Specifically he finds that that ISN'T a good factor, despite all the moaning about it. It's telling that all your examples of him not being speculative were of right-leaning theories you clearly don't like. And btw, his explanation DOES support the idea that, for instance, women returning to traditional family roles would probably raise the birth rate. He just doesn't think that solution is feasible and also doesn't like it.
@zenvd04
@zenvd04 Жыл бұрын
Other components of the solution that you did not mention is reduction in cost of living and work hours.. Fixing all these things will be tough.
@southcoastinventors6583
@southcoastinventors6583 Жыл бұрын
Or just don't spend a lot on you kids upbringing that why dollar store was invented
@ahmadfrhan5265
@ahmadfrhan5265 Жыл бұрын
Another important factor is that the west 🇺🇸🇪🇺👦🏼and westernized countries favors Dopamine over family and stability and have too much degenerate values that break the family union and impossible to create family under these degenerate values. and men don't want the mother of their children to have onlyfans and women don't want a manchild who plays videos games. " GREAT REPLACEMENT " meanwhile anyone following your values commit su1cide
@GreenLarsen
@GreenLarsen Жыл бұрын
@@southcoastinventors6583 Yep, I get all my family vacations, child education and housing from the dollar store /s just in case
@snorttroll4379
@snorttroll4379 Жыл бұрын
Do washable diapers work?
@Success4peace
@Success4peace Жыл бұрын
Maybe the term 'dying' does not do justice. The world population has gone from 1 billion to 8 billion in a span of 2 centuries perhaps the populations are rebalancing themselves to adjust to the new socio-economic circumstances of the 21st century. I think this is a natural process. So crying about population going up or down is like crying about stock market going down or up, we know it will always fluctuate.
@piernikowyloodek
@piernikowyloodek Жыл бұрын
Absolutely true. And it's a beneficial trend in a world with ever more scarcer resources (water, arable land) due to climate change
@mightymulatto3000
@mightymulatto3000 Жыл бұрын
Infinately more wise to compassionately deny a child existence than subject them to a brutal existence of uncertainty and instability. Not having kids is a no-brainer when one knows they are a job loss away from foodstamps, eviction, are crushed with student and consumer debt. Moreover the government subsidizes broke people to have children and men tend to want to mitigate this risk with women who don't desire a family.
@IndustrialBonecraft
@IndustrialBonecraft Жыл бұрын
1: To the economy you are nothing but fuel. You are there to be put on the conveyor belt and sent into the furnace. 2: The wealthy demand a surplus of cheap labour, and thus it would like an ever-increasing pool of workers as doing so increases competition between job applicants and drives down wages. 3: The wealthy demand constant and increasing productivity. This results in a population that effectively undergoes mechanistic dehumanisation as a means of beating the competition. Workers therefore must become increasigly robotic in order to survive. Conclusion: The wealthy view you as nothing more than a mechanised log on a conveyor belt heading into a furnace. You exist to fuel the economic machinery and replicate enough times for your offspring to subsequently be fed into the furnace, so that they can get richer. The only way out is to starve the furnace.
@nattygsbord
@nattygsbord Жыл бұрын
You can always create a job guarantee program and get rid of this reserve army of workers. Government just offers everyone who wants a job a job. And that government job offers a minimum wage. So the private sector needs to offer an equally good wages or higher to attract workers and being able to steal them from the government.
@banto1
@banto1 Жыл бұрын
only problem is Karl, you and your family will starve in the process.
@YoutubeModeratorsSuckMyBalls
@YoutubeModeratorsSuckMyBalls Жыл бұрын
​@@nattygsbordthe key word here is guarantee. Who will guarantee your rights? This is the point. Rich and wealthy have connections in governments. But what ordinary worker has to propose? Nothing but sabotage this by stopping to reproduce. Why law in general works? Because there is an army and police who are powerful enough to explain you properly how to act. But rich people can bribe directly and indirectly those law makers so that they will benefit. And again the question arises who will guarantee the rights of ordinary worker if he has nothing but some paper telling him that he has rights?
@nattygsbord
@nattygsbord Жыл бұрын
@@KZbinModeratorsSuckMyBalls Lets have a Swiss system of direct-democracy in place so that if the government makes an unpopular decision - then the people can gather a list of say 20.000 name signatures and demand a referendum. And then the people can vote to abolish the new government policy.
