| ▲ | lotsofpulp 3 hours ago |
| A better, cleaner solution is to remove old age benefits (Social Security and Medicare and Medicaid). A tax credit sufficient to incentivize attaining TFR would probably blow up the budget, and it would be hard to pin down the exact number, subject to tons of politics. |
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| ▲ | Qem 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] |
| It's not better, because by the time people reach old age and understand the dangers of old age destitution and how dire is the lack of support from close family, they can't act on it anymore. Things need to be structured in a way people act while they still have opportunity. One thing that makes me suspect the population crash will be much harder to fix than the previous population explosion, it's that there's no immediate fix. It takes ~20-30 years to raise a human being into a fully functional member of modern society, after the decision to conceive them was made. It's a long term investment. Back when people panicked on population explosion, some of the proposed "fixes" were brutal, like forced sterilization in India[1], or forced abortions in China[2], but they could be implemented and sometimes stopped quickly. There's fundamental asymmetry. Time to terminate an unborn child is measured in hours to days (counting the recover time for the mother). Time to fully _raise_ a child is measured in decades. By the time people panic over it, it may be too late to avert the crisis. [1] https://www.aljazeera.com/features/2025/6/25/india-forcibly-... [2] https://www.npr.org/2016/02/01/465124337/how-chinas-one-chil... |
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| ▲ | nostrademons 37 minutes ago | parent [-] | | More to the point, human's reproductive lifetime is usually about 30 years. So by the time you realize that you've fucked up your society, the cohort that could do something about it has now aged out of childbearing years. You're left with a much smaller cohort to fix the problem, but because there are now so many fewer women of childbearing age, increases in fertility rate lead to many fewer births. This is actually happening with Millennials. Strauss and Howe predicted a "Crisis of 2020" that would lead to civic renewal and presumably a higher birth rate, but it now appears that 2020 was the beginning of the crisis and it won't be resolved for some time, perhaps a generation, and by that time Millennials (globally, the last big generation) will have aged out of childbearing years. Any baby boom will be led by late Zoomers, at best, and that's a small generation that's already affected by the collapse in birth rates. My takeaway: the globalized, technologically advanced society we have now is doomed to collapse, and we should be working hard to take that advanced technology and identify simplified versions of it that can be run and maintained by a much smaller, localized workforce. |
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| ▲ | stereolambda an hour ago | parent | prev | next [-] |
| There is no guarantee your kids will want to support you, or, to be morbid but realistic, even survive you. |
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| ▲ | lotsofpulp 6 minutes ago | parent [-] | | Wouldn't that reward raising them in a way that increases the likelihood of them supporting you? And/or raising more of them so that the odds are at least 1 supports you? The problem societies have is reconciling both individual vs societal interest and short term benefits vs long term benefits. I don't see that being solved with any kind of legislation, especially not by a legislature that has to depend on votes today. As a side note, some places do try to legislate it with filial responsibility laws: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filial_responsibility_laws |
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| ▲ | nathan_compton 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] |
| A better, cleaner, solution that literally no civilization on earth would ever vote for or want to deal with. "Support families to raise kids" sells way better than "let old people die if they don't have kids to support them." |
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| ▲ | mschuster91 an hour ago | parent | next [-] | | > "Support families to raise kids" sells way better than "let old people die if they don't have kids to support them." Part of the problem is that the decision to not have children isn't a decision for many people. Some never find a partner (and no, I'm not talking about "incel" nutcases here - I'm talking about countries and regions with a severe oversupply of males), some suffer from medical infertility (e.g. due to injuries, cancer, PCOS, endometriosis), some from genetic infertility (e.g. people with genetic disorders, being somewhere on the wide DSD spectrum or where the partners are not genetically compatible), and some have no other choice than not having children for ethical instead of medical reasons (e.g. both partners are carriers of genetically passed diseases or suffer from mental health issues that make them unable to take care of a child). You can't just go and punish these people for not having had children in their life, that's just as unethical. | |
| ▲ | lotsofpulp 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | | Isn’t that the global problem with democracy? What sells well isn’t what is effective, and often times is just current generations selling out future generations. People are going to die regardless of having supportive kids. The question is who pays for their quality of life while in the final years. | | |
| ▲ | JumpCrisscross 2 hours ago | parent [-] | | > People are going to die regardless of having supportive kids. The question is who pays for their quality of life while in the final years Social Security and Medicare are equally about quality of life and survival. And even if you're okay with impoverished seniors, burdening their children of child-rearing age with a new financial obligation doesn't raise birth rates. | | |
| ▲ | lotsofpulp 2 hours ago | parent [-] | | >And even if you're okay with impoverished seniors, burdening their children of child-rearing age with a new financial obligation doesn't raise birth rates. It's better than burdening them with that and FICA taxes and the devaluation of the USD, which are also a financial obligation. The burden can be split amongst children, incentivizing raising more, or parents can opt out of burdening their children by going on a very, very long fishing trip. The government mandated wealth transfer from young to old is obviously unsustainable, in all countries around the world. It is predicated on the assumption that people will "naturally" opt to raise a minimum of x number of kids (economically productive ones), yet the system is most beneficial to those who raise no kids. |
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