This is Why so Few are having Children Today

2024 ж. 11 Мам.
836 971 Рет қаралды

Starting in the 20th century, the fertility rates of the world went crashing down. In just one or two generations nations went from 7 or 8 babies per woman on average to 1 or 2. In this video we visualize that change, look at differences between regions and predict what the future holds and what that means for the future of the human population.
Many factors come into play when fertility rates go down. Women's access to education, the labour market and health care. The gender power balance in politics, communities and families. How cultural and religious aspects affect the community as well as the economic opportunities of the individual. To name a few.
Fertility rates are, alongside the death rate, the driving factor in the demographic transition and the reason why the population of nations stagnate and eventually fall.
00:00 Intro
00:16 Fertility map 1900-2022
03:56 Causes: Intro
05:13 Causes: Wealth and labour
07:15 Causes: Education
09:29 Causes: Culture and religion
12:21 Fertility map projections 2022-2100
13:24 Outro
Small Circles Forward by Daniel Karlsson Lönnö 2022.
Follow my updates on Instagram @smallcirclesforward / smallcircle.. .
Sources:
Main sources are Our World in Data ourworldindata.org/fertility-...
and the Gapminder Foundation www.gapminder.org/topics/babi....
Music from Epidemic Sounds:
"Aokigahara" by Ambre Jaune downloaded from Epidemic Sounds. www.epidemicsound.com/
"Par Dream" by Farrell Wooten downloaded from Epidemic Sounds. www.epidemicsound.com/
"Puzzle of Complexity" by Jo Wandrini downloaded from Epidemic Sounds. www.epidemicsound.com/
"The Farmhouse" by Silver Maple downloaded from Epidemic Sounds. www.epidemicsound.com/
All videos from Storyblocks; www.videoblocks.com/.
Vectorized map: World with Countries - Single Color by FreeVectorMaps.com

Пікірлер
  • On a farm a child is an asset. In a city a child is a financial liability.

    @JB-kx9bx@JB-kx9bx2 жыл бұрын
    • Farm work is done with machines nowadays. In my country hundred years ago majority of people were working on agriculture to feed the nation. Now less than 2 % of population is employed on agriculture and number of people in agriculture is still going down.

      @rickrandom6734@rickrandom67342 жыл бұрын
    • @@rickrandom6734 only in the west in 3rd world countries it’s still human and animal labor

      @GoldenBoyDims@GoldenBoyDims2 жыл бұрын
    • @@rickrandom6734 Yup farms in the future would be smaller and in a warehouse where employees are trained like a scientist to work for a company

      @hallooos7585@hallooos75852 жыл бұрын
    • @@hallooos7585 Why should you put plants which need sunlight in to warehouse? Glasshouses yes, but open farmland is most cost effective. Animals, sadly are in many cases inside in animal consentration camps and treated like machines unable to feel anything.

      @rickrandom6734@rickrandom67342 жыл бұрын
    • JB: In developed countries no matter where the family lives, the cost of rising a child is the same. Children are not working bodies until at least 14-15 years old and they shouldn't be either and even then they can only work part time. They should use their time to grow up, develop themselves as individuals and go to school to learn skills or prepare themselves for further education. Furthermore, have you ever in your life seen the kind of machines that nowadays farmers use to work their lands? They are huge and complex and above all extremely expensive. Those machines are dangerous for children and they shouldn't be anywhere near them. In our days, farmers study several years both in classrooms and in the fields to acquire knowledge and skills to do what they do. Maybe there are still some more simple tasks children can perform to alleviate the working load of the parents in the farm or maybe just to help or to learn responsibility but things are different for children now compared to earlier days. Apart from that, children are not liabilities if any, they are great assets. They are our future, our continuation, our time and our blood. We decided to have them even if they weren't planned. They didn't ask to be born and nobody asked them if they wanted to, they didn't have any say in the matter. They came helpless and completely dependent of us, to this world and from the moment we decided to have them they became our responsibility, pride and honor as adults to guide them and follow them into their adulthood. And yes, they are expensive also, so if not for any other reason, you should show them some respect at least for the sheer value they represent.

      @lavinamontoya8164@lavinamontoya81642 жыл бұрын
  • I have read very accurate comment on this issue: "Plants have replaced pets, pets have replaced kids." "And the kids?" "They are now like exotic animal, you only have them if you have time and money."

    @2SSSR2@2SSSR22 жыл бұрын
    • Or crazy.

      @professionalboycottservice7872@professionalboycottservice7872 Жыл бұрын
    • Stranglely enough highly educated and wealthy people have the lowest birthrates all over the world. The poorer they are the more children they have.

      @alejandroruiz2439@alejandroruiz243911 ай бұрын
    • What an interesting observation, and I can agree with it. However, the 'Pet Rock' fad of a few decades ago didn't stay around--perhaps it was too far ahead of its time, and will eventually replace the plants!

      @bobjacobson858@bobjacobson85810 ай бұрын
    • @@alejandroruiz2439”The rich richer and the poor have children.”

      @kittykatz4001@kittykatz400110 ай бұрын
    • ​@@alejandroruiz2439that's not true though. The very wealthy have vast families. So do he poor. It is the middle section that has few to no children. The stats are clear on this, although you'll have to find them yourself.

      @femimark5021@femimark502110 ай бұрын
  • In 1989, The Simpsons premiered on tv in the US. Homer had no collage education yet supported his family of three kids and a stay at home wife while living in a two story, four bedroom house with two cars. Today, he and Marge would live with one to zero kids in a one bedroom apartment barely able to pay rent.

    @LoverofLiszt@LoverofLiszt9 ай бұрын
  • People aren’t stupid….having kids in this day and age is EXPENSIVE .

    @tysonb3568@tysonb356810 ай бұрын
  • Cost of living. My grandfather's first job was pumping gas and he managed to buy a new car and get a mortgage for a house as well as had 8 children and his wife didn't have to work, she worked only to keep herself busy. My father worked 40+ hours a week and was barely able to afford a used car and could only rent a home, had 3 children, and my mom had to work occasionally to keep the family afloat. I work more hours then my father, get paid far more (even adjusting for inflation). I haven't driven in almost 20 years let alone owned any car, i don't have children, i don't spend money on anything but bills, no debt at all, and i can barely afford to keep an apartment roof over my head. Even in the last 4 years my rent has almost doubled and i pay more for one day of groceries then i used to in a week and that's after cutting back. There's no way in hell i'd ever consider getting into a relationship let alone have children when i work full time far above minimum wage and it still can barely get by. You can't exist in a first world country anymore if you try to make an honest living and that has more of a demoralizing effect on people then anyone appreciates.

    @GhostOfSnuffles@GhostOfSnuffles10 ай бұрын
    • 👍

      @jkmarshall3553@jkmarshall355310 ай бұрын
    • Well said!

      @mramachandran9830@mramachandran983010 ай бұрын
    • Agreed, cost of living is prohibitively high. I want children, though I have only one because I know that having more will be a financial struggle. Furthermore, in countries where birthrate is low, children products are very expensive, thus making it more complicated. I know why it is expensive: economies of scale. Less buyers - more expensive. And this rabbit hole can go even deeper...

      @romenas@romenas10 ай бұрын
    • You need to move lmao. Go somewhere else cheaper, plenty of cheap spots in the US.

      @SeanWinters@SeanWinters10 ай бұрын
    • in the past (50 years ago) people got married and had children in the first 5 years after highschool. why? because the could. it was relatively affordable for all classes. today. you can work 10 years of you life and not even be able to afford your own rent. instead you expected to take on thousands of dollars of debt to get a slightly better chance at working fastfood. now its more late 20's early 30's anyone is confidant enough to enter the market but social expectation do not change with it.

      @BlueBD@BlueBD10 ай бұрын
  • The company who payed every employee 75k per year had a baby boom effect on his employees. Nearly everyone who worked there got a baby cause they had a secure workplace, could afford a child and the options to work from home or have parental leave. In todays time most jobs dont pay enough and are very insecure, you never know if you gonna stay with the company for the next 1-2 years or not.

    @NatnatXS@NatnatXS2 жыл бұрын
    • I know which case you are talking about. At that credit card company. It truly is a reflection that at some point wealth is necessary to have a balanced life.

      @lauracruz2021@lauracruz20212 жыл бұрын
    • Yep, employment options have become steadily more sh*ttified over the past 3 decades. Eventually everyone is going to work for either Amazon, the Hospitals, Google, the Prison Complex, themselves or the government if this keeps up. The rest will be a few banks, big pharma, Starbucks and a handful of chain restaurants. Oh yes and the liquor stores, some churches, clothing and groceries, other big tech and maybe Home Depot. I think I covered most of it.

      @Chunda8@Chunda82 жыл бұрын
    • Yep and if you’re only able to find a job at the hospital, you’d better be a doctor or a nurse or you can forget about a decent paying position

      @KA-ys5ps@KA-ys5ps2 жыл бұрын
    • Job insecurity is a bigger issue than pay, if you have job security, you'll eventually manage to live within your means

      @AtharAfzal@AtharAfzal2 жыл бұрын
    • If they barely pay enough for rent how do they expect birth rates to increase

      @sownheard@sownheard2 жыл бұрын
  • I think the two biggest reasons are 1 - It costs so much money to raise kids and most people would rather be able to retire earlier/at all than have kids 2 - There is no longer a stigma about not having kids that might cause some people on the fence to have them

    @e_eyster@e_eyster10 ай бұрын
    • There's definitely no stigma. Most of the people I know around 40 years old don't have kids. We all know why, because we all have similar lives. Most of us aren't married either, a lot of people just have long term romantic partners. Most of the people I know have graduate degrees. There's no point to doing any of the traditional things anymore. No fault divorce and a legal industry designed to extract wealth from unhappy couples has made marriage a negative financial expectation. Paying hundreds of thousands of dollars to raise a child means you'll never retire. I'm not going to work to death just to produce the next generation of labor for the children of the shareholders of my employer.

      @aluisious@aluisious10 ай бұрын
    • The thing about stigma is very true. 15 years ago when I got a vasectomy at age 27, people thought I was nuts, and that I would regret it. Now in my 40’s, people are not even surprised I don’t have any kids. It’s no longer a default expectation in the city.

      @mylesgray3470@mylesgray347010 ай бұрын
    • @@aluisious "I'm not going to work to death just to produce the next generation of labor for the children of the shareholders of my employer.", smart thinking!!! Just making children, so that the "supply of slaves" doesn´t drop, isn´t worth it. If you have money, property or a business you can leave behind, it´s worth having children. So that the families work, won´t get lost to the state.

      @RaptorFPV@RaptorFPV10 ай бұрын
    • There still is somewhat of a stigma, at least with my family. Whenever I talk to my mom or dad over the phone or go to visit them they at some point will ask when I'll have kids. Honestly not trying to have kids, too much hassle and I rather enjoy doing things without someone else holding me back.

      @TreyDobe@TreyDobe10 ай бұрын
    • @@mylesgray3470 Yeah. Out of my main group of about 10 from college (all mid 30s now) one has three kids, one has two, two have one kid. One other is married, one in very long term cohabitation relationship, two are engaged (unknown if kids might come but its leaning to unlikely at this point). Thats its.

      @e_eyster@e_eyster10 ай бұрын
  • I chose not to have kids for one reason. Mental illness runs in my family. As a parent it's your job to give a child the best chances at growing up into a healthy adult, cant do that if you knowingly pass on undesirable traits such as mental illness.

    @jonsturgill8868@jonsturgill886810 ай бұрын
    • That's very wise of you, not everyone thinks ahead.

      @Terrymixed@Terrymixed10 ай бұрын
    • I’m right there with you. Both my Mom and only sibling, my older brother are schizophrenic and are under the care of the state. This made getting fixed pretty easy for me. No matter who I meet in my life, I don’t want to have children who are likely to suffer a life of insanity.

      @mylesgray3470@mylesgray347010 ай бұрын
    • You seem more mentally sane than most politicians, perhaps they should have children free diet too

      @oriionkekg@oriionkekg10 ай бұрын
    • What kind of mental illness? People just throw these fuckin words around without elaborating at all as to what it means and instead of trying to resolve something they just give up entirely.

      @TheBanjoShowOfficial@TheBanjoShowOfficial10 ай бұрын
    • Same, and I regret nothing. Too many people out here breeding and they have no business bringing life into the world.

      @jf2176@jf217610 ай бұрын
  • Yep. My own family from Guatemala reflects the radical change in total fertility rate in the undeveloped world over the past 70 to 80 years. My grandparents, born in rural Guatemala, all had 10 to 12 siblings. Most of them died before the age of 10. My parents, born in rural Guatemala, had 5 to 7 siblings. My grandparents had my parents, aunts and uncles starting in their mid-teens. Almost all survived to adulthood (only one died of a ruptured appendix). My generation--my mom had 4 kids. She started having us at 20 years of age, my dad at 23 years of age. We were all born in urban Guatemala--Guatemala City to be exact. No countryside for us. All four of us survived well into adulthood. Now all my siblings are over 30 years old and my sister finally got pregnant at 33 years of age and will soon have the first baby of the next generation. But that is crazy when you think about the fact that by 30, my grandparents, combined, had 14 or so kids. This global demographic change has been an extreme radical shift in such a short span of time!

    @Luboman411@Luboman4112 жыл бұрын
    • It's even more drastic for me, my grandfather had 5-8 siblings while my mother only had 4. For this generation, it's only me and my brother for my side of the family

      @someyetiwithinternetaccess1253@someyetiwithinternetaccess12532 жыл бұрын
    • @@someyetiwithinternetaccess1253 Same here except my parents also had 5 - 8 siblings. I'm 43 now with a five year old son my brother has a four year old daughter, he's 40. He might have another kid but I certainly won't.

      @castorchua@castorchua2 жыл бұрын
    • Perhaps the numbers who survived until adulthood should be compared.

      @joachimfrank4134@joachimfrank41342 жыл бұрын
    • @@joachimfrank4134 actually, most if not all of my grandfather's siblings survived into adulthood

      @someyetiwithinternetaccess1253@someyetiwithinternetaccess12532 жыл бұрын
    • My family from rural areas in the very northern part of Sweden shares a similar pattern. My maternal grandmother born 1909 had 12 siblings (3 died in childhood or youth) the other grandparents 6-9 I think. My parents born before and after WWII had 5-6 siblings each and most of them moved to urban areas as adults and have 1-2 kids except one uncle who had 4 children. I have 1 sister.