@YoutubeModeratorsSuckMyBalls
@YoutubeModeratorsSuckMyBalls Жыл бұрын
@@nattygsbord and then question arises who is the guarantee that the decision taken will be implemented? What if someone will go in the way advantegous for him? I mean what prevents governors to say their people something like "You gtfo decision i like will be still embraced?"
@SW-fk3rb
@SW-fk3rb Жыл бұрын
Fantastic video, i love how you make academic level economics content accessible to me as a regular guy lol
@atasaygili2549
@atasaygili2549 Жыл бұрын
As a person of turkish origins i have seen the amount of fertility rates of my family decline. My grandpa's family used to work in the farms in the outskirts of Ankara and he was the last of 7 kids, fortunately he had the opportunity to study and subsequently he only had 2 kids (one my father) compared to its sibsilings which had more, my father only has 2 childs (me and my brother). So we have seen how education can impact to fertility rate but also to the well being of the future generations
@ericpowell4350
@ericpowell4350 Жыл бұрын
NGL you had in the first half.
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@michaelmorgan1250 9 ай бұрын
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@michaelmorgan1250 9 ай бұрын
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@michaelmorgan1250 9 ай бұрын
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@AlessiaOrtiz 9 ай бұрын
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@IKactoz
@IKactoz Жыл бұрын
Here in Poland the government was giving away 500zt (800 now), roughly 8% of the average gross salary per kid per month for close to 10 years now. Along with a strong propaganda campaign this policy has achieved a staggering 0% net increase in fertility rate since its start. That's not even counting a probable decrease related to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, data not available yet. The situation is much more nuanced than it might seem at first glance, so thanks a lot for the video!
@PlayWaves1
@PlayWaves1 Жыл бұрын
The Polish fertility rate did increase slightly the past 2 years. I hope it increases more.
@adam3bujek
@adam3bujek Жыл бұрын
Not surprising, since 500+ for most people meant “cool, 500 more a month” instead of “yeah that’s enough for us to raise another child” given the cost of everything.
@blueodum
@blueodum Жыл бұрын
But without it, the fertility rate might have actually dropped - we don't know, but given the overall trend in Europe, it likely would have.
@nattygsbord
@nattygsbord Жыл бұрын
Full employment and affordable housing are good things I believe. Its hard to start a family and start dating if you have to live with mom and dad until you are 35. So there must be plenty of housing and which is affordable for ordinary people. And everyone who wants a job should be able to get one - with a job guarantee program and full employment policies by the government. Off-loading the parents burden of taking care of their child would also help encourage parents getting an extra child. If this is done by better access to child care or a shorter workday or both doesn't perhaps matter so much.
@nicknickbon22
@nicknickbon22 Жыл бұрын
Neither in Italy nor Spain housing cost is a major problem in the areas that have the lowest fertility rates, in Sicily you could find a 100m2 apartment for 40000 or 50000€, while housing costs are very high in countries such as France and Sweden where they have the highest fertility rate in Europe.
@nattygsbord
@nattygsbord Жыл бұрын
@@nicknickbon22 It is not swedes who breed, its immigrants who lives in cheap apartments in unattractive areas with high unemployment. That is not what I call solving the fertility crisis. Sweden have lots of cheap housing in rural areas, like in the northern half of Sweden where you buy a big house for only costs 50000€. But young people want to move to cities to find a job and a partner since rural Sweden does not have much such to offer. And the governments and EUs anti-rural policies have only helped to destroy the flourishing Swedish countryside we had 30 years ago. So now no other option is left that moving to city facing the sky high housing costs that rightwing landlord butt licking government have created. Life is not easy in other places in Europe either. Italians are among the peoples in europe that moves out last from mom and dads house when they are aged 30. So no wonder that not many children are made there. And the enormous youth unemployment caused by the Eurocrisis in Spain might have contributed to their low fertility rates
@ladyeowyn42
@ladyeowyn42 Жыл бұрын
I can only leave my house to one heir so I only had one.
@melissacorbett4180
@melissacorbett4180 Жыл бұрын
​@@nicknickbon22housing might not be expensive Spain and Italy, but if there's no work opportunities near your cheap apartment, you are going to leave for another city or country. That's why they mentioned in the video that Southern Europe needs to fix their economies to address demographic decline.
@nicknickbon22
@nicknickbon22 Жыл бұрын
@@melissacorbett4180 yeah, that’s the point here
@SetTheCurve
@SetTheCurve Жыл бұрын
To hear that the fertility rate is nearing 1 is probably the best news my generation will ever hear. I can’t think of a better outcome for the future of human society than to come up with a way of surviving without choking into corner
@Memoiana
@Memoiana Жыл бұрын
You may think so. But who is going to pay for an aging population? Your generation. Who is going to be replaced by higher-birth rate countries? Lower birth rate countries.
