Work real hard, 9 to 5, can't afford a roof over your head
The social contract is dead
Limited resources, limited hope. The best parents can hope for is to spend a fortune on educating their kids and maybe the kid goes to an elite college and then gets the joy of an engineering job working on improving how well ads perform. Information worker jobs used to have some promise of long term employment, but not anymore. Layoffs happen despite record profits. Layoffs used to be a dirty word in tech, which gave people a feeling of hope and the confidence to plan long term.
Now days? No job is safe, no industry is immune. When we replaced manufacturing jobs with service industry jobs the nation replaced reliable 9-5 jobs with benefits and a retirement package with jobs that have dynamically determined shifts and no benefits! Has anyone here looked into the life of a retail worker? In some businesses you don't even know when you'll be working until the shift schedule is posted each week, and even then you can be called in at any time! Can't really raise a kid under those circumstances, getting a baby sitter can take weeks notice and baby sitters love to cancel. Not that anyone can afford a baby sitter.
Well I can, because many tech jobs include baby sitters as a job perk, but, the people who really need one can't get one.
So naturally people aren't having kids. Houses are too expensive, food is too expensive, and because the last generation of families was small, support networks don't exist. We are supposed to raise kids in large groups, with aunts, uncles, cousins, nieces and nephews all there to help. Heck even preparing and eating dinner as a small family unit is really abnormal, historically people cooked together and ate together in groups of N > 4.
Many hands make for light work, including taking care of kids. The hardest part of having kids in modern day America is that you just don't have any time off, no time to relax. You never get to sleep in ever again, you never get any downtime. Friends with large families all living locally don't have this issue, kids are passed around from household to household, all playing with each other, a self organizing ball of chaos and noise and occasional bumps and bruises, but it is so much easier than trying to schedule play dates as often as possible.
And then there is the Next Best Alternative. Daycare costs between 30k-40k a year in major cities. Even if someone can afford 30k a year for daycare, they could also just spend that money on 3 amazing international trips each year! You aren't flying first class, but you can sure as heck stay in some nice resorts!
As most people "so, kid, or, at least twice a year you get to spend a couple weeks in any country you want", a lot of people are going to choose a life of leisure.
delichon · 53m ago
> Limited resources, limited hope.
Then why is the fertility higher in places with fewer resources? Is hope higher there?
births/woman
Niger 6.64
Angola 5.70
Congo 5.49
...
USA 1.60
The social contract is dead
The social contract is dead
Work real hard, 9 to 5, can't afford a roof over your head
The social contract is dead
Limited resources, limited hope. The best parents can hope for is to spend a fortune on educating their kids and maybe the kid goes to an elite college and then gets the joy of an engineering job working on improving how well ads perform. Information worker jobs used to have some promise of long term employment, but not anymore. Layoffs happen despite record profits. Layoffs used to be a dirty word in tech, which gave people a feeling of hope and the confidence to plan long term.
Now days? No job is safe, no industry is immune. When we replaced manufacturing jobs with service industry jobs the nation replaced reliable 9-5 jobs with benefits and a retirement package with jobs that have dynamically determined shifts and no benefits! Has anyone here looked into the life of a retail worker? In some businesses you don't even know when you'll be working until the shift schedule is posted each week, and even then you can be called in at any time! Can't really raise a kid under those circumstances, getting a baby sitter can take weeks notice and baby sitters love to cancel. Not that anyone can afford a baby sitter.
Well I can, because many tech jobs include baby sitters as a job perk, but, the people who really need one can't get one.
So naturally people aren't having kids. Houses are too expensive, food is too expensive, and because the last generation of families was small, support networks don't exist. We are supposed to raise kids in large groups, with aunts, uncles, cousins, nieces and nephews all there to help. Heck even preparing and eating dinner as a small family unit is really abnormal, historically people cooked together and ate together in groups of N > 4.
Many hands make for light work, including taking care of kids. The hardest part of having kids in modern day America is that you just don't have any time off, no time to relax. You never get to sleep in ever again, you never get any downtime. Friends with large families all living locally don't have this issue, kids are passed around from household to household, all playing with each other, a self organizing ball of chaos and noise and occasional bumps and bruises, but it is so much easier than trying to schedule play dates as often as possible.
And then there is the Next Best Alternative. Daycare costs between 30k-40k a year in major cities. Even if someone can afford 30k a year for daycare, they could also just spend that money on 3 amazing international trips each year! You aren't flying first class, but you can sure as heck stay in some nice resorts!
As most people "so, kid, or, at least twice a year you get to spend a couple weeks in any country you want", a lot of people are going to choose a life of leisure.
Then why is the fertility higher in places with fewer resources? Is hope higher there?