      @frida507@frida5072 жыл бұрын
  • We aren't having kids in the US because we can't afford to. My wife and I both have great jobs and still struggled to pay for all the costs of two children, especially when both are in daycare

    @noone-um4hk@noone-um4hk2 жыл бұрын
    • That's the sad part of reality, since WWII women have been integrated into employment however it's no longer an option for them, it's a requirement now given the cost of living.

      @AtharAfzal@AtharAfzal2 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah. The reality is the United States needs to levy greater taxes on people who chose not to have children. "Retirement" only makes sense if you have children and a younger generation to support them. If you haven't contributed to this next generation, why think they'll support you in your retirement at the expense of their own families and elders?

      @hippocleides7105@hippocleides71052 жыл бұрын
    • @@AtharAfzal It's quite possible, but with a good deal of sacrifice. I don't have a very high paying job, but my wife has (of her own choosing) spent most of the 21 years we have been married taking care of the home and the 3 kids. I did have to pick up a side hustle or two, and we have done without many of the frills we would have otherwise enjoyed. It's not easy, but possible, though I am glad the child-rearing years are largely behind us.

      @Akalhar@Akalhar2 жыл бұрын
    • @@hippocleides7105 Sadly, those not saddled with paying their own living expenses are having children, and at a slightly higher frequency, than those who do pay for their own cost of living, however they're already on the social welfare tit and their offspring learn to do the same. It's an ever increasing population that will eventually hit critical mass. When the lowest paid ranks of the working class realized they were poorer for supporting themselves as opposed to taking the benefits of the social welfare state, they switched over and became a liability on the system. They next lowest paid rank does the same, and so and so on. In the not too distant future, a "good paying job" will not be what it seems as taxes, inflation, and all expenses of self support will diminish the quality of life for those sacrificing 40+ hours of their lives per week to sustain themselves. When they realize they cannot live in a better house, drive a better car, eat better food, wear better clothes, etc., etc. than those receiving welfare benefits, the tipping point may be the expense of gasoline for driving to and from work. Needless to say, this can go on for only so long because somebody has to go to work to make the rest of the system work. What happens when social workers quit their jobs to go onto welfare? Police? Medical? Anyone involved in the production and distribution of food or fuel? It's not good.

      @rudyschwab7709@rudyschwab77092 жыл бұрын
    • @@Akalhar oh totally agree, but (1) no one wants to sacrifice (2) pick a side hustle (3) live without the frills - you're family understands and adjusted to the realities of nowadays though and I salute you.

      @AtharAfzal@AtharAfzal2 жыл бұрын
  • One factor that everyone neglect is "family time". No one will disagree that Work-Life balance has gone completely haywire these days. How will people take children when they barely has time for the family, for the child? Just the last night my friend was telling me how exhausting it is to attend his child after the whole day of work. No need to take 5 childrens. But a healthy family with 2-3 child will only return if the cost of living is fare and ppl has time for the child.

    @aniksamiurrahman6365@aniksamiurrahman636510 ай бұрын
  • On the corner of the block where I live, there is a fruit vendor. Sometimes the people who live nearby hang around, eating fruit and talking to him, especially the retired people. The other day, one of the retired gentlemen who usually stay there for 1 hour counted 37 dogs walking with their respective owners, while the count of children was JUST ONE!

    @DickDoe@DickDoe10 ай бұрын
  • i’m not having kids because i enjoy my money, quiet, freedom, and serenity. plain and simple.

    @pabloescobarschanclas@pabloescobarschanclas10 ай бұрын
    • You’ll enjoy having no one by your bedside when your dying and being alone and miserable at 70

      @TomBradyisinlovewithson@TomBradyisinlovewithson10 ай бұрын
    • @@TomBradyisinlovewithson y’all are still touting this tired ass argument? bro, look at all the elderly people in nursing homes who don’t have anyone visiting them lmao, having kids doesn’t automatically mean they’ll be there for you “at your bedside” when it’s your time to check out….not to mention, no one is guaranteed to be living to old age anyway, so what’s your point, why do you want everyone to be as miserable as you? also, do you not have literally any other valuable people in your life? no partner, no family, no friends, no one? you just depend on your kids for all your social needs? 🤣

      @pabloescobarschanclas@pabloescobarschanclas10 ай бұрын
    • @@TomBradyisinlovewithson you got it written on a paper signed by your child that he/she WILL take care of you when you're old and not leave you in an old-age home? Always the same deathbed argument from you guys. Life is temporary regardless of how long you live, old age weakens you and that brings so many diseases and problems, why even live past the age when you're not even able to do your own things by yourself? I know it hurts the person seeing how helpless they've become when even the one thing they truly own, their body, is fading away

      @getcattoed9291@getcattoed929110 ай бұрын
    • ​@@TomBradyisinlovewithsonThey'd have nobody anyway if they hated their kid. What kid would be by a parent that only had them for selfish reasons? If pabloescobarchanclas is in a catch22 in which they either don't have kids or have kids and resent them, why do you blame them for picking the first option? Are you daft?

      @goncalocarneiro3043@goncalocarneiro304310 ай бұрын
    • @@TomBradyisinlovewithsonsame mindset as op here, but my retirement provision is a firearm. no suffering in old folks home

      @Terrymixed@Terrymixed10 ай бұрын
  • I make just over $100k per year, live with my parents being 38 years old and gave up on the idea of having a family a long time ago! A decent home that you don’t have to completely rebuild starts at $700k+, in my area, 1 bedroom rents are $3k+ plus utilities, health insurance is high, childcare is $3k per month and so on. My dad was a delivery driver and mom worked in a factory making barely more than a minimum wage , yet still could afford to buy a house and two new cars every few years just 2 decades ago. Completely unimaginable these days!

    @FirstHandLLC@FirstHandLLC10 ай бұрын
    • Then why aren’t rich people having children? How do you explain that

      @ossianns@ossianns10 ай бұрын
    • Rich and poor families have children except middle classes.

      @rexomi17@rexomi1710 ай бұрын
    • @@ossianns Easy, rich people have many time consuming interests, many kids will inconvenience their lifestyle. Poor people have plenty of time to make kids as they barely work and sit on government support, they get cheap housing, free healthcare, free childcare and so on. Middle class gets no help, pays for everything, works a lot and doesn’t have much time and money left to have many kids!

      @FirstHandLLC@FirstHandLLC10 ай бұрын
    • @@FirstHandLLC Precisely.

      @educational1651@educational165110 ай бұрын
    • Damn that's horrible, would you be able to make the same in another place? I'd look into moving.

      @Aashka_The_Mystic@Aashka_The_Mystic10 ай бұрын
  • I'm in my 70s. My grandparents had 10+ children as did their contemporaries. And, living in a rural area, everyone in the family helped with chores on the farm, even the smallest though their chores may have only been to take take of chickens. And the older children did more chores and helped take care of their younger siblings. It was similar for my parents generation though they did not have as many children, 5+. Since birth control was not as readily available, women had tubal ligations/hysterectomies to stop having children. And lots of men had vasectomies too. With my generation, my contemporaries tended to have 1-3 children and many chose not to have children due to cost, two incomes becoming a necessity, the high cost of childcare, etc., as well as the availability of effective birth control. With the stagnating of wages, the ever-increasing cost of living, and the need to live in urban areas that are not necessarily child-friendly to facilitate raising a family, I can see why fewer people are chosing to have children.

    @elizabethpeters4805@elizabethpeters480510 ай бұрын
    • Goodness, an older person who gets it. You're like a unicorn.

      @annistar9693@annistar969310 ай бұрын
    • @@annistar9693 thank you. I sometimes think that many people do not see these things, not because they cannot but, rather because they refuse to. Sigh.

      @elizabethpeters4805@elizabethpeters480510 ай бұрын
    • The real reason is that people dont want to give up their higher standard of living to have kids. Not that people are poorer now. Also in a poor country the only people with incomes are men so women have to attach themselves to a man to live and that tends to create alot of children. In the west many women can just remain single all of their lives and not have kids. Muslim countries are still patriarchal and men have all of the jobs which is why they have higher birthrates.

      @freneticness6927@freneticness692710 ай бұрын
    • Education leads to fewer children as well.

      @AmazingStoryDewd@AmazingStoryDewd10 ай бұрын
    • Being forced to take care of my younger sister is a big reason why I never wanted kids. I wasn’t allowed to be a kid & worry about myself. I had to act like an adult to be responsible for a kid I didn’t have & definitely didn’t want as a sibling 😂. I think it’s pretty selfish of parents to do that. Now that I’m an adult & clearly over it the trauma that is imposed on your body, the risks, school systems potential health risks & child not turning into a productive adult even after you have done all you can on top of being solely responsible because even good men don’t help as much it’s just a no for me lol

      @CoCo-yv3hl@CoCo-yv3hl10 ай бұрын
  • Because no matter how rewarding it is to raise a child, they make most people less happy. I say this from observing my friends and family who did and did not have children. It's undeniable.

    @PhenixJoe@PhenixJoe10 ай бұрын
    • That's what I think too. I only really hear parents complain about their lives and kids, peppered with a couple nice stories. It seems like being stuck in a miserable hole where your life is suddenly no longer yours to live. That just doesn't sound appealing to me

      @asideofaioli4630@asideofaioli463010 ай бұрын
    • Is it rewarding for a child to be brought into this shit show?

      @mariaradulovic3203@mariaradulovic3203Ай бұрын
    • Try asking your mom then

      @arep1030@arep103011 күн бұрын
    • @@arep1030 I already feel bad for what my mom went through raising her three kids.

      @PhenixJoe@PhenixJoe8 күн бұрын
    • @@PhenixJoe Hey it's not too late to make her proud. I'm not one to say as I've yet achieved anything great in my life. But I'm sure my mom would still be proud of me and glad that she actually raised me and my siblings. I'm sure your mom felt the same way too. Having and not having children both have pros and cons, but in the end i think it's worth having children, and that's why humans have always reproduced. Plus raising children with love and care would surely shape you into a better person, something people without children would never know. That's just my opinion tho. Feel free to disagree

      @arep1030@arep10308 күн бұрын
  • Cost of housing is a major contributor. Without a house there cannot be a functional family.

    @bi0481@bi04812 жыл бұрын
    • 100% True, housing and childcare need to be subsidised by governments. No children, no future

      @durnham@durnham2 жыл бұрын
    • But in religious, poor countries they have loads of kids no matter what.

      @davidz3879@davidz38792 жыл бұрын
    • @@davidz3879 Because they don’t have the proper education, can’t afford contraceptive, and because of having children they are trapped in an endless cycle of poverty if they’re children does the same

      @hallooos7585@hallooos75852 жыл бұрын
    • @david23 that has more to do with lack of education in general, and lack of access to contraceptives for the women.

      @nocrtname@nocrtname2 жыл бұрын
    • @@davidz3879 They have faith and that means they don't concern themselves with consequences when persisting despite the circumstances because they want to believe it will all work out in the end.

      @melelconquistador@melelconquistador2 жыл бұрын
  • It's pretty easy to understand, at least in the USA. We just freaking can't afford to have children any more. It's so expensive, no social safety net, and no universal health insurance, pre-K, and a bad public school system. Most millenials are burdened with excessive student debt too.

    @ThatsJustLikeYourOpinionMan@ThatsJustLikeYourOpinionMan2 жыл бұрын
    • Why do poor people in the US have the most children, then?

      @knightshade2654@knightshade26542 жыл бұрын
    • just get more immigrants problem solved

      @moritzguderian8381@moritzguderian83812 жыл бұрын
    • @@knightshade2654 yeah idk somehow they cant afford it. Must suck not owning all the latest games systems as soon as they come out.

      @jhoughjr1@jhoughjr12 жыл бұрын
    • @@knightshade2654 lack of access to effective birth control and less if any exposure to sexual education. Not to mention many women in those conditions have less of a voice or ability to stand up for themselves, so they're taken advantage of my men more often

      @captainalso3649@captainalso36492 жыл бұрын
    • Lack of birth control and education. Many girls get pregnant very young who then grow up in broken homes and also have many kids young. It's a vicious negative cycle.

      @kellharris2491@kellharris24912 жыл бұрын
  • As a 40 year old successful, educated, single American without kids, I unfortunately knew that when social media came out around 2005, I would not get married/have kids. I did everything I could, but in the end I could not find someone. It does not make sense to bring a kid into this world without two parents who are in love. I am content with my status.

    @macristo33@macristo3310 ай бұрын
    • All countries with positive birth rates are patriarchal. All patriarchies enforce male dominance and female submission. But the West refuses to acknowledge that this is necessary for civilization (and the women report they are happy and aren't on anti-depressants like 1/3 or American women). It's a sad joke.

      @Marcara081@Marcara08110 ай бұрын
    • I can't find anyone either but I'm not content with my status. In fact I'm bitter about it. I'm jealous that other men have a pretty woman to love, have sex with and bring in more income to the home but I don't.

      @crand20033@crand2003310 ай бұрын
    • I'm 70 yrs old. Educated, etc. In high school I told my friends that I'd wait to find a divorced woman who's kids have grown up and left the nest. I still have time.

      @drewthompson7457@drewthompson745710 ай бұрын
    • @@drewthompson7457 what job do u do to earn money?

      @noobgod031@noobgod03110 ай бұрын
    • @@drewthompson7457 You are the imbodyment of "Just peak in your 70s, bro." You will never be able to experience having your own family, anymore. Imagine your father had the same mindset.

      @nocturnaljoe9543@nocturnaljoe95438 ай бұрын
  • I also want to point out that many in my generation (late millenials/early zoomers) don't want kids because of the way the future is shaping up to be right now. Politics are getting more radical, people more hateful. And while a lot of things are better now than they were before, so many things are worse now, too. Mental health is being taken more seriously. But mental illness is also more rampant due to above stated reasons as well as economic and personal hardships. People don't connect with others any more like they used to.

