W
WizardofSoda
Overlord
★★★★★
- Joined
- Aug 25, 2019
- Posts
- 8,050
One interesting point to me is that 20-30% of women just don't want children each generation. That goes with what I have read of European history, where about 20% of women each generation didn't have children. Europe never had to the same extent forced marriages as other places. And Europe never was that women couldn't work. Forcing women who don't want to have children is a bad dysgenic idea, and also would be un-Western in using state power to force people around.
So what has changed then. The issue is that many women used to have a bunch of children. Whereas today many of those same women even as they want more children, only end up having 1 or 2 children. Instead of trying to get women who don't want children to have children, a better plan is to help families with like 2 children have 3+ children.
An important aspect is that many Euro countries its not like they have no children. Their fertility rate is around 1.50. Aka the average woman has 1.5 children. Replacement is 2.10. So to get to replacement its not that you need to change everything. Its not that we are trying to make it so women have like 4 children each.
Net immigration also is a variable, you can move it up or down. So imagine a country had a fertility rate of 1.80.. they could also have low-moderate immigration to reach stable population. Relatively few people are against low immigration. A country could also decline gradually in population - that is less problematic then a catastrophic fall off. Take Japan with a fertility rate of around 1.30. If they were up to 1.80, it really wouldn't be an issue.
So what has changed then. The issue is that many women used to have a bunch of children. Whereas today many of those same women even as they want more children, only end up having 1 or 2 children. Instead of trying to get women who don't want children to have children, a better plan is to help families with like 2 children have 3+ children.
An important aspect is that many Euro countries its not like they have no children. Their fertility rate is around 1.50. Aka the average woman has 1.5 children. Replacement is 2.10. So to get to replacement its not that you need to change everything. Its not that we are trying to make it so women have like 4 children each.
Net immigration also is a variable, you can move it up or down. So imagine a country had a fertility rate of 1.80.. they could also have low-moderate immigration to reach stable population. Relatively few people are against low immigration. A country could also decline gradually in population - that is less problematic then a catastrophic fall off. Take Japan with a fertility rate of around 1.30. If they were up to 1.80, it really wouldn't be an issue.