@nordicnostalgia8106
@nordicnostalgia8106 Жыл бұрын
@@Memoiana Luckily we have automation and medical science which helps tremendously with the lost labour and the health of the elderly. Replacement is trickier because politicians benefit and people think it's a virtue
@ladyeowyn42
@ladyeowyn42 Жыл бұрын
If me having one kid opens a spot for a black or brown kid to come over, all the better.
@LucasFernandez-fk8se
@LucasFernandez-fk8se Жыл бұрын
@@ladyeowyn42no it’s not. Look at the country they come from and then decide if you want your nation to look like that. If they managed to create a functional society in the home nation then fair enough they probably won’t be a problem when they immigrate to your nation. But if their home society is dysfunctional as hell then that’s what they’ll make your country like
@danke1150
@danke1150 Жыл бұрын
@@LucasFernandez-fk8se You're not factoring in the magic dirt. Once they arrive in our countries they will be just like us and magically be able to maintain our civilizations for us.
@alexcovey1200
@alexcovey1200 4 ай бұрын
This is the most non biased view of the problem. Thank you.
@kidlatazul
@kidlatazul Жыл бұрын
Ignorant question: why are declining fertility rates and populations a problem? I remember a time not that long ago when doomsayers were warning that the increasing human population would soon be unsustainable, there weren't enough resources on the planet to feed/house/clothe etc. a burgeoning population, etc. Fewer people means more resources per capita and in theory a better life for each person. Supporting freeloading retired people (e.g. me) does present a greater burden for those still working, but couldn't some of the added burden be compensated for by greater productivity?
@robertburton432
@robertburton432 Жыл бұрын
By doubling the labour force in the market we reduced the value of labour making one ordinary salary unstainable to support most families..there needs to a better trade off between career and children
@testacals
@testacals Жыл бұрын
It certainly aint just the doubling of labour force that reduced the cost. The payment has gone down even after those events.
@robertburton432
@robertburton432 Жыл бұрын
@testacals Well, another major contributor was the globuzation of the workforce, where relatively expensive domestic labour was outsourced to cheaper other seas areas
@az-tl3mh
@az-tl3mh Жыл бұрын
if you actually look at the data for female workforce participation, it hasn't changed much since they started collecting the data. Around 50% of women have always worked. Also factor in the women that leave to raise kids and then come back. There was a small drop in female participation in the 50s but then it went back up. What has changed is the type of work women are pursuing. they still work mostly in low-level clerical, domestic work, retail, service industry, but nowadays they can pursue careers and positions that they were excluded from in the past, plus this is also driven by necessity because those lower level clerical, trade, and service jobs have all been automated or outsourced (we don't really need seamstresses anymore, theres no demand for them) and the computer took over a lot of jobs.
@dreammirrorbrony1240
@dreammirrorbrony1240 Жыл бұрын
The importance modern society placed on careers & independence over traditional family values is a big part of it.
@igors1234
@igors1234 Жыл бұрын
@@CooperPBeckam Nah, functional society should combine carreers and family with reproduction. If there is no reproduction, society is dead and carreers become useless.
@antinatalistwitch111
@antinatalistwitch111 Жыл бұрын
​@CooperPBeckam how is that on 1 side of your mouth u say screw careers and on the other side u guys are saying we aren't creating enough cogs to work in this economic ponzi scheme???? 😅
@LightMCXx
@LightMCXx Жыл бұрын
I prefer not to have children instead of living in worst condition Traditional
@igors1234
@igors1234 Жыл бұрын
@@LightMCXx By refusing to make children you let your genes disappear from the gene pool, so that's a biological failure. And you most likely will not become a scientist or a worldwide known businesman, so I don't know what success you are talking about.
@ProgressiveEconomicsSupporter
@ProgressiveEconomicsSupporter Жыл бұрын
Another great video, Quality did also improve over the last 2 years!! 🙏😎
@Pike737
@Pike737 Жыл бұрын
I did a case study about the demographics of India and its sustainability. It is interesting to know that the economic growth rate of the Southern part of the country is significantly higher than the North and the richer South is facing a decline in birth rate. Just like the West. The underdeveloped, poorer, backward North part of India is exploding with it's population by the millions, with limited economic options available these poorer people from the North flock to the South for employment, just like the migrant crisis we see in Europe. It is interesting to see different dynamics within a country, especially for someone like me from a tiny country. With the advent of AI and automation, population is going to spell doom for countries with huge number of people.