    @BootyCrusader@BootyCrusader10 ай бұрын
    • Thats because the bible says in 2nd Timothy. 3 But know this, that in the last daysa critical times hard to deal with will be here. 2 For men will be lovers of themselves, lovers of money, boastful, haughty, blasphemers, disobedient to parents, unthankful, disloyal, 3 having no natural affection, not open to any agreement, slanderers, without self-control, fierce, without love of goodness, 4 betrayers, headstrong, puffed up with pride, lovers of pleasures rather than lovers of God, 5 having an appearance of godliness but proving false to its power;b and from these t

      @trevorwitherspoon9160@trevorwitherspoon91608 ай бұрын
    • Corporations sucks all the wealth. It'll bring new feudalism, "you'll own nothing and you'll be happy" as World Economic Forum says. People with sick mind and no boundaries has been allowed to be in power and effects are visible more and more now.

      @mothrise1@mothrise18 ай бұрын
    • It's just such a bizarre argument. 70, 80 years ago people went hungry, there were wars not in a few countries but everywhere. The complaint that things look so bad right now is purely perception from social media but it's not reality.

      @Zucker2007@Zucker20074 ай бұрын
  • Because my grandparents had 3 times bigger apartment than mine. They also paid for it less than me, even with inflation.

    @Aver888@Aver8882 жыл бұрын
    • Yup, my grandfather worked alone and financially secured his family (wife and 2 children) with having extra to visit places, while all four of us in our family work and still just seem to manage.

      @enozmah6081@enozmah60812 жыл бұрын
    • Yup, capitalism has a tendency to do that.

      @dinnerwithfranklin2451@dinnerwithfranklin24512 жыл бұрын
    • Tends to happen when you double the labor market (womens rights)

      @Exalted_Gaming_TTV@Exalted_Gaming_TTV2 жыл бұрын
    • @@dinnerwithfranklin2451 Actually capitalism is what helped the grandparents but ok.

      @lucifer2b666@lucifer2b6662 жыл бұрын
    • @@lucifer2b666 More industrialization helped the grandparents by increasing jobs and wages. The irony is that the technological progress that capitalism is so good at reduced the well paid jobs over time, until today when the average wage is roughly the same as it was in 1973 in terms of real buying power. But ok.

      @dinnerwithfranklin2451@dinnerwithfranklin24512 жыл бұрын
  • Having children is a huge responsibility. It's not something that should be entered into lightly. Not only do you have to raise this living, feeling, breathing human being but you have to provide for them too. And parenting doesn't just end at the age of 18 years old. There is a great deal that goes into being a parent and now that parents are being open about it people can make informed decisions. Plus, not everyone shall be parents and some people just don't want to.

    @offbeatblackgerl8360@offbeatblackgerl836010 ай бұрын
    • Anti-natalism is becoming more common nowadays as well. Ethical questions are raised when the imposed existence of another sentient lifeform subected to suffering is involved.

      @jackkrell4238@jackkrell423810 ай бұрын
    • @@jackkrell4238 Agreed. This Planet is a predatory and violent place even without humans. If souls exist then the children I might have had are in Heaven thanking me for all of eternity for not doing so.

      @randymillhouse791@randymillhouse79110 ай бұрын
    • @@randymillhouse791 That's a bunch of crap and we both know it. If you really believe that then why are you still awake? Take care of business, end it and stop being a hypocrite. You aren't willing to give up yours. Maybe someone could have an extra child if you weren't taking up resources.

      @blackbette07@blackbette0710 ай бұрын
    • @@blackbette07 'and we both know it.' Another stellar Trumpian argument point.

      @randymillhouse791@randymillhouse79110 ай бұрын
    • @@randymillhouse791 Capitalism is the problem as the bosses seek to hire a single worker and not a family. They seek to pay the lowest wages and work us the longest hours at the fastest pace. We need livable work schedules, social payments for children and 24/7 available childcare.

      @kimobrien.@kimobrien.10 ай бұрын
  • Because houses cost $600k, rent is $2000 a month, and jobs pay $15 an hour. That's the reason.

    @dylanharmon1767@dylanharmon176710 ай бұрын
  • Wow it's almost like all the people all over the world decided that there are plenty of people in the world and we didn't need to have so many kids.

    @cillyhoney1892@cillyhoney189210 ай бұрын
    • Average for any given couple would be most likely between 1-3.

      @hackman669@hackman66910 ай бұрын
  • Childcare is 1300 a month where I live. That alone is a contraceptive.

    @mariasoldi320@mariasoldi3202 жыл бұрын
    • In Germany it is like 80 € per month for the Kindergarten Because we have a welfare system

      @manuelgaertner2258@manuelgaertner22582 жыл бұрын
    • And the question still remains: Even if you can afford childcare (welfare or not), why would you have a child, so strangers can raise it?

      @myown2101@myown21012 жыл бұрын
    • In the US bay area, childcare works out to be at least 2500 per month.

      @oraoffice9562@oraoffice95622 жыл бұрын
    • How about staying home and taking care of your own kids? What a radical idea

      @Magdalena287@Magdalena2872 жыл бұрын
    • @@Magdalena287 Ideal. But most families are not able to survive with one income.

      @myown2101@myown21012 жыл бұрын
  • I feel like "fertility" is the wrong word, "birth" would be more appropriate, since much of the video doesn't discuss sexual health, rather simply the number of children born, and the factors that would lead to the choice to have children. I see the confusion in the comments

    @seitisetsoh4991@seitisetsoh49912 жыл бұрын
    • yeah, 'fertility rate' is the correct and technical term for this but it is pretty confusing. I don't know why that became the official term. Perhaps in a era where it was assumed people would keep having kids unless fertility is an issue.

      @unluckycloverfield4316@unluckycloverfield43162 жыл бұрын
    • Yes, fertility is being able to reproduce, birth is reproducing. They are 2 different things.

      @Chunda8@Chunda82 жыл бұрын
    • Birth rate refers to the actual number of births year to year in a country. Fertility rate refers to how many children each woman has on average.

      @thelourensfamily8048@thelourensfamily80482 жыл бұрын
    • @@thelourensfamily8048 Yes, but fertility is a misleading word to use in this context. It makes people think that Italians, Spaniards, Japanese etc. are having very few kids due to being unable to have more, when it's actually due to contraception. It also makes it sound like Nigerians, Somalis etc are having many kids due to being astoundingly healthy, when it's actually due to religious/cultural dogma & irresponsibility.

      @davidz3879@davidz38792 жыл бұрын
    • @@davidz3879 listen to video again? High birth rates are linked to higher poverty, lower social, educational and economical circumstances. Low birth rates are linked to higher levels of education and social/financial circumstance. If a leader wants more children from the masses they oppress the whole society via the oppression of women who give birth to and raise boys as well as girls out of that oppression. Oppression of women is ultimately the oppression of man. Women's equality and the wealth and autonomy of the masses are deeply interrelated and correlated.

      @maxinewarnest894@maxinewarnest8942 жыл бұрын
  • I live on Culiacan Sinaloa México, and thank God,I dont hear any kids crying anymore, not because I dont like them,is because I hate it to see them suffering.

    @israelcazares2842@israelcazares28429 ай бұрын
  • we need more good people, quality over quantity.

    @hineang5927@hineang592710 ай бұрын
  • In my experience, i can't afford children (netherlands). If we want higher fertility rates, expanding benefits for raising kids would help

    @shadeblackwolf1508@shadeblackwolf15082 жыл бұрын
    • I bet government doesn't want you to have children either, they are planning on Lab fetuses as adopties

      @Shalale@Shalale2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Shalale would still be too expensive

      @shadeblackwolf1508@shadeblackwolf15082 жыл бұрын
    • @@shadeblackwolf1508 the Great Reset is coming that won't happen.

      @lonalxaia@lonalxaia2 жыл бұрын
    • Plus, the demands on mothers is so high. Who can juggle all the demands without losing their minds? Moreover, my friends who are affluent feel poor compare to the other mommies, who have even more money and opportunities for their children. One friend bought a spare condo in one of Chicago's wealthiest neighbors just to ensure her daughter could go to a decent public school. I guess it was less expensive than paying the tuition to one of the city's elite private schools, which costs the same (if not more) than college tuition. It's all too stressful.

      @t.anderson6069@t.anderson60692 жыл бұрын
    • stop two income households.

      @jhoughjr1@jhoughjr12 жыл бұрын
  • I think birth rates have dropped due to economic reasons. Many are struggling to feed themselves, let alone having extra mouths to feed. Most economies rely on workers who work long hours in minimum wage jobs just to pay for food, housing and heating. Most people are taught from a young age to become consumers, to go to school, get a job to buy stuff, have children, work until you retire (if you can afford to retire). People are waking up to this and have stopped having children because why would they want to subject a new generation to the same situation. Working just to pay bills until you die without much else to enjoy because you don't have the time to enjoy life because you are working just to put food on the table is no life.

    @samanthahardy9903@samanthahardy99032 жыл бұрын
    • Yes! Exactly! Wish I could like this 1 million times! 💯💯💯💯💯💯

      @loverrlee@loverrlee2 жыл бұрын
    • that's the intuitive answer but it doesn't explain why the poorest people have the most kids.

      @Vapor817@Vapor8172 жыл бұрын
    • @@Vapor817 they dont know better

      @vivvy_0@vivvy_02 жыл бұрын
    • @@Vapor817 look at the phillapines, they are a Christian county. No birth control allowed. I watched a video on here, these people took them food and toys for the kids quite a few times. The parents have lived under the same bridge for 20 years, had 18 kids and the mom and oldest daughter both pregnant.

      @FluffballKitties@FluffballKitties2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Vapor817 because they have different view in life plus do you see their living conditions.

      @disappointment2657@disappointment26572 жыл бұрын
  • I live in the US, where housing is expensive, medical is expensive, school is expensive, food is expensive, and taxes are quite high, to say the least. Also, let's not forget that wages barely go up here in the US. It will only get worse in the future. I won't be having kids, because I know I wouldn't have the responsibility to take care of a child. They're expensive to take care of, and it's mentally frustrating of a job as well.

    @MattHall05@MattHall0510 ай бұрын
  • I think that people in poor countries most of the times don't choose to have so many children,they just do, because of lack of acces to education & birth control methods.Also religion and tradition play a big part in imposing a model to be followed,not questioned,leaving little choice to the individual,especially for women !

    @paixiao7@paixiao710 ай бұрын
    • It's also that people in poorer countries live in rural regions and are more dependent on agriculture, wherein children aren't a liability but a neccessiety

      @juannaym8488@juannaym84887 ай бұрын
  • The cost of childcare in a young married couples budget is a big factor.

    @celtickitc@celtickitc2 жыл бұрын
    • Fertile young couples can’t afford to have a kid, while economically stable couples are often too old to readily have kids

      @kerbodynamicx472@kerbodynamicx4722 жыл бұрын
    • Easy solution to that: one stay home to raise the children.

      @searose6192@searose61922 жыл бұрын
    • @@searose6192 "We don't have enough money" "One of you, leave your job" Logic 100

      @KentuckyFriedChildren@KentuckyFriedChildren2 жыл бұрын
    • Actually if you compare the past to now. We are far more wealthier than people in the past. It's just that people don't want to start families at 18. Then you have modern Amish in Pennsylvania have big families, and Orthodox Jews in Brooklyn have the same amount of children. But the Orthodox Jewish community have technology.

      @LOUDMOUTHTYRONE@LOUDMOUTHTYRONE2 жыл бұрын
    • Lol maybe mum should look after kids and live with their means.

      @naughtynat82@naughtynat822 жыл бұрын
  • I would adopt or foster children, but some part of me is worried if I had biological children they would have the health problems I have. I also don't see why people keep having more kids when there are some without families.

    @KKISCRAZYFUL@KKISCRAZYFUL2 жыл бұрын
    • I would adopt/foster children. I'm an academic/chemical researcher. I enjoy teaching. Yet, my government deems me unfit to do so as I'm neither cis or heterosexual.

      @runakovacs4759@runakovacs47592 жыл бұрын
    • @@runakovacs4759 what country?

      @Dimitri88888888@Dimitri888888882 жыл бұрын
    • @@Dimitri88888888 Hungary/Magyarország. Although, by our recent political behaviour, Russia Minor is also a fitting name!

      @runakovacs4759@runakovacs47592 жыл бұрын
    • @@runakovacs4759 i think you are heterosexual you just happen to hate men perhaps?

      @YouAreUnimportant@YouAreUnimportant2 жыл бұрын
    • I honestly feel sad when people who would actually be good parents (Healthy: Mentally, Emotionally and financially, Self-Aware, etc.,) and wouldn’t mind having kids of their own, forfeit it SOLELY because “there are kids here already or kids without families”. It’s like the quality potential parents sterilize themselves and the ill-fit people of society (poverty-stricken; careless; trauma filled; ignorant) just multiply like roaches, and their distasteful genetics are passed down. Adopting/fostering doesn’t help it only encourages degenerates to keep multiplying and creating more trauma in the world and being comforted to know that their babies will HOPEFULLY be adopted by “good” people. And what if they don’t? The cycle of doom continues. Sad.

      @delightfuldaisy3520@delightfuldaisy35202 жыл бұрын
  • could you imagine both being able to afford to have a kid, and also having the time to raise one?

    @bobowon5450@bobowon545010 ай бұрын
    • You'd legit have to be upper-class at this point.

      @JojoJukestar@JojoJukestar10 ай бұрын
    • @@JojoJukestar It's not just the money. Not everyone is happy with gubment injection laws in order for a kid to go to school or daycare. All the risk is being shifted to parents by politicians and bureaucrats who have no downside risk if kids get injured.

      @jessereinhardt6320@jessereinhardt632010 ай бұрын
    • ​@@JojoJukestar The only way I could start a family at this point is adoption. I will be too old for any seed to be any good from me when I could afford it. I would be old enough to be a grandfather, likely. I do not want to raise a child in a place where they are disappointed for their birthday because I could not afford to celebrate it because the cost of living is ridiculous!

      @themaskedtalker2171@themaskedtalker217110 ай бұрын
    • When you consider the modern conveniences we have compared to our ancestors, it is fascinating that we find children to be such a hindrance to our lifestyle. Comfort and leisure are relatively new phenomenon for the typical citizen. If we adjust our standards we can certainly enjoy children and the legacy they bring. Our family has lived on a single income for 15 years and we have more than the average number of children in our area. Our home is small, but our children are absolutely loved, well fed, enjoy a wonderful education, participate in sports and youth activities, and live full lives with siblings who will share a deep bond when we are gone. The rates of depression in women have steadily increased as the birthrates have declined. While I would not suggest this is a single factor, I do think the modern stressors on women are greater than when women were better able to afford greater time with their children. As our parents enter their twilight years we hear stories of acquaintances virtually alone in this world as they age. Our parents will be surrounded by children, grandchildren, and perhaps great-grandchildren as they enter that final period of dependency. They will not lack for a home, care, transportation, and support as they grow older. Perhaps they will not see their final days in a lavish home, but they will be surrounded by the love of those who will remember them and share their legacy for generations. And when it is all said and done, you can't take it with you. I wish no one I'll and hope any reader has many friends if they are without children. But I urge those young enough to consider whether free time or material goods now is worth ending a legacy later.

