Half a million fewer children? The coming COVID baby bust:
The COVID-19 episode will likely lead to a large, lasting baby bust. The pandemic has thrust the country into an economic recession. Economic reasoning and past evidence suggest that this will lead people to have fewer children. The decline in births could be on the order of 300,000 to 500,000 fewer births next year. We base this expectation on lessons drawn from economic studies of fertility behavior, along with data presented here from the Great Recession of 2007-2009 and the 1918 Spanish Flu.
[...] When the public health crisis first took hold, some people playfully speculated that there would be a spike in births in nine months, as people were "stuck home" with their romantic partners. Such speculation is based on persistent myths about birth spikes occurring nine months after blizzards or major electricity blackouts. As it turns out, those stories tend not to hold up to statistical examination (Udry, 1970). But the COVID-19 crisis is amounting to much more than a temporary stay-at-home order. It is leading to tremendous economic loss, uncertainty, and insecurity. That is why birth rates will tumble.
[...] There is ample evidence that birth rates are, in fact, pro-cyclical. This is shown, for instance, in the work by Dettling and Kearney (2014) described above. Their analysis of birth rates in metropolitan areas finds that all else equal, a one percentage-point increase in the unemployment rate is associated with a 1.4 percent decrease in birth rates. Schaller (2016) analyzes the relationship between state-level unemployment rates and birth rates, and finds that a one percentage-point increase in state-year unemployment rates is associated with a 0.9 to 2.2 percent decrease in birth rates. Other evidence shows that women whose husbands lose their jobs at some point during their marriage ultimately have fewer children (Lindo, 2010). This suggests that transitory changes in economic conditions lead to changes in birth rates.
[...] What are the likely implications of the COVID-19 episode for fertility? The monthly unemployment rate jumped from 3.5 percent to 14.7 percent in April and to 13.3 percent in May. Note that the BLS also indicate that technical issues in collecting these data likely mean that the actual unemployment rates in those months were likely 5 and 3 percentage points higher, respectively. That would bring them to about 19.7 and 16.3 percent. Although it is difficult to forecast the 2020 annual unemployment rate, assuming a 7 to 10 percentage-point jump to 10.6 to 13.6 percent seems reasonable. Based on the findings presented above, this economic shock alone implies a 7 to 10 percent drop in births next year. With 3.8 million births occurring in 2019, that would amount to a decline of between 266,000 and 380,000 births in 2021.
On top of the economic impact, there will likely be a further decline in births as a direct result of the public health crisis and the uncertainty and anxiety it creates, and perhaps to some extent, social distancing. Our analysis of the Spanish Flu indicated a 15 percent decline in annual births in a pandemic that was not accompanied by a major recession. And this occurred during a period in which no modern contraception existed to easily regulated fertility.
Combining these two effects, we could see a drop of perhaps 300,000 to 500,000 births in the U.S. Additional reductions in births may be seen if the labor market remains weak beyond 2020. The circumstances in which we now find ourselves are likely to be long-lasting and will lead to a permanent loss of income for many people. We expect that many of these births will not just be delayed – but will never happen. There will be a COVID-19 baby bust. That will be yet another cost of this terrible episode.
Journal References:
1.) Melissa S . Kearney, Phillip B . Levine. Subsidized Contraception, Fertility, and Sexual Behavior, (DOI: rest.91.1.137)
2.) Melissa S. Kearney, Riley Wilson. Male Earnings, Marriageable Men, and Nonmarital Fertility: Evidence from the Fracking Boom, Review of Economics and Statistics (DOI: 10.1162/rest_a_00739)
(Score: 1, Troll) by crafoo on Friday December 04 2020, @03:16PM (2 children)
"So, it's an "Us vs Them" thing?"
That depends entirely what you believe a country is and if you share Values and Culture with the illegal invading latinos or not.
(Score: 3, Informative) by JoeMerchant on Friday December 04 2020, @03:53PM (1 child)
Growing up, I wanted to own/operate an orange grove.
After growing up, as I looked into the proposition of actually owning/operating an orange grove I came to the realization that: in order to make the operation financially feasible (even slightly profitable, rather than a hobby/money loser) it would have to be approached at scale: 10+ (preferably 100+) productive acres, financing, insurance, etc. and to make all that float a key component of the entire system was harvesting labor. Without using "illegal" harvesting labor, no citrus groves in Central Florida in the 1990s would have been even break-even profitable. This was due to competition among grove owner/operators which drove the margins down until "illegal" harvesters were a required component of any profitable operation, even break-even.
It's not a choice. The grove owners and operators, most of them 6th generation and later 'Muricans, all of them considerably wealthy, have dictated the necessity: anyone who grows citrus for profit at any kind of scale requiring hired harvest labor must support the presence of illegal migrant farm laborers in their groves.
Furthermore: the State (at the urging of the citrus industry) has repeatedly taken actions to wipe out "backyard citrus" further ensuring that the only significant citrus grown in Florida is grown in large scale commercial operations, or by those who "swim upstream" and spend far more growing their own citrus than it can be purchased for at retail.
Україна досі не є частиною Росії Слава Україні🌻 https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2023/06/24/7408365/
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 04 2020, @07:48PM
Whites should kill every White company owner who hires non-whites, after one warning. Kill any politician that tries to allow non-White competition in.