„Es ist keine schöne Welt da draußen“: Geburtenraten haben den tiefsten Stand seit 50 Jahren erreicht

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/cvgzdq23xpgo?xtor=AL-71-%5Bpartner%5D-%5Bbbc.news.twitter%5D-%5Bheadline%5D-%5Bnews%5D-%5Bbizdev%5D-%5Bisapi%5D&at_campaign_type=owned&at_ptr_name=twitter&at_bbc_team=editorial&at_link_origin=BBCNews&at_link_type=web_link&at_medium=social&at_format=link&at_link_id=2E024FBE-59ED-11F1-9817-BABBC8CB323D&at_campaign=Social_Flow

    Von tylerthe-theatre

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    27 Kommentare

    1. OilAdministrative197 on

      Can’t afford stable housing so can’t afford a stable life and a child. Blame private landlords buying up the starter houses that would have been used for me to start a family but instead go to boomer cruises. Landlords are the death of the native Brit.

    2. Tiny-Command9417 on

      Birthrates typically fall when there is economic insecurity and distrust. Consider that 1976 was around the time the IMF bailout occurred. that’s some hard hitting reality

    3. AgitatedAd7265 on

      They told us not to have kids unless we can afford them. Shocking that the birth rate falls when most of us can’t afford them 🤣

    4. trmetroidmaniac on

      >“If I’d had children, I’d have had to reduce my hours at work,“ she says. 
      „I’m a huge traveller and go away whenever I can in my camper van, which I wouldn’t be able to do if I had children.“

      >“They’re waiting for a better job, better salary, better house, better neighbourhood, and it takes longer to get those things in the current climate,“ she adds.

      >“Even in the Nordics, with [their] family-friendly social policies, they don’t see an increase in birth rates,“ she says.

      Go back more than 2 or 3 generations and the average person’s ancestor lived a much more impoverished life than they do. While economic factors do certainly sting, this is mainly downstream of cultural changes. People want a certain standard of living more than they want kids.

    5. beetrootfarmer on

      Maybe if we didn’t have to rely on a household having two full time incomes to just live a average life quality then kids might be more of an option. Past generations could afford to buy homes and food on a single income.

    6. HotelPuzzleheaded654 on

      Birth rates are never going to get back to the days where the average family would have 10+ kids even if you fix the economy.

      People have better lives now and as a result more choices.

      We need to ween our financial system off an ever growing employee to retiree ratio.

    7. Claims world is horrible place – chooses not to have kids so she has time to see it

    8. ShowerEmbarrassed512 on

      We’re having a child not because we can 100% afford it comfortably, but because the grandparents will always provide it with a financial safety net if we fall on massively hard times. 

      I would wager a vast majority of people my age aren’t privileged enough to have that luxury. 

    9. Theunluckyone7 on

      I feel like this ‚it isn’t a nice world‘ thing is an excuse people throw around for not having children and i’ve no clue why. Don’t want them, don’t have them! But living standards are high compared to previous decades and it’s a bit ignorant to pretend otherwise.

      It’s hard when you’re not able to afford suitable housing or childcare, I do get that element.

    10. Ok-Store-9297 on

      Blair’s ‘essay’ that he’s released today is so tone deaf to this tidal wave of news about the failure of the economic model he championed.

    11. NoThatsNotPasta on

      Everyone here saying „I can’t afford children“ not one (that I have seen on this thread so far) saying: „if it’s this bad now, what’s it going to be like when the child grows up“

      It’s going to be a rough 70 years unless things take a positive turn (unlikely) – that is a reason to not have kids!

    12. It’s mad that we act like falling birth rates are some mysterious cultural problem when it’s basically a giant spreadsheet issue. Wages flat, rents and house prices exploding, childcare costing more than a second mortgage, pensions tied to endlessly rising house values, and every bit of “risk” pushed onto individuals while companies and landlords hoover up the upside. People aren’t suddenly anti‑kids, they’re just doing the maths and realising bringing a child into permanent precarity is brutal. If a government genuinely cared about birth rates, they’d go after housing costs, job security and childcare first instead of lecturing people about avocado toast and putting off adulthood

    13. Recent-Conclusion997 on

      Where will these imaginary kids live lol, we can’t afford the property to leave them, two full time jobs needed just to survive, procreation is for the very rich or the benefits brigade who have social housing

    14. MoonlightByWindow on

      Economics of course play a part, but the single biggest factor behind birth rates falling across the world is women’s education. Women don’t want to give up their lives and careers to have children (justifiably), especially as so many of us young women witnessed our mothers both working full-time and still being the primary caregiver for any children. Plenty of my friends don’t want the same life.