      @eurekahope5310@eurekahope531010 ай бұрын
    • ​@@eurekahope5310the point is, the cost of living crisis around the world is the worst we've ever had in human history. We'd have to go back to Victorian England standards of living if we wanted to birth children and have the time to raise them

      @alexmason250@alexmason2507 ай бұрын
  • Umm, I had my first child at 37 and pregnant with my second at 40. Not ideal by any means, but the first time it was financially viable. A lot of couples can't afford children and a lot of women don't want to look after a man child and kids.

    @zoebidwell720@zoebidwell72010 ай бұрын
  • A lot of people just don't want to pass along the trauma they endured...

    @truthseeksme9994@truthseeksme99942 жыл бұрын
    • That's certainly one of the biggest reasons for me.

      @molekyyli@molekyyli10 ай бұрын
    • @@molekyyli i am feeling the same man.. but i cannot say its the ONLY reason

      @safsafmando@safsafmando10 ай бұрын
    • @@molekyyliUnless you are in saddening personal situation, that argument is just bûllshît to me. Our ancestors went through Viruses, WORLD WARS, famines, civil wars. And you are complaining that you have it rough? Life finds a way, despite the roughest of circumstances people still have children because children are a beautiful thing, life is a beautiful thing.

      @jamalperkins-6107@jamalperkins-610710 ай бұрын
    • @@jamalperkins-6107 they might have passed on bad coping skills. We don't have to have or want kids.

      @lucykoelle6602@lucykoelle660210 ай бұрын
    • @@safsafmando No, it's certainly not the only reason, but for me, at least, one of the significant ones. A child can't walk away from a bad parent like an adult can from a bad relationship.

      @molekyyli@molekyyli10 ай бұрын
  • Fun fact. Giving birth, even in a well-developed country with good healthcare, can still cause severe physical and/or mental trauma for the mother. For some people, including me, it's less I don't want to have kids moreso I just don't want to be pregnant. There's so many children stuck in foster care and they deserve a healthy household to live in

    @mikubrot@mikubrot10 ай бұрын
    • And in the US it costs an average of 10k in hospital costs to just have the baby.

      @jehssickah@jehssickah10 ай бұрын
    • It's almost like people greatly valued that great sacrifice of mind and body to birth the literal future of humanity, and now we see a disconnect between having children and the act of making them. Hook-up culture also sees a drastic decline in people forming long term relationships that would more readily provide care for possible children, since again, sex is divorced from the concept of having children

      @CheffBryan@CheffBryan10 ай бұрын
    • ​@@CheffBryanpeople, especially men, have never valued that sacrifice, ever. When a women becomes pregnant, the chance of her partner cheating on her becomes the highest it will ever be. The chance of a woman getting murdered is higher when she is in a relationship, lowest when she is single and HIGHEST when she is pregnant. When a pregnant woman dies of unnatural causes, it is almost always because of the male partner.

      @maheenm.k1015@maheenm.k101510 ай бұрын
    • What about c sections? (Speaking as someone born via c-section)

      @nechdaught3412@nechdaught341210 ай бұрын
    • @@nechdaught3412 What about them?

      @EgalitarianWoman@EgalitarianWoman10 ай бұрын
  • Who would want to bring a child into the world today with the way things are...? 😳

    @sandraheinz5609@sandraheinz560910 ай бұрын
    • True we're in the end of days

      @963freeme@963freeme10 ай бұрын
    • Depends on region or area you live in. Some people have the right environment while others simply do not. take time and a lot of planing.

      @hackman669@hackman66910 ай бұрын
    • The world has always sucked.

      @paulheinrichdietrich9518@paulheinrichdietrich95182 ай бұрын
    • Bcs breeders are narcissists. They like gambling their kids' lives.

      @mariaradulovic3203@mariaradulovic3203Ай бұрын
  • What an excellent summary. Both of my sets of grandparents were immigrants to the US and had in excess of 10 births, with several of their children not surviving. My good friend is originally from Poland, and his grandparents all had large families for the benefit of having an internal labor force. There was past religious pressure to have large families. I was raised in a religion that prohibited birth control. That was a real concern for my sister, who is 15 years my senior, but not a concern for me. Religious views have changed over time. My wife and I are educated professionals; we have 4 kids but are outliers in our circle. Raising kids is a very expensive proposition. My wife gave up over 10 years of her career in that pursuit, and I had to make many sacrifices as the family's sole breadwinner. The cost of raising a child in the Western world is astronomical. For instance, a college degree is almost mandatory and can cost hundreds of thousands of dollars per child. We were very fortunate that we could allocate resources for our children, but it certainly involved a large sacrifice. We were rewarded with great kids who are now adults. With that said, I can understand why some are choosing to not have kids. These individuals are so burdened with debt and uncertainty that their struggles almost seem to be the flip side of the coin of the motivators that caused couples at the turn of the last century to have huge families. At the turn of the 20th century having many children ensured financial stability. At the turn of the 21st century having no children ensured financial stability.

    @Drmikekuna@Drmikekuna10 ай бұрын
    • College degrees are not mandatory. You and many others have been conditioned to think that they are.

      @ObsidianRadio@ObsidianRadio10 ай бұрын
    • ​@@ObsidianRadioeven so, in this day in age jobs without a college degree are very low paying, and people with just those jobs can barely get by by themselves (unless their family ends up being a giant money source, which won't happen often) much less with children to keep in mind It's not required technically, but it practically is

      @YonkaLmao@YonkaLmao10 ай бұрын
    • I can confirm this. I am someone without a college degree, and life is almost impossible. I am an ex-houswife who became a widow at 32 when my husband died unexpectedly in a car accident at the age of 36. Our son was 3, and I had no marketable skills or work experience and now I am basically SOL. It been 2 years , and although I wanted more children (even lost a pregnancy right before my husband died) and to have a family, my life is so miserable and impossible and already unfair to my existing child. Not to mention the lack of a partner is obviously a factor but even if I met someone im running out of time, and unless my situation improves drastically (not likely in the time I have) i would not be able to justify taking away resources from .y existing child that are already not enough. I have accepted that the family I always wanted will never happen.

      @MD-zy9oq@MD-zy9oq10 ай бұрын
    • @@YonkaLmao This system is gonna have to change. This just isn't right. If we don't get degrees we get lower paying jobs and can barely get by. If we do get degrees we still can't get by because the cost of everything constantly goes up and now we're in thousands of dollars in debt that will take more than a decade to pay off. This is just wrong!!! 😞

      @ObsidianRadio@ObsidianRadio10 ай бұрын
    • @@YonkaLmao I know tradesmen, electricians, carpenters, plumbers, etc., who make very good money, better than many with college degrees. I'm glad I have an engineering degree, and it has helped me live decently, but I see plenty of examples of those who act very responsibly with the education they have and do well also. What has happened in the US is that States have dramatically reduced their support of education, especially college education. Student debt has thus become far more of a burden for the current generation, and they have my sympathy for that. The savings in State budgets have not necessarily been distributed to offset the increased costs of college.

      @timtrewyn453@timtrewyn45310 ай бұрын
  • Having children would impact women’s career. There are I many hours in a day. Children needs women’s care and attention. Companies demands all employees to be fully engaged. It’s hard to balance both and I often felt exhausted. I lost my job after having my second child. I get to spend more time with my kids. But I still want to get back to the work force.

    @cawlsy@cawlsy2 жыл бұрын
    • Why?

      @JRobbySh@JRobbySh2 жыл бұрын
    • Each household should be working 40 hours a week instead of 80. In the 50s when one man supported the household 40 hours was enough.

      @eccehomosexual@eccehomosexual2 жыл бұрын
    • Raising your kids is quite likely the most important thing you'll ever do.

      @chrisgunther109@chrisgunther1092 жыл бұрын
    • @@eccehomosexual THIS^^^^^^ If we had more manageable work hours, maybe we’d see people more eager to start families and invest in themselves and idk… maybe even increase productivity ! Obv we should look into the logistics and economics of it too but it’s a good starting point to talk about our crazy work hours

      @boober6738@boober67382 жыл бұрын
    • @@eccehomosexual Yes, and that's before computers & robots were there to help out. Something is seriously wrong. We're working more hours than our Grandparents,

      @kerrynball2734@kerrynball27342 жыл бұрын
  • The short answer is most of us like the financial stability of no kids and the peace of mind of just needing to work and go home, not raise another human being. Slightly longer answer in some countries is when women gained the ability to make their own paychecks prices started to adjust to the dual income households. That is why being single is such a struggle financially for most and being in a couple feels like just enough……the issue is there is not enough room financially to fit children even with two incomes for most families and even with more money those people sometimes still prefer not to have to deal with all the burdens kids bring. No one is home all the time to be with the kids and both incomes are needed to sustain the household, not to mention day care costs and other costs. If countries want more children they just need to turn the dial on cost of living down and bring back the possibility of one income supporting the entire house as the norm……but it’s not happening 😂 Edit: just want to make clear I think it’s great everyone gets to work the issue is the price increase of everything in relation to dual income households and other issues . I’m for households to be comfortably supported by one income as well as two if they choose to have two incomes. I don’t think anyone should lose any rights. Felt it necessary to clarify since there seemed to be some Confusion lol 😂.

    @rykersixx@rykersixx10 ай бұрын
    • Agreed. I think there are too many zoning regulations in most countries, which makes housing harder and more expensive to build, and it also restricts the supply. All of this makes housing a lot more expensive than it should be. I can't help but think this is by design.

      @mysticaltyger2009@mysticaltyger200910 ай бұрын
    • Being single isn't much more of a struggle than living with another person. You can have a smaller apartment, spend less on utilities and have more time for side hustles. And of course the flexibility and freedom.

      @itsvmmc@itsvmmc10 ай бұрын
    • @@itsvmmc smaller apartment depends. In a couple you can still go one bedroom or even studio if you share the same sleeping space. So technically you can look at the same apartments single or in a couple. You can still have time for side “hustles” and other things in a healthy relationship. Extremely successful people don’t have to be single and most often they are not. They are with someone who values what they do. Bills don’t go up dramatically when having a partner. If both are in the same space with the light on it isn’t twice as expensive, same with cooking that pizza for two people. The bills are halved with a partner who shares the burden with you. Most of my friends are single and can barely afford anything working the same job I do. The difference is my house we have two incomes and work together to build while they work to survive. The biggest solution if you are single is to find a reliable roommate but then you likely need at least a two bedroom. In addition this can be a much harder task and one person in this exchange will likely eventually leave due to finding a partner themselves. There is also the possibility someone in the house is single because they are a terrible partner, which means they can be negative help in a similar way to a bad partner in a relationship. I’m not sure how having a good partner would ever be a downside financially. Now having a bad controlling partner who expects you to take care of them and their bills 😂 now that leads to you unable to pursue additional money from other sources and increased difficulty. Don’t pick a leach for a partner and don’t pick someone who wants you to do nothing but spend time with them. Having a good partner and no kids means you still have the time you spend with friends you can give to them and the same time you spend away from friends to pursue whatever you choose. You also might have more money to help achieve what you want sooner and so might your partner. Tldr: being single is only better if you have a bad partner for what you want. A good partner is never a burden long term in a scenario without kids. A 2 v 1 situation feels unfair to the 1 . The 1 needs to be significantly better to overcome the challenge and only a really bad ally could make things less good for you. The 1 can win, it can be done…..but if you could then having another teammate at your level you would be at an astronomical advantage thus reaffirming that having a good partner is the better play. You don’t have to want a good partner but the fact remains it is a massive upside to have one instead of without outside of circumstances both of your control. This would include medical complications and other potentially traumatic and unexpected live occurrences. Okay long ass comment complete, I wonder how many will actually read this monstrosity xD

      @rykersixx@rykersixx10 ай бұрын
    • @@rykersixx So, the obvious solution is to make polygamy great again. BTW I struggled with the last paragraph 😂.

      @julius43461@julius4346110 ай бұрын
    • @@julius43461 lol I mean technically if you can get it to work then it could be extremely beneficial xD but it’s difficult to find one really good partner let alone 2+ who are also into sharing you lmao 🤣

      @rykersixx@rykersixx10 ай бұрын
  • When I was a boy I dreamt of having a big family. But as I realised in what kind of world we live (brutal economy, mass killing weapons and environmental destruction worldwide) I started struggling and ended up with the decision that I don't want to expose any human being to this sh*thole that we created in decadence and eager. I feel sorry for the young people of today. We completely messed it all up

    @ptalch@ptalch10 ай бұрын
    • I am the same. I never even thought I would live past 40. Never saw the point in having kids. I am an old fart now, but the years have shown me that I was right. I see the wreckage of awful families all around every day. I am not happy about it either. But it would be worse if I had children.

      @eddenoy321@eddenoy32110 ай бұрын
    • ​@@eddenoy321child free policy

      @satyasankalpapanigrahi9416@satyasankalpapanigrahi941610 ай бұрын
    • @@eddenoy321 what job do u do

      @noobgod031@noobgod03110 ай бұрын
  • Let's hope, for the sake of humanity's future, fewer children are born. Those few will be more valued and better raised. We are headed in the right direction.

    @devirama1@devirama110 ай бұрын
  • I mean, most my friends grew up in poverty, as did I. And now most of my friends have one child at most, or none at all (like me). Because we know raising a kid in dire financial straights where the caregiver(s) are always absent because they have to work all the time and choosing between whether you want to eat dinner or lunch that day is a recipe for unhappy children likely to follow in poverty. No one wants to bring a baby into that trauma. What would be the benefit?

    @Prizzlesticks@Prizzlesticks2 жыл бұрын
  • My dad was the youngest of nine, I was the oldest of three, my brothers had no children, and I have two. My children have chosen, in my opinion quite smartly, to forego marriage and children until they are well established in their careers. Many of peers also made that choice. They waited and only had one child. It's obscenely expensive to raise a child in the U.S. today.

