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Falling fertility, debt and AI: is the US headed toward a population crisis?

about 19 hours ago
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Americans having fewer kids plus an ageing population could be a recipe for disaster that further erodes social stabilityRemember environmentalist Paul Ehrlich’s 1960s-vintage prediction about how overpopulation would deplete the Earth’s resources and condemn millions to starvation? His Malthusian condemnation of humanity’s voracious appetite has kept a grip on the debate over the future of the planet, even scaring the young out of having children,Ehrlich was wrong,Yet as we have come around to the thought that overpopulation won’t kill us all, we are being walloped by another demographic emergency: we are not having too many kids, we are having too few,This problem is real,The most recent scare came from government figures released last week suggesting the fall in US fertility – the number of children a woman will have over her lifetime – may be speeding up, hitting a record low of 1.

57 in 2025, below the 1,62 projected by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) in January last year,This is well below the 2,1 children per woman needed to maintain a stable population, a rate we haven’t hit since the Great Recession of 2008,The population hasn’t started shrinking, but it is getting older fast.

While this won’t starve us, it will further erode the rickety foundation of US social stability,In 2000, there were about 24 Americans aged 65 and older for every 100 working-age adults,By mid-century, there will be 43, according to the CBO,Taxes levied on narrower cohorts of working Americans are being called on to finance Medicare and social security for a growing cohort of pensioners, straining deficits and increasing debt,Spending on old age entitlements will grow from 6% of GDP at the turn of the century to 12.

7% in 2055, largely due to ageing, according to CBO projections.The CBO projects that the fiscal deficit excluding interest on the debt will reach about 2% of GDP by the 2040s.Economists at the Fed and the Aspen Economic Strategy Group estimated that it would be in surplus if only the ratio between elderly and working-age Americans stabilized in 2025.This is not an exclusively American problem.Fertility is falling everywhere, in rich countries with low fertility rates and poor countries where it is comparatively high.

Two-thirds of the global population lives in countries where fertility is below the replacement rate.This is contributing to rising public debt, which almost reached 94% of world GDP in 2025, according to projections by the International Monetary Fund, and is set to reach 100% by 2029, one year earlier than projected in April 2025.In China, where a decades-long policy limiting families to only one child produced one of the lowest fertility rates in the world, the IMF foresees that ageing will slow annual GDP growth by nearly two percentage points between 2024 and 2050, and boost pension spending by nearly 10% of GDP.Among the industrialized nations of the OECD, ageing is expected to push pension and health spending up by 3% of GDP.This may not sound particularly alarming for the diehard Ehrlichians that still lurk in the environmental movement, hoping the battle against environmental strains can be advanced by controlling the population.

The Silicon Valley elite probably also welcomes the happy coincidence of having the working-age population stall just as AI is about to destroy human work,But falling fertility won’t save the planet,Carbon emissions must fall sharply over the next two or three decades,Populations don’t change that fast,One study found that even if fertility around the world were bumped up to the replacement rate of just above two children per woman, the global temperature in 2200 would be less than 0.

1C hotter.Fans of depopulation misunderstand how humanity prospered despite environmental constraints: through innovation.Just as agricultural innovations fed a growing population on limited land, the path to decarbonization requires zero-carbon energy production on a vast scale.Innovation needs people, though.Smaller populations will have fewer innovators.

Smaller economies will have fewer resources to pay for innovation with large upfront costs, and smaller markets to justify these investments,It is not a coincidence that the population lump created by the baby boom was accompanied by a jump in pharmaceutical innovation targeted at the ailments of boomers as they aged,Hopeful scholars want to believe it is only a matter of spending money to get more children,Falling fertility in advanced nations is largely driven by the rising opportunity cost of child-bearing for women who must interrupt their education or career to have children,But much evidence suggests that even societies that spend generously on public childcare and family support to reduce the burden have not raised fertility consistently.

Trump’s White House has some ideas.There’s a plan to deposit $1,000 into an account bearing Trump’s name for every child born during his presidency.It has floated teaching women about their menstrual cycle so they target their lovemaking.It proposed a National Medal of Motherhood to encourage patriotic women to get on with it.But even if this produced a baby boom tomorrow, it would not fix the world’s fiscal dilemma.

It takes 20 years or more for kids to start contributing economically,Over the next couple of decades, more of them would increase the strain on countries’ budgets,What’s to be done? AI could bolster the social contract, if a stupendous productivity leap raises economic growth so it can support the jobless, whether young or old,We shouldn’t count on it, though,Getting tech oligarchs to share the spoils of their revolution may not be easy, considering plutocrats’ longstanding hostility towards redistribution.

