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Tony F.'s avatar

The global trend is that -- as economies mature and education levels rise -- fertility drops. People shift from having lots of kids (needed sometimes in developing countries to help out in subsistence agriculture) to having fewer kids and devoting more resources to their development (e.g. higher education).

Assuming we avoid some catastrophe and existing developing economies continue to mature, that will happen in China and India too -- if it hasn't started already. Global population is projected to peak then begin falling in a few decades, something unprecedented in human history unless caused by a disaster (war, plague).

The solution is probably not policies that encourage people to have more kids -- you're fighting a global trend here. By all means, bring in family-friendly policies, but it probably isn't enough to address this demographic trend. It's probably time to start thinking about economic systems that aren't reliant on constant growth. In the near-term Canada must figure out ways to improve productivity across its entire economy -- to produce more with fewer people. Longer term, we need to think hard about what it means when your economy doesn't automatically grow every year.

I agree, this is a long-term demographic trend that we are not dealing with at all. Immigration is helping us manage it now, and that's great. But, as global fertility itself declines (as projected) there will likely be fewer immigrants -- and a need to develop economic models not dependent on constant growth. This will impact everything -- business, government spending, healthcare -- and we don't really have any solution yet.

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Rhiannon Tuttle's avatar

As a pregnant woman with a career -- we are ignoring a large part of the cause on decline and thats a mysoginistic economic policy that makes it harder for families to have and support children. A woman on maternity leave gets 55% of her income only up to $60,300 - as the primary income support in my family who makes well over that cap having a child means severe economic consequences aty a time where you are introducing a great brand new financial cost of supporting another child (Ive paid into EI since I was 18 years old and have only ever used it once when I had my first child) -- add that to the increase in costs of living on top of massive costs around of school supplies and fees, health care, growing food costs -- its hardly financially viable for most families to even consider having 5, 6 or 12 kids kike our parents or grandparents did -- we live in a society wherre majority of households rely on 2 incomes and women are progressively making career moves that would sewe them as the primary financial contributors tot heir household. My family is fortunate compared to many but having our second child is going to create considerable economic challenges for our family. Until we start addressing this lopsided point of view on families we will continue to see households have less children. Teh right conservative population that spreads this replacement theory bull crap support the same partes who traditionally are the last when it comes to even considering proper funding for families., Let alone providing more funding for fertility supports or making the adoption process easier. They'd rather buy into some ridiculous white supremacist's rhetoric then actually address the issue and find concrete solutions, while being ignorant tot he fact that as our significant boomer population moves into retirement we will need to find someway to fill the vacancies they will be leaving -- so what is it far right? Economic support for families and social programs - or support for immigration -- you cant have no ways and expect to maintain the quality of life you feel so entitled to. Nor can you ignore the current funding system in place speaks more accurate to a family unit of the 1960s that to the family unit of today.

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