    @williamjones820@williamjones8202 жыл бұрын
    • My mom spends $140 a week to send my nephews to daycare and that is considered insanely cheap.

      @carlycrays2831@carlycrays28312 жыл бұрын
    • In our area, daycare was AUD $110 dollars per day or $70 USD. So for 5 days, that’s $350 USD / $550 AUD PER WEEK

      @serinab@serinab2 жыл бұрын
    • It's because most people put their kids in daycare, which has been shown to hinder social and psychological development of children. I think what is lacking is financial education. Because don't know how to live below their means and have a parent stay home for a few years until their children go to school. I have two kids and I only spend a couple hundred bucks a month extra for them if even that. Mainly it goes into investing into custodial accounts for them so they have a hunk of cash they can have when they grow older to do with what they please. It's a myth children are expensive. It's just we don't know how to manage our money wisely. Their is a social safety net for anything your child may need. Medicaid, food stamps, FAFSA, etc. But if you don't qualify for those programs then you make enough and that's good too.

      @elibaker8849@elibaker88492 жыл бұрын
    • @@elibaker8849 You realize that for many people, daycare isn't a choice.

      @carlycrays2831@carlycrays28312 жыл бұрын
    • We live in one of the most expensive places in the world. Metro Vancouver and yet we have three kids. I’m a stay at home mom and homeschool them. I think too many people say they can’t afford kids because they want to live a certain lifestyle. They want the IG home to show off, the constant vacations. The latest gadget for themselves and their children. I think the REAL issue is too many don’t know how to live within their own means and there is very little financial education. We decided from before we married that when we had kids we would not put ourselves in any situation where I would have to leave the home to work. This means we don’t own a house. We rent and we don’t let the social pressures of that get to us. Many of my peers say they can’t afford to have more than one child because they both have to work, because they did decide to buy a house in an incredibly expensive house market. So now they are both slaves to their work in order to pay a mortgage.

      @PunsandPixels@PunsandPixels2 жыл бұрын
  • I think the trend you see is 1) Choice (birth control availability, decline of male-dominated society, women becoming financially independent, broadening of acceptable roles for women in society), and 2) Desire for self-actualization. There are a lot of psychologically complicated reasons for not wanting children. Most people I talk to want a higher quality of life, time for themselves and their own interests, freedom (in many forms), a truly pleasurable life, or a life of purpose or adventure. There also seems to be increased desire to "do it right" if they do have kids--something that certainly has been less of a concern in the past.

    @sinisterkitty8411@sinisterkitty841110 ай бұрын
    • I wonder how these people you talk about will keep up their quality of life without children present in their old age? Retirement homes? Where there will never be enough staff, since nobody is having children anymore?

      @DatAsianGuy@DatAsianGuy10 ай бұрын
    • I think it is more about money. Who is having children if they can't afford a house?

      @thevikingbear2343@thevikingbear234310 ай бұрын
    • Why are you acting as if having children bars people from a life of freedom, pleasure, or purpose? It's this type of thing that puts people off of having children. How about we instead point out that most people who have children say they don't regret having them? How about we point out that more people regret not having had more children than they ended up having than regret having had children at all? Or that people who have children are happier than those who don't? This is sort of tangential, but there is no decline is society being male dominated to any significant degree. The most important roles in society are filled by men, as they need to be, because if they weren't civilization would regress.

      @Ruairoquai@Ruairoquai10 ай бұрын
    • I think you are missing a very large piece of the puzzle... We are losing our ability to reproduce. Our fertility, especially in the more developed countries, is down 40-50%, and thats just since the 90s. Probably due to the amount of synthetic hormones we are dumping into our environment. If we ban them, the plastic industry won't exist anymore. So, it's obscured information that very few of us know about. To keep the monetary economy from collapsing. Our species survival is not guaranteed. We are potentially sacrificing our species ability to survive for the monetary economy. Really let that sink in. What's worse, it may already be too late. That may already be something we can't reverse. Even if we stopped creating those chemicals right now, today, they are already in the water supply. 99% of ALL life on this planet contains some level of forever chemicals, the chemicals mimicking female hormones. They are already everywhere. It will take time to get them out. Time... we may not have. Especially if we continue to pretend it's not a problem. It's like any addict out there, a problem can only be solved if the existence of the problem is acknowledged first. Edit: i am talking about our actual fertility, not our "social" fertility. Not whether we "choose" to have children, whether we are physically capable of having children.

      @amandap9332@amandap933210 ай бұрын
    • I always wanted to be a mom.I had three sons and couldn't have been happier. Having a child is a blessing.My firstborn joined the Army during the war, and he never came back the same, and I was with him every step of the way while he got help through the VA. At 27, he died, and it was the hardest thing I have ever been through. Yes, there are challenges with children, but there have always been challenges in life. I feel people miss out on a beautiful experience of having a child.

      @lisabruner7018@lisabruner701810 ай бұрын
  • Growing up i always pictured myself having children. My parents had 3 kids, so i pictured myself with three. I had a very romanticised view on having kids. I saw children as a symbol of love, the greatest kid you could ever give to someone, and the symbol of you and the person youve vowed to spend the rest of your life with, becoming one flesh. But now as a 25 year old woman my views on children are changing. A part of me is still considering motherhood, but a bigger part of me is looking at my student loan debt, the rising cost of living, the drop in the number of jobs being created per year, and the number of jobs being replaced with automation. Im looking at rapid climate change. Im also looking at myself and my desires. I want to be able to travel the world someday, not have my body alter faster due to giving birth, im thinking about my hobbies, my love for reading and writing. Im thinking about how much i enjoy peace and quiet, as well as not having a massive expense like children draining my meager resources. Theres a lot of reasons for not wanting to have children. Thanks to the rapid advancement in technology and medicine, if i ever change my mind and decide to have kids, i should realistically be able to have 1 or 2 in my 40s if i so choose. But honestly, if i ever decide to have kids it would only be if i have a lot of money ($300,000-$500,000) in both liquid and asset form to support them and have something to pass down to them. But rn as a broke 25 year old college student still living with her parents, having children is not my priority.

    @Geechee_Chick@Geechee_Chick9 ай бұрын
    • You are speaking for millions, female & male, in your age group who now find themselves in the same situation. They live in all the countries where it now takes about 20 years of schooling, and many more years to pay that off, just to guarantee a slightly above middle-class standard of living. There is nothing extravagant about your expectations. Similarly, most in that group are not asking to live like millionaires. But, in most first World countries, we may have reached a point where only millionaires can afford to raise children.

      @gardengeek3041@gardengeek30415 ай бұрын
  • My grandmother had 8 kids. My mother had 3 kids. I am planning to have 0 kids. I am the very face of this. To be honest with you, it is not even because we 'hate kids', it's literally because we are earning way less than our parents when they were our age and the cost of living in general is higher than it has ever been. I can't even take care of myself, let alone be responsible for another human for a quarter of their lifetime.

    @heyitsfadoua@heyitsfadoua2 жыл бұрын
    • then why rich countries tend to have less kids than poor?

      @karolissavickis10@karolissavickis102 жыл бұрын
    • @@karolissavickis10 Because the more educated a population, the fewer children they have.

      @dergluckliche4973@dergluckliche49732 жыл бұрын
    • @@karolissavickis10 Education. When you are poor, you need to have more children to provide for you at an early age because they are fitter and younger than you and you don't prioritise their education.

      @heyitsfadoua@heyitsfadoua2 жыл бұрын
    • @@karolissavickis10 The "country" might be rich, that does not mean that individual citizens benefit from it.

      @apopuffkin1717@apopuffkin1717 Жыл бұрын
    • @@karolissavickis10 ;) the same reason why poor countries have high death rate for children and rich don't.

      @romenas@romenas10 ай бұрын
  • So funny, my mom has a bachelor’s degree in a STEM field yet had 5 kids. Not to mention, she earned that degree while being a teen mom. Truly a statistical anomaly

    @1Madlycat@1Madlycat2 жыл бұрын
    • Wow! Go, Mom! Interested to hear your experience of her as a mom. Role model? Wished she stayed home and baked cookies? Gave a more intellectually enriching environment and life skills?

      @sarahrosen4985@sarahrosen49852 жыл бұрын
    • Some women like to work hard. But I think her having a STEM degree in fact encourages her to have kids, as she has the means to raise the children she births.

      @1mol831@1mol8312 жыл бұрын
    • @@sarahrosen4985 oh I could go on and on about my mom lol But to keep it short, yes, to all of those things you said (she still did make us cookies sometimes 😛) Somethings I’d add though, is that since we are relatively close in age, when I was a teen (and still today), she was able to relate to me in a lot of ways that parents usually don’t. And a piece of advice she gave me *that I live by* is to “prove the world wrong.” That is to say, don’t let others try to define who you are supposed to be, don’t become solely the result of your environment. Instead make your own path and decide who *you* are. (Then she’d caveat, “but your my child, so you’re at least going to university and working a respectable job.” 😆) Thanks for asking! Sorry if I’m sound disorganized, I’m going on 4 hours of sleep!

      @1Madlycat@1Madlycat2 жыл бұрын
    • Maybe but I would even say that it is a future trend. The most educated individuals are going to end up having the most children since it is a luxiary they can afford. People want rarity and having big families is going to be a new status symbol

      @Joso997@Joso9972 жыл бұрын
    • Being a teen mom ain't a good thing 💀

      @prateeksharma729@prateeksharma7292 жыл бұрын
  • In 1960, minimum wage was $1, your yearly wage was $2080 per year. The median house price in the USA was $10,000. In 2022, minimum wage was $8 federally. That is $16,640 per year. The median house price was $449,000 Sobwages went up by a factor of 8, and housing by a factor of 44. Logically, to live the same basic lifestyle, it would take $44 per hour to make the same wage as your grandpa. Jobs with that pay are Electrician, Machinist, Plumber. Skilled labor. That $1 an hour your grandpa made was for unskilled labor. Think gas station attendant, street sweeper, custodian, etc. If he had a skill he made EVEN MORE than $44 worth of spending power per hour. Since there is a drop in opportunity, I don't see a future for my children, as I see things getting worse with every generation. If my grandparents couldn't guarantee my parents a comparable lifestyle (society wide,) and my parents couldn't guarantee me a comparable lifestyle (society wife,) why should I bring children into the decline?

    @Mike-eg9ok@Mike-eg9ok10 ай бұрын
  • So I've been seeing people saying the cost of living is too high and there is no longer a stigma for women to have kids, but one thing I've not seen talked about a lot that is my reason and many others I've heard from for not having kids is we don't want to have kids and have them grow up in this chaotic and hate filled world we live in nowadays. To me it seems like bringing life into a world that is violent, selfish, and racist is one of the cruelest things you can do.

    @ghostlycreations6@ghostlycreations610 ай бұрын
  • We can’t expect perpetual growth in a world of finite resources.

    @scorpiomoon2535@scorpiomoon25352 жыл бұрын
    • We don't have finite resources at the moment. We have one small group hoarding massive amounts of resources and using their influence to manipulate the cost of living in order to squeeze as much money as they can from us.

      @zerosen1972@zerosen197210 ай бұрын
    • ​@@zerosen1972a slave world on a prison planet

      @hotdogrelish@hotdogrelish10 ай бұрын
    • @@zerosen1972 The reason they hoard them is because they are finite.

      @timeenoughforart@timeenoughforart10 ай бұрын
    • @@zerosen1972resources are always finite, it’s just how much we have left.

      @streddaz@streddaz10 ай бұрын
    • @@streddaz we have a lot left, but it wont matter if a small number of people get most of it

      @duckface81@duckface8110 ай бұрын
  • We say that we love freedom, but when people exercise their freedom, we complain about it.

    @SuperTonyony@SuperTonyony2 жыл бұрын
    • Freedom is just another word for being a slave to your own image of freedom.

      @morkmello5367@morkmello53672 жыл бұрын
    • “Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness” are in opposition to each other.

      @cosmicprison9819@cosmicprison98192 жыл бұрын
    • @yitzhak shekkelsteingoldmanberg Conservatives are the ones who scream “FREEDUMB” all the time. Whenever somebody practices that freedom outside of the “conservative” or biblical model. You people make it a political debacle.

      @Affluent-Ghetto-Blackman@Affluent-Ghetto-Blackman2 жыл бұрын
    • When we say "freedom" we actually mean "MY freedom". We're all just a bunch of petty tyrants at heart.

      @stevenscott2136@stevenscott21362 жыл бұрын
    • 1) Most nations don't recognize deliberately setting out to non-defensively hurt, harm, or demean others as a human right. 2) The type of freedom most westerners (especially Americans) want is that of a wild coyote roaming the prairies. That's not freedom, that's anarchy.

      @filrabat1965@filrabat19652 жыл бұрын
  • very happy to hear this, I believe world populations should be about 20 percent of what it is now, achieved naturally via education

    @Rico-Suave_@Rico-Suave_10 ай бұрын
    • Totally agree! Glad someone think like me.

      @biagia1231@biagia123110 ай бұрын
    • This is the solution. The problem is for some reason most people can't envision the solution

      @billmanty3636@billmanty363610 ай бұрын
  • That was an excellent summary of population dynamics in the last century. Very straight-forward, and only a slight bias visible. Thank you for producing this video.

    @user-qr2gd7me6c@user-qr2gd7me6c10 ай бұрын
  • It is the tradeoff which we all have to bear for a better quality of life. Raising a child is becoming much, much more expensive than before. So the really simple question I always ask myself is, if I can’t even feed myself, why bother marrying?

    @leejimmy2209@leejimmy22092 жыл бұрын
    • Well you also have to find someone whom you want to marry and who wants to marry you - and then have a shared vision of having a child or children. And for the woman - that she be young enough to have one or more healthy children. Many women aren't making it to that 1st or 2nd marriage where they still have time to safely bear children. And infertility issues for both men and women is on the rise in the developed world. From the perspective of national fertility rates, it doesn't matter whether parents end up divorcing or have multiple divorces, or simply have children without marriage or even living together - but for many people, the quality of married life and marriage longevity is important enough that they are more careful about whom they marry. And this can be a factor affecting the children who result from these relationships. In terms of net social benefit, societies don't really need more adults in prisons or requiring mental health care and support, or longterm unemployed.