Despair is kindling a fear that our demographic conundrum will inspire a darker response.In Children of Men, PD James’s zero-birthrate dystopia, the challenge of supporting elderly people is dealt with by facilitating their suicide.We know how to encourage the old to take the deal: make their life miserable by depriving them of social security and Medicare.
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A sad indictment that the young seek tradwife life | Letters

I very much enjoyed Lucy Knight’s article (My month in the tradwife world: ‘I can’t pretend I’m not enjoying myself at all’, 15 April). As a boomer with children and grandchildren, I have no trouble appreciating the very poor hand the young people of today have been dealt and the reason that gingham, herb gardens and sourdough are a comforting fantasy. However, I think it is high time to draw readers’ attention to Sue Kaufman’s very funny and terrifyingly relevant Diary of a Mad Housewife to warn of the dangers of the tradwife ideal. I would also like to put on record, since my generation is constantly reviled, that when we marched to Aldermaston, campaigned against the death penalty and the incarceration of homosexuals, demanded equal rights (abortion, mortgage without a male backer, etc) and pay for women, tried to persuade the world about ecological issues and the need for recycling (I vividly remember having a rubbish bin tipped over my head by an angry eco-sceptic), demonstrated again, this time against the Vietnam war and later the Iraq war, and are now being arrested for objecting to genocide, we were not trying to create a world in which the young needed to take refuge in tradwife fantasies, from a dismal present and hopeless future. It is regrettable that we failed, but we tried

about 14 hours ago
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‘A white man’s fantasy’: if we want to rebuild social cohesion, we need to acknowledge where it all started to unravel

Things fall apart, as Chinua Achebe warned us. And “things” – the climate, the social contract, the rules-based international order – seem to be falling apart at a rate of knots. They fell apart spectacularly and horribly at Bondi last December, when allegedly Islamist gunmen opened fire on civilians, including children. Fifteen people were killed. Many more were injured

about 15 hours ago
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Are you a woman who makes life easier for everyone else? Beware – you could endanger your health | Emma Beddington

Women, a warning from Instagram: “You really need to be a bitch or you’re going to develop an autoimmune disease. It’s that simple.” Versions of this scientifically dubious statement have caught the imagination of a corner of the internet, getting algorithmically nudged my way multiple times (a TikTok to this effect has 40,000 likes; a Threads post 26,000). Sometimes, it’s set to music; sometimes, it’s the basis for earnest discussion of cortisol and inflammation. Sometimes, it’s evangelical

about 17 hours ago
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‘Labels protect us’: Olivia Nervo wants reproductive coercion to be a standalone offence – she is not alone

When the Grammy award winning songwriter, Olivia Nervo, agreed to start a family with her partner she believed she was in “a monogamous, committed relationship leading to a future”, and had never heard of reproductive coercion.Her world came crashing down when she was six months pregnant and she found out that her partner was in a relationship with another woman who was also pregnant, and with whom he already had a child.It was a discovery that led her to learn about reproductive coercion, a form of controlling behaviour in which someone interferes with an individual’s ability to make decisions about their own body. The Labour MP, Natalie Fleet, led a debate in parliament on the issue last month in which she said it was “so important – in the public interest, even – that the story of Olivia Nervo is heard”.The court declined to make any finding as to whether there had been reproductive coercion in Nervo’s case, with Fleet describing the doctrine as something the legal system in England and Wales “still struggles to recognise”

1 day ago
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Three meningitis B cases confirmed in Dorset as young people offered vaccines

Three cases of meningitis B have been confirmed in the south-west of England, according to the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), and young people in the area have been offered vaccinations against the disease.The cases, which have all been confirmed to have occurred between the 20 March and 15 April in Dorset, have been treated. Those affected are said to be recovering well, according to the UKHSA.Two of the cases were in students at Budmouth academy in Dorset who are contacts of each other, while the other young person attends Wey Valley academy.However, no link has been made between these cases, which may suggest this particular strain of MenB bacteria is transmitting more widely among young people in the area

3 days ago
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Centrepoint to cut ties with Sharon Osbourne after she backs Tommy Robinson rally

The homelessness charity Centrepoint has said it will cut ties with its celebrity ambassador Sharon Osbourne after she expressed support for a far-right rally being organised by Tommy Robinson.The charity, of which the Prince of Wales is patron, has been moved to distance itself from comments made by Osbourne. The TV personality indicated this week that she would be attending an event organised in London by Robinson, whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon.On an Instagram post about the “unite the kingdom” rally, Osbourne’s official account left a comment saying: “See you at the march.”In response, Centrepoint, which had recently engaged Osbourne as an ambassador for a campaign, said: “This sort of event does not align with our values

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Bank bosses called to meeting with Reeves over impact of Iran war on UK economy

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Falling fertility, debt and AI: is the US headed toward a population crisis?

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Labour’s ‘crabwise’ approach to closer EU ties must address damage of Brexit | Heather Stewart

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‘I don’t want to waste the gas’: Uber and Lyft drivers reeling as fuel prices soar

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Vodafone incentivised security staff to fine its own franchisees

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More Britons opt to holiday in UK this summer amid uncertainty over flights

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