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US birth rate: 30 year low


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The birth rate in the US is now at a 30-year low without much end in sight.

 

image.thumb.png.2f811d401e22cb7b358d16fae128e605.png

 

The trend worldwide is similar, with higher income correlating to lower birth rates (and most closely correlating to education of women). The higher incomes result mostly in lower birth rates among the young(first child birth age in the US has gone from 21 to 27 in the last 50 years)--meaning the biggest decrease is for young and unprepared parents (mostly moms), the result of which is more "wanted" kids, with better prepared parents. This can only be good news.

 

As India's economy and education rise, and maybe even someday Africa, our world population is projected to peak somewhere in the mid 2000s and then begin to gradually decline. The elbow room on planet earth should be OK for our kids!

 

 

WSJ Article

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5 minutes ago, Nanker said:

What role do abortions have in the declining birth rate?

 

Abortions are on the decline according to Wiki via the CDC, so not much.

 

Year Number of abortions
reported to CDC
Induced abortions
ratio per 1,000
live births
CDC Abortion
Surveillance Report
1970 193,491 52 [3]
1971 485,816 137 [3]
1972 586,760 180 [3]
1973 615,831 196 [3]
1974 763,476 242 [3]
1975 854,853 272 [3]
1976 988,267 312 [3]
1977 950,675 325 [3]
1978 1,157,776 347 [3]
1979 1,251,921 358 [4]
1980 1,297,606 359 [5]
1981 1,300,760 358 [6]
1982 1,303,980 354 [3]
1983 1,268,987 349 [3]
1984 1,333,521 364 [7]
1985 1,328,570 354 [7]
1986 1,328,112 354 [8]
1987 1,353,671 356 [8]
1988 1,371,285 352 [9]
1989 1,396,658 346 [10]
1990 1,429,247 345 [11]
1991 1,388,937 339 [12]
1992 1,359,145 335 [13]
1993 1,330,414 321 [14]
1994 1,267,415 334 [14]
1995 1,210,883 311 [15]
1996 1,221,585 314 [16]
1997 1,186,039 274 [17]
1998 884,273 264 [18]
1999 861,789 256 [19]
2000 857,475 246 [20]
2001 853,485 246 [21]
2002 854,122 246 [22]
2003 848,163 241 [23]
2004 839,226 238 [24]
2005 820,151 233 [25]
2006 852,385 236 [26]
2007 827,609 231 [27]
2008 825,564 234 [28]
2009 789,507 227 [26]
2010 765,651 228 [29]
2011 730,322 219 [30]
2012 699,202 210 [31]
2013 664,435 200 [32]
2014 652,639 193 [33][34]
2015 638,169 188 [35]
Edited by BeginnersMind
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3 minutes ago, Nanker said:

About 30 million fewer Americans by just those raw stats alone. Of course those 30 million would have produced several more millions over time - if they ever had the chance. 

Most of them would probably have been shot dead by their fellow Americans anyway. 

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2 hours ago, BeginnersMind said:

The birth rate in the US is now at a 30-year low without much end in sight.

 

image.thumb.png.2f811d401e22cb7b358d16fae128e605.png

 

The trend worldwide is similar, with higher income correlating to lower birth rates (and most closely correlating to education of women). The higher incomes result mostly in lower birth rates among the young(first child birth age in the US has gone from 21 to 27 in the last 50 years)--meaning the biggest decrease is for young and unprepared parents (mostly moms), the result of which is more "wanted" kids, with better prepared parents. This can only be good news.

 

As India's economy and education rise, and maybe even someday Africa, our world population is projected to peak somewhere in the mid 2000s and then begin to gradually decline. The elbow room on planet earth should be OK for our kids!

 

 

WSJ Article

  From my vantage point birthrates are down in general among younger women/couples regardless of education or employment.  The problem is immigrants seem to be offsetting that.  Look at Western Europe.  The native people have had declining birthrates for a while now while the birthrate of recent immigrants appears to be completely offsetting that.  All this is fine if immigrants want to adapt to the host country but in a lot of cases this is not happening.  I would not count on the children of these immigrants to be happy worker drones in the economy as one poster here is speculating.  

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There are now better forms of birth control, a morning-after pill, access to early abortion, etc. and people take advantage of those options.

My great-grandmother once told my grandfather (her youngest) that the perfect family size is "one".
He responded, "But you had six children!"
Her response, "But we didn't have access to the birth control methods you do today."

My great-grandmother... who died before I was born said that. 