      @SY-ok2dq@SY-ok2dq2 жыл бұрын
    • @@SY-ok2dq having more kids won’t result in more imprisonment. Those people WERE someone’s 1 shot child. Aka that wasn’t before the fertility crashed that was after

      @LucasFernandez-fk8se@LucasFernandez-fk8se2 жыл бұрын
    • @@LucasFernandez-fk8se Oh I didn't mean to imply that. I'm merely stating that the reason why governments in many countries around the world are trying to get national birth rates to go back up is so that there are more productive, income earning, money saving, working people who can do all the jobs that currently support society, and to be able to draw upon taxes and revenue from those younger generations to a)fund all the functions of government and running a modern state at the current levels of development, and b) to fund the non-income productive lives of seniors over retirement age The welfare of these new, young generations is important to governments only insofar as they maintain stability, and are fit, healthy and able (mentally able, physically able) to do all the work in society and provide revenue. Oh and that includes the need for military personnel. People who spend long periods in prison, or are in and out of prison often, provide less revenue to governments and worse, are a drain on government funds. Families that live in unstable environments, abusive and neglectful conditions - having more children is likely to increase the odds of more kids growing up to be unstable or commit crime, and also raise kids that follow in their footsteps. Naturally, this isn't an outcome for society that we want. And it's a hard life for those children. But from the standpoint of governments needing revenue, it's a minus as a higher birthrate that comes with the downside of more unstable, damaged, or criminal adults in prison or who harm others, is costing more money than is being added to a nation's GDP and taxes. What I meant is that I think there are important positives to people taking some time to decide to marry and have children, and putting more focus on the health, happiness and wellbeing and the economic wellbeing of the fewer children that they have. They have to value their 1 or 2 or 3 children more than if they had 10 babies with 7 or 8 surviving to their 20s or 30s (childbearing/rearing age). I can see a lot of benefits of children having many siblings, but at the same time, when parents only have a few kids, each child gets more individual attention and care, and a feeling of more importance.

      @SY-ok2dq@SY-ok2dq2 жыл бұрын
    • @@LucasFernandez-fk8se It boils down to the parents and their character (and also their genes, as some things like schizophrenia are I believe, likely to have inherited, genetic factors; maybe alcohol and drug addictions are this way too, in addition to environment), and how they raise their child, as well as other influences outside of parents in their environment, and whether they experience trauma or abuse etc. Anyway, back in the days before contraception, most women just pumped out many kids regardless of whether they wanted them or not, or whether they had the means to support them financially and emotionally. I think it has to be better that parents think about it more, and prepare and plan. And I think it's better that people have more freedom of choice, rather than in some cultures and in the past around the world, where young women (and men) were forced into arranged marriages and women expected to produce children as heirs (often males) and couldn't avoid pumping out babies. But on the other hand, it's now become paradoxically so much harder for people to find someone and to marry and have kids before they're too old, or before they have enough income and security. A lot of men in Western (and now other countries like Japan) are unwilling to get married, and go from one woman to another, or else they mostly retreat from relationships (like in Japan) for various reasons.

      @SY-ok2dq@SY-ok2dq2 жыл бұрын
    • When people marry each other it's because they love the person and want to spend their life with them. There will always be money issues throughout your life. There is never a "good" time to settle down, marry and have children. Also raising a child is not as expensive as you think it is, if you have a well paying job providing for your children should not be a problem. You will not be able to afford EVERYTHING but you will be able to take care of at least a few kids.

      @mariemunzar6474@mariemunzar64742 жыл бұрын
  • my grandfather born in the 30s raised 5 children on a city bus driver salary and he was the sole bread winner. Goodluck finding a place to live yet alone raising a single child on a bus drivers salary today. its simply to expensive to live atleast in the "west".

    @RF-lg4rq@RF-lg4rq2 жыл бұрын
    • Well, I'm sure they didn't each have a phone, iPad, Netflix subscription, etc so there's also the cost of all those modern conveniences and experiences

      @oakinwol@oakinwol2 жыл бұрын
    • @@oakinwol yep thats the reason people are having fewer children netflix and iPhones....

      @RF-lg4rq@RF-lg4rq2 жыл бұрын
    • @@RF-lg4rq my grandfather had 12 kids and lived on a farm in Nigeria. Somehow they could afford having all these kids survive into adulthood and contribute to society. I don't think all these people who say they can't afford kids are living hand to mouth huddled in small one bedroom apartments. In the past, they understood that it isn't a question of whether you can afford to have kids, it's whether you can afford not to. Modern society gives the illusion that we can afford not to make significant sacrifices to invest in the next generation. It's just selfishness. We have more than any generation before us has had. We will learn what happens when people en mass depriotize relationships, family, and children. I always mention that for 1000+ years after the society that pyramids collapsed they were surrounded by people without the knowledge or capacity to do what their ancestors did. We're not invulnerable. There are a few things that can cause complete system collapse like what we saw in the bronze age. Declining our population too rapidly is one of them

      @oakinwol@oakinwol2 жыл бұрын
    • @@oakinwol I don't think you understand. In the past 50 years household income has increased 16%, while the average household cost increased 190%. Source: (kzhead.info/sun/Y9ejXZyooaZvi6M/bejne.html timestamp 7:01). Sure your grandfather had 12 kids but by what measure are you using to decide if he could afford them. Could he afford to have 12 kids in the United States right now on an average income all the while paying a mortgage and all the bills that come with home ownership? Feed all 12 of those kids? Clothe all 12 of them etc.

      @RF-lg4rq@RF-lg4rq2 жыл бұрын
    • @@oakinwol I am expected to have a smartphone for my job. Fuck, any job is gon a expect you to have a smartphone. My grandparents didn't forego all luxury and convenience even on my grandpa's small pay as a baker.

      @carlycrays2831@carlycrays28312 жыл бұрын
  • I'm genX and the only child in my family. When my parents grew older I took care of them financially and although I lived on a different continent I always found time to communicate with them several times a week. It went without sayng that children have to care for their aging parents. I raised 3 kids, now I'm getting older. We live in the same country yet I do not raise my hopes too high: they are so deep into their own worlds - and phones - that unless I call them they can go for months not talking to me, they don't care. Sometimes I think I would be better off if I didn't have children and redirected the time and money I spent on my family to my personal development and enjoyment. Yet the hope is still there like a tiny pilot light.

    @alexandermikhailov2481@alexandermikhailov248110 ай бұрын
    • how old are your children if I may ask? I heard and seen many times that children choose to avoid their parents in their teens and twenties to self-actualize and build up their own lives, but become more connected once they reach their 30s and gain stability in their own lives

      @juannaym8488@juannaym84887 ай бұрын
    • @@juannaym8488 32, 26, 18

      @alexandermikhailov2481@alexandermikhailov24817 ай бұрын
  • A world without children would be heaven on earth! I could finally live my life peacefully!

    @534sander@534sander10 ай бұрын
  • I wish more people were into demographics, its a good way of seeing how the world will be in the future.

    @Muslim-og3vc@Muslim-og3vc2 жыл бұрын
    • Breeding like rats

      @niranjansrinivasan4042@niranjansrinivasan40422 жыл бұрын
    • @@niranjansrinivasan4042 not really current world wide fertility rate is 2.5

      @Muslim-og3vc@Muslim-og3vc2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Muslim-og3vc 2.5? Na, its far less ⬇

      @everythingisfine9988@everythingisfine99882 жыл бұрын
    • Indeed, to put thing in perspective every day about 300,000 people die, and about 600,000 a born... Soon The NWO and now China too will do to Africa what the NWO did for China and The Rest in general - enable MASSIVE POPULATION INFLATION on a grotesquely fake-green industrial scale.. Either that or PULL THE PLUG! -- Here's my take... After WW2 (AKA Nuclear World War 1), The Allied Internazi Winners carried on warring all over the world, in both the Cold War, and extremely HOT Nuclear World War 2 - The Nuclear Test War, 100s of 1000s of nukes exploded... The Internazis went progressively Neo-Liberal, and then full-on Neo-Liberal Globalist from the 80s onward, neo-liberally investing in The Rest's Nazi-like cultures, transferring The West's industrial might & magic to The Rest - who TRIPLED THEIR POPULATIONS in just 40 Years from 2 billion to 6 billion.. -- The US had nuclear supremacy for quite a few years so could have wiped out the Nazi-like Restern Cultures.. Out-Nazid them all, once and for all, for good, while liberating Western children to INHERIT THE EARTH! No joke....... Instead, it chose to demonise its citizens and make them 3rd class citizens in their own lands by 'progressive' Affirmative Action laws, programs and funding.. Thus Native Europeans and Native USians have been Greatly Replaced in huge numbers..

      @PrivateSi@PrivateSi2 жыл бұрын
    • @@PrivateSi yeah the elites are trying so hard to destroy the family, they view is humans like a disease and think we are too many, when that is false, the earth has so much habital land, we already make more than enough food etc. only those people with good familiy values will survive

      @Muslim-og3vc@Muslim-og3vc2 жыл бұрын
  • I have thought about this so much over the years. I was born in the US in the 70s. My grandparents on both sides had between 10 - 12 siblings but not all survived to adulthood. My grandparents' generation had 5-6 kids themselves, then my parents' generation had between 1-2 kids. In my generation, I know several people who don't have any kids at all. In my lifetime, we went from one person being able to support a family with modest means, to families with multiple people working but still struggling to get by working 50+ hours per week. I'm sure access to birth control played a part. But in larger families, childcare duties were spread out among family members living in the same household; these days, all the communal duties of a household may fall to just one person, and if that person works, they have to pay someone for childcare, cooking, or cleaning which in older times might have been done for free by a family member. Enjoyed the video and the analysis.

    @heatherthomas7545@heatherthomas75452 жыл бұрын
    • Correction: why WHITE people stopped having kids

      @suzygirl1843@suzygirl1843 Жыл бұрын
    • If people stopped believing in Evolution, they would value life higher.

      @earlysda@earlysda10 ай бұрын
    • Governments around the world LOVE women working. Why? Two reasons: They get to tax the entire population, not just half. The kids get ignored at daycare, so the parents have no influence over their kids and the government takes over influencing them.

      @marygoff3332@marygoff333210 ай бұрын
    • Wow. You must've hit a nerve. 3 replies but I see nothing. Something nobody ever seems to want to recognize is that there has been a world wide push from western activists to reduce human reproduction. They have championed policies that decrease productivity and work to create an environment hostile to "breeders" who "irresponsibly" bring more life into the world. This coupled with the effective destruction western mating rules and the lionization of abortion as a heroic act has brought us to the point where western population crash is a very likely possibility in the next few decades. At the same time globalization of the worlds economies has pushed the dirtiest manufacturing work into countries that do not have the worker or environmental protection policies common in the west, effecting local fertility rates & infant mortality. Which has set up the rest of the world for a similar crash. It's not going to go the way those cheering for it think it will, either. We are looking at losing enough of the worlds workforce that there's not going to be enough workers to keep critical systems working. Workers that *cannot* be replaced with robots and AI. And since achievement is based on things other than aptitude or ability there won't be the people needed to make those robots and AI

      @nicholashodges201@nicholashodges20110 ай бұрын
    • You just made a perfect case for women not being in the workforce. If I had my way, women would comprise no more than 10% of the workforce, and that would be in nursing, and professional entertainment.

      @Hardin9@Hardin910 ай бұрын
  • Without Generation Wealth Fund, many singles will feel the liability is not worth it

    @wendyshoowaiching4161@wendyshoowaiching416110 ай бұрын
  • I think it's the price society pays for not caring about making things easier for women. Almost nothing has been done to help us, giving birth is the worst pain a woman can experience in her lifetime. Why can't birthing be completely painless? That's the only reason I'll have no kids ever, I can afford everything, I would love to have many kids with my husband, but the birth is insanely scary and there's also a possibility of death. It's horrible, who would ever go through that willingly?

    @hugrid9647@hugrid964710 ай бұрын
  • I hope the world of the future will be a world of quality than quantity.

    @paolosulit7690@paolosulit76902 жыл бұрын
    • You can't apply that to demographics. Older nations (see Japan as an example) will economically stagnate, then crash. It would be very difficult to run an economy where most of the population is over 65. That means, fewer consumption, fewer consumers, fewer men to enlist in the military to defend the nation etc etc. Even with robotisation, it won't solve everything

      @numericbin9983@numericbin99832 жыл бұрын
    • @@numericbin9983 If computers can do everything a human can do as well or better, than their is no reason to have humans at all, they'll just be a liability. The most driven nations would kill their population so they can invest everything in automation. However for the demographic problems that Japan is experiencing, there are ways to mitigate them, mainly making caring for the old people more efficient and/or immigration. However, if old people have money, they will consume, especially if they're paying massive medical bills from age-related diseases.

      @user-cx9nc4pj8w@user-cx9nc4pj8w2 жыл бұрын
    • @@numericbin9983 the idea that anything including economics should grow endlessly is suicidal. Infinite growth is impossible on finite planet

      @KateeAngel@KateeAngel2 жыл бұрын
    • This doesn’t apply to demographics my guy.

      @basedkaiser5352@basedkaiser53522 жыл бұрын
    • Every person available to produce, think, invent, clean and solve problems make the world better.

      @cas1652@cas16522 жыл бұрын
  • I did some calculations and it seems like the "standard" lifestyle with 2 kids is impossible for the average person in my country because both parents would need to make 1,6x the average wage. The only way you can afford kids is if you sacrifice something (car, savings, mortgage down payment etc.) and even THEN you'll be living paycheck to paycheck. You can really just be financially stable if you live on your own here, and avoid any extra payments.

    @itsvmmc@itsvmmc10 ай бұрын
    • What country, if I may ask? We have three children, but we started at 27 and 37 (respectively), and I’ve worked in between children. We make many sacrifices to keep them fed, healthy, happy, and their grandparents pay for their schooling.

      @kiwik2951@kiwik295110 ай бұрын
    • @@kiwik2951 What sounds like reasonable sacrifices to you may be unpalatable to others, there are billions of people with different perceptions. The trade-offs when you have children are not simply financial, it's a lifelong commitment - of time, energy and goodwill - to something you may not be capable of handling. "Grandparents pay for their schooling" is not likely to be a commonly available resource

      @pritapp788@pritapp78810 ай бұрын
    • The "nuclear family" was invented by Victorian society not counting 20 heads of household staff contributing to childrearing without being counted as family members and accordingly fallacious

      @fionafiona1146@fionafiona114610 ай бұрын
    • Yup, politicians and the wealthy are screwing the masses. Pick up your arms, their is going to be a mother of all wars over this.