@Umrao979
@Umrao979 Жыл бұрын
Not a single southern Indian state has had population decline so far.
@Pike737
@Pike737 Жыл бұрын
@@Umrao979 birth rates are declining in the Southern states, I'm pretty sure because I did the study only few months back
@deepikar5862
@deepikar5862 Жыл бұрын
​@@Umrao979he's right birth rate is decreasing in southern state especially in cities
@sairis
@sairis Жыл бұрын
Not all north states have high population. Especially the Himalayan ones. Although we do migrate to southern parts but it is only when we are left with no opti0ns for empl0yment purpose. Also, our state geography is not very much favourable.
@AmishKumar-lc7zs
@AmishKumar-lc7zs Жыл бұрын
​@@sairisstate geography as well as southern states language & Culture😅
@Nitzpitz
@Nitzpitz Жыл бұрын
The social norms also include availability of many things for larger families. Both my husband and myself come from a 2 kids family, but we have 3 kids. It is only now that I can see how much more complicated things can get with 3 or more kids. For instance hotel rooms are for a maximum of 2 kids, finding a car that we would fit in was more difficult, entry to attractions can be relatively more expensive than with 1-2 kids. With three kids it is still doable, but I am wondering how larger families do stuff.
@estuardo2985
@estuardo2985 Жыл бұрын
We have forgotten how. You no longer see them but station wagons used to be common as well as bunk/multiple beds per room. Now people seem to think they need a large suv just to haul two kids around and anything more they need a suburban (actually it used to be common for three kids to squeeze in the back of a sedan too). For hotel rooms, my complete guess is that they may not of had that regulation or skirted it often in the past. However at the same single parent households were more rare and discipline was higher in the past as well.
@agme8045
@agme8045 Жыл бұрын
I agree with you, however I believe people don’t realize most of these things until after they’ve had 3 or more kids lol.
@Eodbatman
@Eodbatman Жыл бұрын
We just had bunk beds, went camping on public lands for vacations, went to libraries or public pools or lakes for fun, turned our yard into a very large garden so we could have lots of healthy food, and so on. My brother and I worked a ton starting at young ages when we weren’t in school. There are ways to make it work and still have a great life, you just find other things to do and be a bit savvy with the finances. Sadly, houses are now so expensive that I wonder if I’d be able to afford to give the same sort of life for my kids.
@millevenon5853
@millevenon5853 Жыл бұрын
Most couples in the didn't get hotel rooms and vacations
@robertnomok9750
@robertnomok9750 Жыл бұрын
While other doesnt have to make it work have WONDERFUL life without livingt in povetry.@@Eodbatman
@iivarilappalainen9836
@iivarilappalainen9836 Жыл бұрын
"Good quality of life" is very subjective and really kinda works against us in the modern world, where everyone can see always new cool and whatever things on the internet and start they are missing out on x, y and z. In the older days we would live simpler lives and have simpler needs and still feel its good and meaningful life ....but the more rich we get in the material world ...the more things and everything we need to get the feel of "good quality". and i do genuinely feel alot is lost in this endless race for better "quality of life".
@lanzer22
@lanzer22 Жыл бұрын
Another aspect is how we become more mobile as economies grow. In cultures where people move away from family to other cities or countries for opportunities, we see that as a good economic move, with people earning more and raising the country's GDP. But that comes with the cost of losing family support from grandparents on starting a family.