Big families were partly - we need the labor for the farm - and partly - it is very difficult to prevent pregnancy.  Once America moved on from an agricultural society, once health-care got better so you didn't have a cemetery full of dead children that needed to be "replaced",  once birth control became more accessible and women had control over birth control methods,  once women had more options than to just stay home and bake cookies <_<  ... in other words a lot of things have contributed to birth rate stagnation and decline. Cost of living plays a part - kids ain't cheap (and I'm not talking education - even the cost of childcare when young is astronomical).

So many reasons and many are personal choices. Is there a solution? Well, I am sure the Democrats will say more illegals. The EU tried doing that to bolster declining birth rates. Look at how well that turned out for them!

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6 minutes ago, Buffalo_Gal said:

There are now better forms of birth control, a morning-after pill, access to early abortion, etc. and people take advantage of those options.

My great-grandmother once told my grandfather (her youngest) that the perfect family size is "one".
He responded, "But you had six children!"
Her response, "But we didn't have access to the birth control methods you do today."

My great-grandmother... who died before I was born said that. 

Big families were partly - we need the labor for the farm - and partly - it is very difficult to prevent pregnancy.  Once America moved on from an agricultural society, once health-care got better so you didn't have a cemetery full of dead children that needed to be "replaced",  once birth control became more accessible and women had control over birth control methods,  once women had more options than to just stay home and bake cookies <_<  ... in other words a lot of things have contributed to birth rate stagnation and decline. Cost of living plays a part - kids ain't cheap (and I'm not talking education - even the cost of childcare when young is astronomical).

So many reasons and many are personal choices. Is there a solution? Well, I am sure the Democrats will say more illegals. The EU tried doing that to bolster declining birth rates. Look at how well that turned out for them!

 

I don’t see it as a problem. This was meant to provide very good news. The article is about the US, but we’ve followed Europe and most of the rest of the world is on a trend where education of women and contraception access further reduces birth rates. 

 

The population isn’t going to zero just because birth rates are declining, but fewer total people on earth in the long term may not be a bad thing. 

Edited by BeginnersMind
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17 minutes ago, BeginnersMind said:

 

I don’t see it as a problem. This was meant to provide very good news. The article is about the US, but we’ve followed Europe and most of the rest of the world is on a trend where education of women and contraception access further reduces birth rates. 

 

The population isn’t going to zero just because birth rates are declining, but fewer total people on earth in the long term may not be a bad thing. 

  Muslim women have access to education and birth control?  Are they allowed to say "no" when the man of the house is feeling horny?  I see it as a problem if immigrants do not want to adapt to the host country.  A lot of us here will probably live for a while yet and don't want to see growing contempt when we are out and about in terms of our culture.

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25 minutes ago, Buffalo_Gal said:

There are now better forms of birth control, a morning-after pill, access to early abortion, etc. and people take advantage of those options.
 

 

From what I've heard the past few weeks, that's all untrue.  Because if we're denying access to late-term abortions to women, we're turning them in to nothing more than "breeding factories."

 

Yes, I actually saw that.  Didn't bother pointing out that the idea women only have control over their actions in their third trimester was more misogynist and infantilizing to women than the worst thing I've ever heard Republicans say.

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28 minutes ago, Buffalo_Gal said:

There are now better forms of birth control, a morning-after pill, access to early abortion, etc. and people take advantage of those options.

My great-grandmother once told my grandfather (her youngest) that the perfect family size is "one".
He responded, "But you had six children!"
Her response, "But we didn't have access to the birth control methods you do today."

My great-grandmother... who died before I was born said that. 

Big families were partly - we need the labor for the farm - and partly - it is very difficult to prevent pregnancy.  Once America moved on from an agricultural society, once health-care got better so you didn't have a cemetery full of dead children that needed to be "replaced",  once birth control became more accessible and women had control over birth control methods,  once women had more options than to just stay home and bake cookies <_<  ... in other words a lot of things have contributed to birth rate stagnation and decline. Cost of living plays a part - kids ain't cheap (and I'm not talking education - even the cost of childcare when young is astronomical).

So many reasons and many are personal choices. Is there a solution? Well, I am sure the Democrats will say more illegals. The EU tried doing that to bolster declining birth rates. Look at how well that turned out for them!

  I generally agree but see the advance in medicine that happened after the Civil War for the reason households grew larger for a time.  Rural couples reproduced at a rate based on what they knew from generations past rather than what they could expect in terms of medical science.  Also, we don't like to think of our ancestors as frisky but they only had so much to occupy their time when not doing chores and they probably knew what we know today in that it is pleasurable.

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