Not enough babies? Not enough state support for families
by Phillip Inman from Economics | The Guardian on (#4D380)
When governments withdraw from child-friendly policies, their citizens are, unsurprisingly, more reluctant to procreate
When a baby is conceived there are usually three parties involved, and one of them is the government.
Without financial and other kinds of support from the state, people are more reluctant to have children, according to official statistics. It's a phenomenon seen across the developed world since the 1990s, when direct state intervention appears to have taken over from a more general sense of economic wellbeing as the main driver of procreation.
The old, of course, have only themselves to blame. They voted for Tory administrations to maintain austerity
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