@OhMyLaurens
@OhMyLaurens Жыл бұрын
Makes a lot of sense, would have liked to see the added parameters of immigrant % as well as distribution (median kids per woman). They could, as they make large portions of the population now, affect things greatly. And as they are seemingly not adopting western social norms there could be a scenario where systems are "intertwined". i.e. enough kids but a large part raised as the security option for the parents. Instead of the parents wanting a better and fulfilling future for their child (general western norm, as mentioned). Government leniency towards alternative lifestyles could also have a big effect. US, France, Sweden... have much higher rates of economic migrants and in the last years and decades also growing immigration concerns. [Female to male labour force participation in Afghanistan, Morocco, Iraq, Algeria.. is ~10/20-100 compared to European nations all at ~80/90-100.] Great video as always though! And good luck with the little one :)
@g.zoltan
@g.zoltan Жыл бұрын
Here are some counterpoints: -Most of Eastern Europe has free education (even higher education), free healthcare, so having less kids wouldn't allow for a better future for them. Childcare is free and accessible. Labour markets are uncompetitive with most countries suffer from a labour sortage. Safety is relatively good, since most property is privately owned, and inheritence often benefitting the younger generations. Grandparents are also expected to contribute to the new family, making things even easier. Yet fertility is at rock bottom. -The quality-quantity theory suggests that poor countries have good fertility since kids work on farms. Is that really the case? Do people in India, Middle East, or the Gypsy communities own farms where kids can work? And kids don't go to school there? Both of those questions can be answered with no. I conclude that high fertlity isn't explained by the claims of the video, and low fertility isn't explained by the claims of the video either. There must be other factors at play. These can be found by asking ourselves and others why they don't have more kids. I have 2 explanations. 1: Career-Family balance. One has to compromise between raising kids and building a career. People in developed countries are career-focused, and people in developing countries prioritize family. 2: Technology. Netflix, KZbin, and video games are a lot more fun than raising kids. Modern entertainment also prevents couples from forming - people just can't meet. Developing countries typically don't use such distractions extensively. The exceptions. I have asked people from France and the Nordics why they have better fertility. I was told that the original population has the same low fertility as the rest of Europe, but the significant migrant population, coming from poor countries, has very high fertility that brings up the average. These people bring their mentality, prioritizing family over career and using less technology. I assume it's a similar case in the US. So how can a decaying population be fixed? 1:more migrants from poor countries. 2: convince people that a family brings more happiness than chasing a career.
@mangolemon4117
@mangolemon4117 Жыл бұрын
What about the technology part then?
@g.zoltan
@g.zoltan Жыл бұрын
@@mangolemon4117 I have no proposals for that, obviously I won't advocate measures most people would hade. But personally, I use very little technology and I love it.
@mangolemon4117
@mangolemon4117 Жыл бұрын
@@g.zoltan u is only one person and wont change anything.
@g.zoltan
@g.zoltan Жыл бұрын
@@mangolemon4117 "I have no proposals for that"
@XA1985
@XA1985 Жыл бұрын
I refuse to work like a slave raising a family, is hard taking care of myself, my vasectomy is the best decision I ever made 😊
@tr-vh3ec
@tr-vh3ec Жыл бұрын
U maakt me een viere belg vandaag, zeer goede channel! Goed bezig man!
@yestadayfk
@yestadayfk Жыл бұрын
Great content! this is what the internet need!
@MoneyMacro
@MoneyMacro Жыл бұрын
Thank you!!
@msoguitarcover5718
@msoguitarcover5718 Жыл бұрын
It happens in Brazil too where the ancient generations had much children. I am 50 years old man and when I was child my birthday party were full of children but nowadays birthday party are few children and lots of adults and elders
@Galopo
@Galopo Жыл бұрын
17:00 your research is missing something, all the fertility problems are concentrated in the urban areas. You could improve fertility by making remote work excidingly beneficial for companies. If that was the case, people could leave more expensive city centers and locate in rural areas with better quality of life for the family. The youth could move out to the city to pursue a higher education and make everything more accesible for everyone. Just tax the shit out of offices and provide better tax incentives to work remote.
@KatharineOsborne
@KatharineOsborne Жыл бұрын
The healthcare in rural areas is often worse (which is a factor when deciding to give birth, which is a life-threatening activity). Also management likes to lord over workers and watch them like hawks; most companies only begrudgingly allow remote work if at all. You'd have to address both issues in order to improve fertility with remote working.
@Galopo
@Galopo Жыл бұрын
@KatharineOsborne of course, investment in adequate healthcare will be required, but you don't need frontier facilities for regular births. Regarding managers: Just make it more expensive to have workers physically at the office. Naturally, not every position can be done remotely... but most office jobs can.
@nicknickbon22
@nicknickbon22 Жыл бұрын
Here in Italy the problem is present both in cities and areas areas alike: in fact, most rural areas, especially on the alps and appenines, are becoming uninhabited and you won’t find any young family with children in most of the villages.
@Galopo
@Galopo Жыл бұрын
@nicknickbon22 yes, because currently, if you want to have a high paying job, you require to physically be present in a city. Young people with money aren't in rural areas. Im proposing to support remote work. If income was the same, people would tend to prefer the lower cost of living.
@zesky6654
@zesky6654 Жыл бұрын
​@@Galopo so people want to be alone in the middle of nowhere with no support?
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