      @kryts27@kryts2710 ай бұрын
    • Then you are choosing to have material wealth over family.....the joke, however, is that that wealth is built on a system that demands growth and as we hit the demographic crunch those savings and investments are going to rapidly Decrease in value leaving most people poor AND without family.

      @booklover4314@booklover431410 ай бұрын
  • Not every woman is ready to sacrifice her dreams for the sake of having a child. I am 28 years old, I have a higher education, a stable job, I have been in a relationship with the same man for 6 years, we have been living together for four years, and I have no children. I've made a few percent of my dreams come true, and the child will simply destroy everything that I'm building now. I’m not ready to give up being happy and having a baby, because my happiness does not lie in having children. I’m not alone, all my friends, both female and male of the same age, don’t have children and have completely different goals in life. Values ​​have changed, and people, especially women, now have the opportunity to make their dreams come true, and reproduction is not everyone's goal. Plus, kids are too much of a responsibility, and that's for life. You can't change your mind after giving birth once. Having given birth, you are connected with a whole person for the rest of your life, and personally I’m not ready for this yet.

    @AidanK_ART@AidanK_ART10 ай бұрын
    • Sister ❤️ what's your opinion on the philosophy of antinatalism?

      @potter5647@potter564710 ай бұрын
    • Replacing family with career or consumerism is incredibly short-sighted and not a choice you can undo once the train has left the station (10 to maybe 15 years)

      @YBM2007@YBM200710 ай бұрын
    • ​@@YBM2007that's alright. They don't want to be on that train anyways.

      @LckD008@LckD00810 ай бұрын
    • @@LckD008 heres the thing, a woman is locked to that choice - a male partner can ditch the plan, her and then start a family anytime. At least in theory

      @YBM2007@YBM200710 ай бұрын
    • @@YBM2007 that's alright. They don't want to be on that train anyways.

      @LckD008@LckD00810 ай бұрын
  • Honestly with the way things are going in the us and rest of the world, socially. I don’t think I’d want to have kids and make them deal with everything.

    @seemlyca9065@seemlyca906510 ай бұрын
  • I'm actually thinking of not having children.

    @Chryztallic@Chryztallic2 жыл бұрын
    • For me it depends if I'm wealthy with a perfect wife. Divorce rate is already HIGH, I don't wanna be another statistic.

      @henryjohnson-ville3834@henryjohnson-ville38342 жыл бұрын
    • Having kids isn’t some key to happiness as all the worlds cultures pump into womens heads. It’s a load of bullshit and one can live single or married and no kids with being extremely happy and fulfilled.

      @bluetickbeagles116@bluetickbeagles1162 жыл бұрын
    • @@henryjohnson-ville3834 Yeah... Those not perfect wifes are to blame )))))))

      @myown2101@myown21012 жыл бұрын
    • Best decision of my life!

      @myown2101@myown21012 жыл бұрын
    • @@myown2101 It is. Marriage is a pull/push game where if I work out and is frugal with money, she does so too. If she cooks, I wash the dishes. Ya know. All the time I see couples, ones either slim whilst the other is a obese toad.

      @henryjohnson-ville3834@henryjohnson-ville38342 жыл бұрын
  • Tbh, it is not just rural and city issue that affects fertility rates. For me not having children is my non-confidence vote on how the future is heading. For example, the generation before me invested in CDO and mortgage-backed securities for short term gains instead of investing in space stations or cities on mars or the moon. It is the fact that in my teens, I knew it took 2 people working right now to pay for our current retirees of our retirement plans. I also knew this was going to increase to 3:1 when I retire and if I did have kids they see it in a 5:1. Government-backed mandatory pyramid scheme go figure and no one has the bravery to say it out loud and end the program. Governments are currently spending money from future taxpayers, aka your kids, without their consent but they will be left with the bill. The main reason why I don't want kids: I know my kids would be more worst off than I am.

    @MeGawOOt99@MeGawOOt992 жыл бұрын
    • I love how you're dropping truthbombs everywhere, yet have so few upvotes because people want big daddy government to help them with everything because everyone is fucking brainwashed into thinking that socialist communist dictatorship countries are "best" because "muh equity". For me, the reason why I don't want kids is because I don't see a future worth living within the next 25-50 years. Everyone's becoming more in support of megacities, getting shoved into pods, and being told to eat the insects, just like how the globalist overloards want.

      @malice5121@malice512110 ай бұрын
    • Agreed with ya I prefer to left humanity extincted than torturing themselves.

      @rexomi17@rexomi1710 ай бұрын
    • You can live in retirement by living in one of your children’s home

      @dreamsdeep1076@dreamsdeep107610 ай бұрын
  • I'm not having children because I enjoy my sanity, freedom, money, vacations, and quietness.

    @thundergato84@thundergato849 ай бұрын
    • Preach

      @savagesweetheart90@savagesweetheart906 ай бұрын
  • Worse economy and lesser opportunities in life is the answer. I wouldn't have child until I secure my economy and guarantee my children's financial well-being. Since it's too difficult to ensure these people will have even lesser children in the future.

    @ligdjumvidja8294@ligdjumvidja829410 ай бұрын
  • The amount of time you have to sink raising a child is also noteworthy, in poorer societies as long as the child hits double digit he will be able to join the workforce, but in first world some above average job won't even give you a chance to interview if you don't have a college degree, that means parents have to devote 20+ years of their life raising a kid just to have a chance competing with others

    @infinitsai@infinitsai10 ай бұрын
    • That's true, lack of enforced child labor laws and the labor intensive farm life in poorer countries makes extra hands an asset.

      @hansfrankfurter2903@hansfrankfurter290310 ай бұрын
    • Exactly, the standards of raising kids have gone up tremendously. It’s a good thing but it definitely makes it harder to have them. Back in the day many kids didn’t go to school, worked, did not receive medical care, and often slept in overcrowded rooms if they were poor. They went out on their own and didn’t get much supervision. That type of parenting is largely inexcusable today.

      @agees924@agees92410 ай бұрын
    • Don't focus on "above average." It's impossible for the average person to get an above average job.

      @aluisious@aluisious10 ай бұрын
    • Its mostly due to poorer and male dominated societies having all of the jobs done by men. Women therefore have to marry early and marriage often results in pregnancy especially without birth control. Rich countries where women dont have to get married means that alot of times they choose not to have kids. In ancient sparta alot of the wealth ended up concentrating in a few women's hands and that society eventually ceased to have almost any spartan citizens by the end and then got taken over unlike their thriving male dominated neighbours athens, thebes and macedonia.

      @freneticness6927@freneticness692710 ай бұрын
  • Theres also the impact wealth has on birth control ETA theres a few times the phrase "how many children a woman chooses to have" without taking into account that poorer countries have higher r*pe stats. Its not just that, higher educated women tend to be better off. Theres also stigma around periods in poor countries resulting in girls missing valuable schooling. There are MANY more factors that go into birth rates than how many kids a woman wants. And putting the onus squarely on them is doing a disservice to the examination of the economics involved.

    @Coop_Boop@Coop_Boop2 жыл бұрын
  • There is an interesting cultural shift here in Hong Kong. The elders are less powerful in families now compared to a few generations ago. There is less peer pressure and pressure from the extended family on expecting you to have children. This gives ppl less incentive to settle on a less-than-ideal mate. I think Individualism also made ppl focus more on personal goals and growth rather than having a family

    @hotpenguin607@hotpenguin60710 ай бұрын
  • Very interesting. I really liked the coloured marker form of illustration- brings the subject to light impeccably. You mentioned a number of aspects, like the effects of tv, that I hadn’t thought of. Thank you

    @Nettsinthewoods@Nettsinthewoods10 ай бұрын
  • In the early 1960's, John Calhoun did a series of rat experiments looking at fertility and behavior when rats in a confined colony were given free access to food and water. Those experiments are described in Wikipedia under the term "behavioral sink". Rat fertility dramatically fell as the population rose, with a fall happening in parallel with a cultural shift. There was plenty of room for more rats, so it wasn't as simple as not enough physical space. Gangs of male rats came together, there was violent conflict, and others confined themselves to a solitary existence, choosing not to breed. Ultimately all rats died. There are parallels to cultural shifts in human populations today.

    @spelunkerd@spelunkerd2 жыл бұрын
    • Hmm… interesting-although a bit disturbing. en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behavioral_sink

      @whatisahandle221@whatisahandle2212 жыл бұрын
    • I know about 'mouse utopia' experiment. Was there something similar done with rats too?

      @justsomedude8324@justsomedude83242 жыл бұрын
    • @@justsomedude8324 Good point, I believe he did experiments with both species.

      @spelunkerd@spelunkerd2 жыл бұрын
    • Only incels attempt to link rat behaviour to human psychology...

      @IndustrialBonecraft@IndustrialBonecraft2 жыл бұрын
    • i remember there was a video about this

      @sierralovat5498@sierralovat54982 жыл бұрын
  • I don't have kids. When I was a kid I didn't like children or babies or dolls. When I found out where babies came from, I was horrified about pregnancy and birth! Not one thing appealed to me about any of it. (Sex was great...not pregnancy!). Education for women prevents unwanted births. (Unwanted births are great for cheap labor for corporations...that's why they promote anti-abortion and poverty wages. ). America wants to suppress sex education, prevent abortion, abolish laws against child-marriage. I would have not survived an unwanted birth because my alternative would have destroyed my own future as well. NO way I would become a brood-mare for the state! Or some fantasy church beliefs that others hold over humanity. At 70, I consider my greatest success in my life was to NOT have children. I am not "childless"...I am "child-free". My generosity to myself was that I left enough room for women who actually *want* children have more resources.

    @Sushi33312@Sushi3331210 ай бұрын
  • Thanks for exploring not only the well known reasons but also the less known. Great video.

    @samuela-aegisdottir@samuela-aegisdottir10 ай бұрын
  • Becoming a parents is not for everyone. Kids require a lot of patience. There are people with children already who shouldn’t have them. 🤷🏿

    @b.jerelljones7312@b.jerelljones731210 ай бұрын
  • Religion plays its role in certain part of the world with regard to fertility rate. For example, Kerala is considered the most literate state in India but In 2018, 43.80% of the total reported births in the state were to Muslims, 41.61% to Hindus, 14.31% to Christians and 0.25% to others whereas the population of these religion group is 27%, 54% and 18% respectively. Even though people of Kerala belongs to same race, have similar culture and speak one language but there is a stark difference in birth rate.

    @dobronx5270@dobronx52702 жыл бұрын
    • Interesting example to look into more! Could differences in economic and social opportunities or differences in level of urbanization be part of the explaination?

      @SmallCirclesForward@SmallCirclesForward2 жыл бұрын
    • All Abrahamic religions told their adherents to fill the earth. The holy book writers definitely wanted their religion to dominate

      @containedhurricane@containedhurricane2 жыл бұрын
    • More than religio it is the economic conditions in which people from each religion are.. you have to see from that perspective as well.. also literacy doesn't equate to knowledge and awareness

      @tanmaya1111@tanmaya11112 жыл бұрын
    • @@SmallCirclesForward I don't think lack of economic and social development is the reason behind high birth rate. High birth rate is the reason behind lack of economic and social development. Urbanization could be the reason because muslims who live in rural areas are govern by local madarsas and mosques. They preach that using contraceptives methods are unislamic and haram. Preventing child birth is against god's will. Whereas in urban areas people are more busy in pursuit of their economic goals.

      @dobronx5270@dobronx52702 жыл бұрын
    • @@dobronx5270 YOU DESTROYED A SICKULAR GIRL NIICE

      @MrDEVkaushik@MrDEVkaushik2 жыл бұрын
  • I don't think "fertility rate" is the right wording for the title. It would indicate a change in a woman's ability to give birth. Birth rate would probably fit better.

    @darianbell9614@darianbell96142 жыл бұрын
    • I agree it can be confusing, but fertility rate is the commonly accepted term

      @SmallCirclesForward@SmallCirclesForward2 жыл бұрын
    • Technically fertility rate in the West in males is on the decline too.

      @davidmarshall9708@davidmarshall97082 жыл бұрын
    • @@davidmarshall9708 Due to chemicals placed in food...it's all by design for population control.

      @iveyhealth2266@iveyhealth22662 жыл бұрын
    • The Fertility Rate : of a continent or nation . Not a single woman or man . So it makes sense he is talking about the fertility of an Area in general . Not singling out one person like you are

      @swordguy1243@swordguy12432 жыл бұрын
    • @@SmallCirclesForward commonly accepted does not mean correct.

      @ziplokk1453@ziplokk14532 жыл бұрын
  • I have no idea how people in the US manage to have and raise kids. Not only is it super expensive to live but also we work so much here no one has time to raise their kids. Day care costs more than a mortgage. Also, marriages typically don’t last either leading a single parent to raise on their own. Everyone is so independent there isn’t much support on child care. I can’t even imagine how it would be possible to have a child here.

    @acutiff7125@acutiff712510 ай бұрын
  • I would think that in some nations the lack of birth control would be a contributing factor on families having more than 5 children. Women don't exactly have fun giving birth, especially if there are fewer hospitals (which there normally is in these countries) and the women have to birth in there home or even the agricultural fields. This was a very good video, thank you for sharing it with us. 😊

    @jenniekelly571@jenniekelly57110 ай бұрын
    • It comes down to choice. In Victorian times the women belonged to the father until she was handed over to the husband. It's not about whether that's right or wrong it's just the way it was. Male dominated societies see large families. That's why some countries in this day and age, such as in Africa and the near East have large families, whereas in the west and the far east where women are emancipated you see birthrates below replacement levels. I'm sorry but this is a trend repeated throughout history. The more equality you see between the sexes the lower the birthrate. What usually happens is there reaches a point of collapse! In the west we are literally importing the children we never had which is causing huge demographic changes! That's not going to end well for anyone! That will be the cause of the collapse.

      @thehound9638@thehound963810 ай бұрын
    • @@thehound9638 omg love your avatar, Hound is simply the best

      @Li_Tobler@Li_Tobler10 ай бұрын
    • @@Li_Tobler 👍

      @thehound9638@thehound963810 ай бұрын
  • Quality of life is another aspect. Many people including me believe that its unethical to bring another life into this world with so much suffering, pain and injustice.

