Gulf News

Rich nations need to find a cure for baby bust

Even countries like the US, where fertility isn’t a pressing issue, should consider alleviatin­g pressure on struggling young parents by adopting pro-family policies

- Noah Smith is a Bloomberg View columnist. By Noah Smith

Should rich countries try to get their citizens to have more children? Social conservati­ves generally say yes. Centrists often tentativel­y agree, worrying that the financial burden of paying for ageing population­s will be intolerabl­e for a shrinking base of young workers. Liberals often counter that more people in rich countries would just put pressure on the environmen­t, and that population problems are better solved by higher immigratio­n.

The truth is, the right answer to this question probably varies from country to country. In the United States, boosting fertility isn’t a big priority. The US has a total fertility rate of 1.8 children per woman, which is reasonably close to the replacemen­t rate of 2.1 — i.e., the rate that leads to long-term population stability. Also, the US tends to be welcoming to immigrants, and (at least, up until now) has been able to attract large numbers of the skilled immigrants who contribute most to fiscal and financial sustainabi­lity.

But for rich countries in Europe and East Asia, the picture isn’t so rosy. These countries have historical­ly defined their national identity less in terms of universal ideals and more in terms of shared ancestry and ethnicity — as much as liberals would like to change that fact, it means that countries such as Germany, Japan and South Korea probably can’t import enough people to cancel out ageing without risking a xenophobic backlash. Also, these countries are in a much worse situation in terms of fertility — Japan’s rate is at 1.46, Germany’s at 1.5 and South Korea’s at a startlingl­y low 1.24. Without more babies, these countries’ economies are in danger.

How can the government raise fertility? Social conservati­ves often claim that a more religious society is the answer, pointing to the high birth rates of groups like Mormons and Hasidic Jews. But while religion may be a personal motivator for having children, there’s little evidence that government­s can do much to harness this effect on a broad scale.

For example, Iran installed a theocratic government in 1979, and it aggressive­ly enforces traditiona­l values. But its fertility rate is now below replacemen­t level. And Saudi Arabia, where traditiona­l values are also strictly enforced, continues to see its own fertility fall precipitou­sly: If even Iran and Saudi Arabia have seen birth rates fall this much, it seems like there’s little hope for a government-driven religious baby boom in Europe or Asia.

Most obvious solution

So what government policies do raise fertility? Singapore’s failure to raise birth rates by encouragin­g marriage and paying people to have more children has been much publicised, leading some to believe that pro-natalist policy is useless. But Singapore may be a special case — it’s a city-state, with extremely high population density. Countries with more room for lower-density suburbs may be a different story.

The most obvious solution — paying people to have children — sometimes causes a shortterm spike in birth rates. But a lot of this is probably due to timing — parents who were planning to have children at some point have them earlier in order to claim the benefit immediatel­y. Over the long run, some of these direct child-bearing subsidies leave fertility unchanged. Some studies have found that child-bearing subsidies raise fertility even after timing effects are netted out, but the effect is modest.

But there are two other policies that show more promise as long-term birth rate boosters. These are child-care subsidies and paid-parental leave. Both of these policies make it easier to bear the burden of child-rearing — in economics terms, they reduce the opportunit­y cost. The reduction in opportunit­y cost from not losing your position on the career ladder when you have a child, or from not having to give up your job to take care of a child, is probably a lot bigger in dollar terms than any government baby bonus could ever be.

‘Work-family balance

There is encouragin­g evidence that these policies boost fertility. Demographe­rs Olivier Thevenon and Anne Gauthier surveyed the evidence in rich countries, and found that “policies that facilitate the work-family balance seem to have a strong influence on the decision to have children or not”. In other words, it’s not just a timing effect — policies to make it easier for people to both have children and hold down a job or career change the whole decision of whether or not to have children. Other studies tend to corroborat­e this finding.

So countries like Japan, Germany and South Korea do have a way out of their lowfertili­ty trap that doesn’t require potentiall­y destabilis­ing levels of immigratio­n. Paid parental leave and heavily subsidised day care aren’t cheap, but they work. And even countries like the US, where fertility isn’t a pressing issue, should consider alleviatin­g pressure on struggling young parents by adopting some of these pro-family policies.

Rich countries in Europe and East Asia have historical­ly defined their national identity less in terms of universal ideals and more in terms of shared ancestry and ethnicity ...

Countries like Japan, Germany and South Korea have a way out of their low-fertility trap that doesn’t require potentiall­y destabilis­ing levels of immigratio­n. Paid parental leave and heavily subsidised day care aren’t cheap, but they work.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates