Everybody knows what needs to be done. Parenthood needs to be sustainable for the parents. There’s just no political will to implement a policy that will only start paying off in 20+ years. Every politician kicks the can down the road, or implements half-hearted policies.

Edit: Just realised I posted this to the wrong instance comm 😅

  • iii@mander.xyz
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    6 days ago

    Everybody knows what needs to be done.

    I’m not convinced it’s as simple as you make it out to be, as places that experience more poverty and violence appear to have higher fertility rates (1).

    • AwesomeLowlanderOP
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      6 days ago
      1. In places with poverty and violence, kids are an asset. They work and contribute to the family in times of crisis.
      2. General lack of education, awareness and access to birth control means there are no options for women.
      3. Women have fewer or no rights, and little to no say in whether they have kids.

      Unless we’re planning on this route (which it seems the US is set on), the alternative is to make parenthood attractive (or at least not-unattractive) enough to negate the costs.

      Additionally, fertility rates are dropping worldwide, even in low-income countries. They’re further back on the curve, but they’re definitely moving along it. Some institutes claim we’ve already dropped below the global replacement rate of ~2.3, though it’ll take a few years to confirm the current statistics.

        • Lvxferre [he/him]@mander.xyz
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          5 days ago

          That reminds me my grandma. My family is not exactly wealthy, even for Latin American standards; and even in times where women were not supposed to work, my grandpa was doing grunt work while grandma worked as a hotel maid.

          And as I was getting older, I often visited my grandma. Drink some yerba together, chitchat, smoke some cigs together, this kind of stuff. And she told me some shitty stories about my mum and her three siblings when they were kids. In plenty of those, one of the four muppets almost died. (Including my mum. Hoooooly fuck - eating berries known locally as “horse destroyer”, rolling inside a tire into a high traffic road, perhaps she likes cats so much because she identifies herself with them, they both have nine lives?)

          Well. Turns out that they weren’t supposed to be four children, but six. My mum wasn’t the oldest one - her two older brothers died before she was born. My grandma once mentioned that once, but in no moment she showed a change in expression; it was a fact of life.

          Even as a man I could not picture myself being so stoic. If I had a child and they died, I’d probably lose my marbles.

          • dumblederp@aussie.zone
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            5 days ago

            It first came to my attention in a book - The Poisionwood Bible - about missionaries into Africa.

            And fwiw, my friend with four healthy children has also had nine miscarriages. Nine!

      • Panamalt
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        6 days ago

        You forget that most of the assholes in charge right now don’t give a flying fuck about fertility rates, having an educated workforce, or even anyone’s rights and opportunities. All that matters to them is making more money and hanging onto power. The fuckers can practically read the future as long there is a dollar sign in front of it, and as far as they are concerned, the rest of us don’t factor into that future.

        • Taokan
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          6 days ago

          I believe some of the rich assholes really do see birth rates as a sort of global crisis. Mostly because it poses a threat to their bottom line. Less workers = less labor to exploit, less consumers to buy their shit, pay subscriptions or blast with ads. And a demographic shift where the size of the older generation is greater than the younger generation massively screws up social security systems that depend on taxes from the young to pay the benefits for the old. And, more nefariously - because parents necessarily consume more and become more reliable workers: when you’re living paycheck to paycheck you can’t afford to quit, take unpaid leave, turn up overtime or go on strike. But perhaps too, some may be experiencing the existential crisis that there is a real, natural limit to the growth of the human race, that we are not god-destined to just expand forever and ever, but rather finite in our place in the cosmos.

        • Jiggle_Physics
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          6 days ago

          Many are concerned. Capitalism requires a growing population. It is just they seem to believe force is the way to go.

            • Lvxferre [he/him]@mander.xyz
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              5 days ago

              Capitalism requires a growing population.

              How so?

              Sloppy/oversimplified explanation:

              In capitalism, each business is trying to maximise its own margin of profit. And to do so, it needs to produce more for a cheaper production price, and sell it.

              Technology makes each worker output more production, but it also makes their labour more expensive. So to produce more, better tech is not enough; you need more workers.

              And to sell more of your production, you need more people buying your stuff, because there’s a limit on how much each will buy.

              This means each business needs an increasingly larger number of workers and customers. At the start they could do it by venturing into other countries, and killing local businesses; but eventually you reach a point where you have megacorporations like Unilever, Google, Faecesbook*, Nestlé etc. Where do they expand into? Where do they get more customers and workers from?

              *call me childish, I can’t help but misspell it.

              • iii@mander.xyz
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                5 days ago

                Isn’t that a bit like argueing that a bathtub needs to increase in size every time you take a bath, as you add water?

                In other words, it’s ignoring a whole part of the bath: the drain.

                In the same way it’s ignoring a whole part of capitalism: bankrupcies and other forms of debt foregiveness. As some businesses become irrelevant, and as new ones are started.

                • Lvxferre [he/him]@mander.xyz
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                  5 days ago

                  Bankruptcy is a mostly a risk for small and nascent businesses: raw material is more expensive, economy of scale works against them, they start out with less know-how, they have a smaller reserve of capital to handle eventualities, banks are less eager to give them loans, so goes on. Eventually they get outcompeted by another business, often a considerably larger one, that keeps growing.

                  So the analogy with a bathtub full of water doesn’t work well. It’s more like a box full of balloons; except those balloons keep growing, and the bigger balloons are actually harder to pop than the smaller ones. Eventually the pressure forces a few small balloons to pop, but as soon as they do the bigger ones take the space over. And they keep exerting pressure over the box. [Sorry for the weird analogy.]

                  • iii@mander.xyz
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                    5 days ago

                    Bankruptcy is a mostly a risk for small and nascent businesse

                    That’s untrue? The big ones also go bankrupt. It’s a risk shared by every company, to keep adapting as the world changes.

                    Even the VOC, at a point the largest company in the world with more assets than most countries, folded.

              • iii@mander.xyz
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                6 days ago

                That dissertation does not explain why capitalism requires population growth.

                Rather it takes “capitalism requires positive economic growth” as an axiom, to argue that such growth can not persist.

                • Jiggle_Physics
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                  6 days ago

                  Yes, and growth is sustained by striking a balance of quality and quantity in terms of the human population. If this balance becomes out of whack you will decline into what they refer to as “malthusian stagnation”. So the population does need to grow in order to sustain economic growth, along with the quality of the individuals that make up the population. What they refer to as “economic darwinism” beings to truly take place as a population has the extra resources to put more into children than parent, creating generational progress. Post industrial economic darwinism gets a buffer, so-to-speak, due to the increased per capita productivity introduced by technology. However this is also not infinite, and so, at some point this will plateau, and the population will need to begin rising again to spur growth. We are likely in the midst of this plateauing.

                  • iii@mander.xyz
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                    6 days ago

                    So the population does need to grow in order to sustain economic growth

                    The argument is going round in circles, but never explains if nor why capitalism requires economic growth. Therefore it also does not explain if nor why it requires population growth.

        • AwesomeLowlanderOP
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          6 days ago

          I didn’t forget it, that is one of the main reasons why there’s no political will.