    15. HotMachine9 on

      Every third space you could think of is dead or too expensive. How are people to meet?

      House prices are so high youd be mid thirties if youre lucky in many cases.

      Wages have stagnated and compressed.

      Fuel, utility bills are eye watering high.

      Jobs are getting cut day after day.

      What do you expect.

    16. ZeroFrogsHere on

      My friends have two children.

      It made more financial sense for one of them to quit their job so that they would qualify for free nursery placements than it did for them to both work full time and pay for nursery.

      Me and my partner both work full time, can’t afford a mortgage and certainly wouldn’t be able to afford to put a child through nursery.

      The system is broken

    17. There is more than enough people in England. You import enough young people where birth rates don’t even matter

      Scotland however could do with more births from Scots. Our house prices are also much more affordable. My toddler is not in the slightest a financial burden.

    18. Ashamed_Tutor_7922 on

      I actually want kids, but have to wait 7 months to see a urologist about a diagnosed fertility issue

    19. CalligrapherEast2344 on

      I don’t think people realise how behind many countries are on this issue. South Korea is always used as the example for this topic, but their birth rate is actually increasing quite consistently and will soon be on par with most European countries.

      And of course, SK isn’t reliant on immigration to help boost the numbers, so they’ve had to actually work towards more foundational solutions.

      Are they perfect? No. But there is a far greater effort and more candid recognition of the problem than you’re seeing in other places.

    20. Honest-Concert7646 on

      There are too many people on the planet. The natural environment cannot accommodate any more people. Overpopulation is a massive source of instability. It’s good that birth rates are declining.

      Hopefully we will see an end to the growth in human population. it will solve many of today’s problems.

    21. ToiletDestroyer6000 on

      As someone who came to realisation kids weren’t on the cards here are the main things a single man in his mid 30s chose

      1. Meeting someone when your both ready is painful and dating apps are getting really weird and I am not an attractive middle age man (probably the main point) 
      2. Everyone who has kids fucking complains about them all the time, it looks like a pain in the ass 
      3. I want more, I’ve been undersold at every  major precipice (left school 2007 BOOM Recession, mid 2010s BREXIT, 2020 COVID, 2022+ SHITSHOW WARS GENECIDES AND NOT VERY GOOD TIMES) and that’s not including all of the previous national and international issues we just had to “soldier on through”, 

      Have the above been major factors, yes and no in different ways it’s certainly influenced it and put the needle in the “very unlikely to happen portion” of the scale, 

      I’ve chose my house, my career, travelling, weekend fun and holidays, I chose not to have kids, who’s needs kids when you can have fun 

    22. Regular_Block9876542 on

      The reality is we have gone from a society were even the average worker could afford a house, family and retirement to within a few generations turning into one in which probably half of millennials and gen z will get none of those options.

      Our entire economy is like one big failing company these days. We all know it’s heading down the drain in the next 20-30 years but no politician is brave enough to change course from the neoliberal model which has got us here.

    23. SmallPromiseQueen on

      Walking around in like the fifth consecutive yearly annual “unprecedented” heatwave has made me think thank god I don’t have kids because I really dunno what sort of changes will happen as a result of global warming.

      I don’t want them anyway to be fair. And I can fully admit it’s for selfish reasons like “wanting to enjoy my own life.” I’ve never looked at a parent and felt jealous of their life tbh. Good for parents who want kids and have them – all power to you! But it’s not for me.

    24. JeffyLikesApple on

      Everyone here talking about the cost of a child. Maybe more just my opinion, but people simply just don’t want kids because they’re very hard work and you basically become a slave. You lose all freedom and I hear more people regret having children over those that don’t. I have 2 kids and I’d highly recommend not doing it lol. Especially if you don’t have a support network.

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