Posted on 06/23/2014 9:38:07 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
I know it sounds creepy to suggest that Uncle Sam ought to bribe women to have more babies. It has the whiff of something that chest-baring ultra-nationalist Vladimir Putin would do. More future patriots from Russian mothers for Mother Russia!
Most Americans would probably say nosy technocrats have no business trying to engineer some socially desirable family size, either bigger or smaller. And they would be right.
But what if Washington has already inadvertently instituted its own version of China's awful one-child policy? After all, American families are having fewer children than they want. Surveys show a steady, four-decade preference for 2.6 kids. But today's actual number is something more like 2.0.
Why the gap? Parents point to pocketbook issues. When asked by Gallup why they aren't having more kids, 65 percent of respondents mentioned "not having enough money or the cost of raising a child." Another 11 percent blamed the state of the economy or the paucity of jobs in the U.S. You can at least partially blame government for that, at least to the extent that bad policy slows economic growth and makes education and health care less affordable.
But there is another way government may hinder family formation. Considerable academic research suggests social insurance programs, such as Social Security and Medicare, reduce fertility rates in advanced economies. Thanks to these government-funded safety nets, parents have less incentive to produce kids to care for them in old age.
This is not just a problem that parents should care about. America's childless ought to care a lot about the "kid gap." Washington should care about the nation's fertility rate the same way it cares about the nation's productivity and labor-force participation rates. Low fertility rates are associated with diminished economic growth. Fewer kids mean fewer tax-paying workers to support public pension programs. The Obama White House has stated that real GDP growth in the 21st century "is likely to be permanently slower... due to a decline in the growth of the working age population." An older society, noted the late Nobel laureate economist Gary Becker, is less dynamic, creative, and entrepreneurial.
Thomas Piketty argues in his best-selling Capital in the Twenty-First Century that higher fertility would reduce inequality by increasing economic growth and dispersing the wealth of the rich among more descendants. And for now, at least, bigger families would boost housing demand and near-term economic growth.
Unfortunately, increasing the birth rate is hard. You really have to incentivize it.
Just ask Putin. Since 2006, the Russian government has been paying women about $10,000 for having a second and third child. Russian women are indeed having more kids, though the slight rebound began before Putin's natalist push, and also comes after birthrates plummeted during the post-Soviet era's economic chaos.
A study analyzing a 1990s Canadian program that paid up to $8,000 (Canadian dollars) to families having a child found a "strong effect" on fertility. Indeed, some American conservatives are suggesting a sharp expansion in the child tax credit to help offset how government currently distorts parental choice. Another idea is to reduce payroll taxes for middle-class families by a third for each kid they have until the child turns 18.
Now, trying to nudge women to have more kids than they want is both a fool's errand and unseemly. But trying to make it easier to for parents to have the number of kids they do want and produce the next generation of workers, taxpayers, and entrepreneurs by lowering government hurdles is just what U.S. economy and American families need to flourish in the long run.
If making babies was all that it took, South America would be rich.
The best social security is what the bible calls “turning the hearts of the fathers to the sons and the hearts of the sons to the fathers.” Of course that goes for both genders and also for some voluntary intergenerational charity.
People all with a personal God, that is the key.
“If making babies was all that it took, South America would be rich. “
Good point. Maybe this NR buffoon should ask himself why Obama’s childrens’ crusade is flooding the border.
bump
This idiot author never heard of the Child Tax Credit? Free schools? and crap
Did my part, ten.
Today, if you DID have more than two you’d need to buy a bus, just to haul the car seats.
The free market should work regardless of the population size and the population growth or decrease if it is indeed the most efficient way to match buyers and sellers.
Either this guy is a closet commie or else capitalism is as Chesterton claimed, just the flip-side of the materialist coin. The other side being socialism.
Population does play a part in technology advancement and economies of scale. A world of only a few million people would never have the economic foundation to develop and produce a digital computer, for instance.
We have a long way to go before the population gets down to a few million people, or even before the youth population goes below one billion.
To have babies, raise families in middle class America people need good, long term secure jobs, affordable medical benefits, (Ya know how much it cost to have one baby without good insurance?) They need homes to raise them in, etc, etc....
Young folks in Middle America has none of that
Very true - and people need something which is disappearing - security of employment, especially for adult men. How can one take on a long-term commitment if one’s job and income are always provisional and short-term? It is no accident that the years of the baby boom were the golden age of paid employment and job security.
BUMP
This government has created an economic environment that makes it nearly impossible for many to get gainfully employed while punishing those who do and subsidizing the ones who are lazy.
Yep....It’s not very complex as to why young folks are not having babies, raising families etc.
We figured this out 10+ years ago...
Saving the economy never crossed my mind.
By God’s design, I have the capacity to have children, under the proper conditions (good health, a healthy spouse). To say God made me wrong would be disrespectful to Him and degrading to me.
...because 28 million unemployed just ain’t enough.
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