    @herp_derpingson@herp_derpingson10 ай бұрын
    • Pretty much. Especially with world war 3 right around the corner. Definitely not a time to be having a child.

      @killman369547@killman36954710 ай бұрын
  • Kids are expensive and require a lot of time. Something most of us can't afford these days. Most of us are struggling to support ourselves.

    @taylorrhyne502@taylorrhyne50210 ай бұрын
  • I’m ready to not have kids due to cost of living. Working a warehouse job, I’m having to consider a second full time job to keep up.

    @LCCWPresents@LCCWPresents10 ай бұрын
  • Wait for mee, I've wanted a family for years and I'm going to work hard for it. I'm 18 and I don't understand everyone's choices, but all I know is that until i finish college, become I'm financially stable, car, mortgage and husband, my dream of being a mother will have to wait

    @atetic_queen8588@atetic_queen858810 ай бұрын
    • I hope you reach those goals! The most important thing is finding a good man who shares your vision.

      @eurekahope5310@eurekahope531010 ай бұрын
    • Same girl

      @sakura.8138@sakura.81388 ай бұрын
  • I feel really sorry for children who are born now into this mad mad mad world

    @tanyamostovoy6784@tanyamostovoy67842 жыл бұрын
    • Right?

      @RomeliaGomez-Calmell7934@RomeliaGomez-Calmell79342 жыл бұрын
    • i think it was always mad, just getting madder

      @vetiarvind@vetiarvind2 жыл бұрын
    • Yes. Plus the planet is dying anyway. Who wants to doom their kids to a live action Mad Max.

      @annnee6818@annnee68182 жыл бұрын
    • Mad mad mad mad world is a great film. Check it out if you haven’t already!

      @abubakrakram6208@abubakrakram62082 жыл бұрын
    • @@abubakrakram6208 Coming soon to a reality near you

      @castorchua@castorchua2 жыл бұрын
  • I think the biggest part is: Most women don't want kids. In my family, the average amount of kids (in my generation) is 3-4, that's if they got kids, and it stays consistent across all generations, only thing increasing is the amount of women who choose to... not have kids.

    @ThighErda@ThighErda10 ай бұрын
    • let me guess, you cant back it up with sources?

      @YBM2007@YBM200710 ай бұрын
    • I don't. My patience & energy are too low to be forced to care for someone else every day for yrs and yrs and yrs. Only to be finished when I'm too old to enjoy my life. Plus, I like sleeping in on weekends. Kids don't let you do that.

      @asideofaioli4630@asideofaioli463010 ай бұрын
    • Right you are! I am one of these women. I just don't want children. I have seen women of my age with kids....and guess what? The financial pressure is so huge that they tell me how lucky I am to be childless.

      @misskirjolohi@misskirjolohi8 ай бұрын
  • I'm not having children because I believe it would be cruel to subject another soul to the rest of you.

    @zeke1220@zeke122010 ай бұрын
  • Because life is too short and there is so much to do. Having kids puts a limit on you. Plus, without kids, you aren't afraid to lose your job

    @yevgenyblinov48@yevgenyblinov4810 ай бұрын
  • I think it’s a good thing people are more selective about when and if they have kids. Growing up in the Deep South, so many of my peers were accidents, or their parents had kids before they were ready just because it’s what was expected of them. And no wonder most of us had really shit childhoods, or metric assloads of trauma we can’t afford a therapist to address. I’d rather we have a birth rate under replacement level, but the remaining kids be born into a situation where they’re set up for success. Far too many of us were set up for failure from birth, and our whole lives will be a fight to claw our way out.

    @xxx_putin_has_a_flaccid_pe5374@xxx_putin_has_a_flaccid_pe537410 ай бұрын
    • USA has declining enrollment in the military. Hence abortion being banned in many states. Young men birthed by poor women who would prefer to not have them will provide recruits in the future. More 'metric assloads of trauma' are on the way. When the only way to get an education or to get ahead is to have it funded by a military, then that's what people do. Most recruits don't do it for the chance to get killed somewhere in another country. They do it for the possibility of getting training and education. Same here in Canada. Poor kids join the military. Rich kids don't.

      @gabriellakadar@gabriellakadar10 ай бұрын
    • @@gabriellakadar That is indeed something I saw happen to my peers. I’m very lucky I managed to find a career niche with livable enough wage without that, even if it’s hard right now because I’m at the bottom.

      @xxx_putin_has_a_flaccid_pe5374@xxx_putin_has_a_flaccid_pe537410 ай бұрын
    • ​@@gabriellakadarsuch a vicious cycle indeed. So many people don't wake up to what is really going on here

      @noellee1439@noellee143910 ай бұрын
    • Maybe that’s fine when the kids are all in their 20/30s ie China a decade ago… the sugar high is great. But then comes the comedown ie Europe and Japan now. Think a welfare state can be sustained with fewer taxpayers than retirees… think taxes are too high ? Look 20/30 years later. You’ll find in Britian (where older voters have long been dominant) the welfare state is sacrosanct. So taxes go up now automatically to fund health, and pensions (disproportionately going to those over 65) meaning fewer people (that want kids) can afford to bring them up. I think you may be projecting a little my family was poor but my family loved us, I’m one if 4 my mother one of 9 (this is Britain) you know what you Americans are obsessed with “trauma” and therapy.

      @reecemacaulay1690@reecemacaulay16906 ай бұрын
    • @@reecemacaulay1690 Declining birth rates are mainly a problem for the economy if you’re not willing to let enough young workers immigrate to make up that shortage in labor. Also, I wasn’t trying to make a broad generalization. Yes, there are parents who take the situation at hand and deal with it as well as they can. But generational poverty and unwanted children are definitely things that exist and can harm people. I don’t know about the UK, but in many parts of the US it’s bad. People deserve to decide when or if to have kids, when they’re ready for that commitment. Children deserve to be born into a situation where they have a fighting chance at life, both economically and developmentally. They deserve to not skip meals because their parents aren’t able to provide for them, they deserve to not fear their own safety in the neighborhood they live in. They deserve parents who are able to be present in their lives some of the time, instead of constantly working or dealing with several other siblings. They deserve the choice of a higher education, or tech school/apprenticeships. Instead, many poor kids never even got taught what they needed for that. Or they turn 18, then immediately have to work a shitty fast food job to provide for their own parents and siblings. No child, and no parent should have to be put in these situations. I can’t speak for where you are, but in some parts of the US it’s still considered okay to beat your children. Scream at them for the slightest mistake, instead of explaining what they did wrong. Sending them to conversion camps or outright kicking them onto the streets if they turn out gay. Many children are treated more like property than humans, a mere extension of their parents. Some of the shit I’ve heard from my parents’ generation were insane. A lot of children also have parents who are addicted to hard drugs. I’d say that in many cases, trauma is a valid description for these situations. You need to remember, a young child’s brain and nervous system is physically more sensitive to things like this than adults are. 18 years of your life, at the most moldable stage of life, can stunt you mentally and emotionally. This is proven neuroscience at this point, regardless of who’s to blame or who’s willing to self-reflect.

      @xxx_putin_has_a_flaccid_pe5374@xxx_putin_has_a_flaccid_pe53745 ай бұрын
  • I am a woman in my 60s, who heard about OVER population throughout my childbearing years, and chose to be childfree. There must be, to some approximation, a world population level that will be sustainable with the majority of people having sufficient resources to live comfortably. I was always under the impression that lowering or stabilizing population was a good thing, now it's worrying?

    @sherrieludwig508@sherrieludwig5082 жыл бұрын
    • the worrying part is less the population itself and more the ratio between young and old people. with life expectancies becoming longer and birthrates going down, there are going to be fewer and fewer workers to support the growing elderly population. automation is a solution but there is going to have to be a pretty radical industrial revolution for it to make a difference

      @Vapor817@Vapor8172 жыл бұрын
    • It's a good thing

      @ajcambern@ajcambern2 жыл бұрын
    • Only worrying if your main priority is accumulating wealth, but anyone that thought an infinite growth economic model was sustainable, is definitely not playing with a full deck.

      @chineseboxer108@chineseboxer1082 жыл бұрын
    • @@Vapor817 But there will be fewer dependent children for the workers to educate and support.

      @chriswatson1698@chriswatson16982 жыл бұрын
    • @@chriswatson1698 unless you wanna work until you're like 80, retirement is only going to become longer than childhood as the average lifespan increases. plus there's that bit about how children become more independent over time and grow up into working adults while old people can only grow older and become more dependent on medical infrastructure to keep them alive.

      @Vapor817@Vapor8172 жыл бұрын
  • It’s hard for me to believe the Middle East and Indian subcontinent are down so much on fertility. It’s rare to see a family with less than 4 kids here. I once had to interact with one of 22 while I was at work.

    @MandoMonge@MandoMonge10 ай бұрын
    • I am from India I rarely see people with more than 2 kids when I look at the young couples meaning in their 20s and 30s the fertility rate of the state I live in is 1.8 which is below the replacement level. I can very much see the reduction in population with abandoned homes men and women not wanting to marry etc.

      @user-th4ch4ky3g@user-th4ch4ky3g10 ай бұрын
    • I am from India and from a upper middle class family. My grandfather had 8 children, My father (Who earns a lot more than my grandfather ever did) had 1 (the highest was 3 from one of his sister), Now in my generation, Highest is 2 from one of my cousins.

      @wrathava@wrathava10 ай бұрын
  • a lot of ppl are realising that being childfree means u have more time and money to spend on yourself 💅

    @FollowerofDuck@FollowerofDuck8 ай бұрын
  • Reasons why I'm not having children: - Generational trauma - My mental disorder - Too expensive - Too challenging

    @Sashimi_Boy2404@Sashimi_Boy24042 жыл бұрын
    • so you got no b****es

      @novemharrison4524@novemharrison4524 Жыл бұрын
    • You forgot selfcentured and lazy..

      @seniormale@seniormale10 ай бұрын
    • incel

      @N73B60@N73B6010 ай бұрын
    • Translated: "Reasons why I'm not having children: I am weak and I am scared to change"

      @julianprzybysawski8543@julianprzybysawski854310 ай бұрын
    • Reasons why I'm not having children: - I don't want to

      @chickenoraria7559@chickenoraria755910 ай бұрын
  • Salaries have not kept pace with the cost of cars and homes. Ironically you usually need to live in an expensive city for the employment opportunities. Canada provides around $500 a month for your kid from birth to about age 6 and that helped us a lot. Still, trying to make things work with multiple kids these days is hard, and contributing to women’s lack of career progression because it’s often such a logistical challenge to have both parents working and also figure out child care.

    @RossSpeirs@RossSpeirs10 ай бұрын
    • Regarding women working, that's one reason why a single salary is insufficient to comfortably allow for raising a family. Same thing with immigration and outsourcing work abroad - as labor becomes for plentiful, the value of the labor diminishes. Whenever you see the companies talking about how much they value those groups of people, it's not because they care about those people, it's because they want to pay their employees less. If they actually did care about those people, they wouldn't be exploiting them like that.

      @rabbiezekielgoldberg2497@rabbiezekielgoldberg249710 ай бұрын
    • @@rabbiezekielgoldberg2497 Wrong as more people are employed the output of labor increases. The problem isn't women immigrants or foreign workers working it's what the labor is being used to produce which is profits, the imperialist war industry and luxuries for the rich. It is the world capitalist system of production and trade which is failing as the bosses quest for profits is causing these problems. As giant industries are built by reducing labor time the profit rates inevitably declines. That is because our labor is the source of the profit while the fixed capital investment rises and the living labor in the production process declines. This is how industry and finance capital the most parasitic of capitals become to big to fail.

      @kimobrien.@kimobrien.10 ай бұрын
    • The governments wanted women to work...so they could tax the entire population, not just half.

      @marygoff3332@marygoff333210 ай бұрын
    • @@kimobrien. But more people _aren't_ employed. The amount of jobs isn't increasing. In some cases, employers are cutting jobs and burdening their remaining employees with a heavier work load with only a slight increase in pay that doesn't keep up with the rate of inflation (if even that) so that they can keep even more money. The demand for labor is not changing in accordance with the supply, and that is what is causing the diminishing value of labor. I don't disagree that capitalism is a flawed economic system, but people wouldn't be better off under communism (I see your profile picture just as you see my name). Fundamentally, a nation and its state must be comprised of at least a supermajority of a single ethnic group in order to be successful - the bond between blood and soil is imperative. We see now the result of once powerful nation-states collapsing under the weight of immigrants who don't care one way or another whether the country lasts or not.

      @rabbiezekielgoldberg2497@rabbiezekielgoldberg249710 ай бұрын
    • @@rabbiezekielgoldberg2497 As I stated the more employed or more working the greater the output. The Federal Reserve bank keeps economic stats. The stats show that productive capacity is going unused as a percentage used in the US and it has been declining overall since this was first measured in about 1968. Their is no specific bond between any nations blood and soil that is just made up nonsense by Adolf Hitler. The productivity of labor has been rising while wages have been stagnant since 1973. Supply and demand only applies when the two are different when supply equals demand it says nothing about the difference in prices between what is for sale. The capitalist seek to pay the lowest wages, work you at the fastest rate and the longest hours to make the biggest profits. This results in the decline of wages to the minimum need to get you back to work for the next pay period it doesn't include the time needed to form a family and raise children. The capitalist seek to eliminate higher paid skilled labor with lower paid unskilled labor and machines. They build giant industries which go into decline because the capital value rises but the labor employed declines resulting in a declining rate of profit since the profits come from our unpaid labor. They use the central bank and the printing of money to create inflation as a way to increase the value of property and cut the value of wages without having to issue the old fashion wage cut.

      @kimobrien.@kimobrien.10 ай бұрын
  • People have been sold on the idea that owning things and life style are must haves. When I was a child we were not well off but my mum did not work and raised us 3 kids. We did not own much and only had one cheap car. Us kids walked everywhere because dad drove the car to work. Now we have a car each, drive the kids to school and have all the household gadgets and flat screen TVs, also holidays abroad. I'm not complaining but having 3 or more children often means you can't have all these goodies. Many countries that traditionally had large families now only have one or two children.

    @pinballrobbie@pinballrobbie10 ай бұрын
  • I'm 30 with no babies.. Doubt I even want them anytime soon. I have so much I'd like to achieve in the next couple of years plus I'd like to do a bit of traveling.

    @quinnnyra8733@quinnnyra873310 ай бұрын
KZhead