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originally posted by: Lurker69
a reply to: pavil
Do you have an example of such a social policy that would be successful?
Also you give data for Germany. Please adjust your original post to either ask questions about Gemnay’s social policy or include data on the whole of Europe.
ETA. Only Germany or all of Europe.
Too low of a birthrate is a problem in the West. Isnt that the reason for the migration to Europe? That's what governments and media say.
originally posted by: JAGStorm
a reply to: pavil
Better social policies? Face it, most young (educated) adults today do not want kids. Those that do want kids only want one or two.
-Parenthetical figures are estimates, some of which are derived from reported data.
-Abortion ratios, percentages, and rates may be based on a mix of data from different sources and thus may not represent a consistent time series.
Thus, abortion is necessary but not sufficient to cause low growth rates.
With the exception of a few countries with aging populations and very high contraceptive prevalence rates, developed countries need to maintain abortion rates in the range of 201-500/1000 if they are to maintain growth rates at levels below 1%.
An even greater reliance on abortion--over 500/1000 live births--is required in developing countries to reduce population growth.
Role of abortin in control of global population growth
In all the data about Germany, it's the one statistic that bucks the trend. Its economy is strong, its cities are regularly cited as among the best in the world to live in – but Germany is a shrinking country. It has the lowest birthrate, just 1.36 children per woman, in Europe, and one of the lowest in the world.
Demographics and family policy experts are divided over the reasons for the apparent reluctance to have children, as well as the ways to tackle the situation. What they generally agree on is that Germany's demographic future looks gloomy. With many more Germans dying than being born for 40 years, the obvious results will be a shrinking workforce, lower growth and a struggle to pay for a rapidly ageing population. Britain's population is forecast to exceed that of Germany by 2040.
originally posted by: pavil
link to German birth and abortion statistics
So the reason Germany needed so many migrants was because of their low birthrate, so we are told.
If you look at the statistics, from 2000 to the present, there would have been almost 2 Million more German babies had there been no abortions during that period.
My Question. Is why doesn't Europe just craft better social policies to encourage more births from their own citizens rather than an untried experiment of migration of people from vastly different countries and cultures?
Forgive me for not quoting the article, it's mainly stats that wouldn't copy well.
originally posted by: pavil
My Question. Is why doesn't Europe just craft better social policies to encourage more births from their own citizens rather than an untried experiment of migration of people from vastly different countries and cultures?
originally posted by: Krazysh0t
"Untried experiment"? Multi-culturalism experiments have existed in the world since antiquity.