viernes, 1 de diciembre de 2017

The new importance of children in America |MercatorNet|December 1, 2017|MercatorNet|

The new importance of children in America

|MercatorNet|December 1, 2017|MercatorNet|







The new importance of children in America

Why is sex going out of fashion?
Shannon Roberts | Dec 1 2017 | comment 



With a healthier economy, good employment rates and lots of women entering their prime childbearing years, American demographers thought back in 2014 that the country’s birth rate would begin to recover by now.  Historically, that has always been the case.  However, instead it has continued to fall. Deseret News reports:
We are seeing the opposite,” said Samuel Sturgeon, president of Demographic Intelligence (DI) and author of its U.S. Fertility Forecast. DI’s most recent forecast says births will have dropped about 2.8 percent by this year's end to 3.84 million, compared to 2016’s 3.95 million.
When 2017 actual births are counted, the total fertility rate in America will likely hit a 38-year low of 1.77 children per woman, well below the “replacement rate” of 2.01 children per woman.
It is uncertain whether women are simply delaying having children or choosing to forgo them altogether.  However, one explanation lies in the fact that young people are having less sex.  For instance, a recent Pew Research Center study on reduced sexual activity found a dramatic drop in the share of young Americans who are choosing to settle down romantically before age 35, even net of economic factors. And it is not a phenomenon unique to America.  At the end of last year the Swedish government launched an official study to find out why Swedes are having less sex.  Some wonder if technology and social media is fuelling a relational disconnect.  Japan, a country wtih extremely high technology take-up, provides some evidence of a country in which sex has seemingly gone out of fashion.
Whatever the cause of its decline, the effects of a falling birth rate are significant, upsetting future job markets, economic growth, social programs that provide for the elderly, and influencing immigration policy.  According to a recent article in Health Affairs, a leading American journal of health policy, thought and research, the seismic demographic shifts taking place in American society mean that how we raise, educate, and care for children has reached new importance.  While I would argue that each child has always been just as important as now, it is an interesting comment that is the focus of a new research report: The New Importance of Children in America, which finds:
Declining birthrates mean that each child is proportionately more important to society than ever before. Beyond our moral obligation as a country to care for children for their own sake, our future economy, standard of living, and place as a leader in the world demand that children become our highest priority.
Declining birthrates will lead to a shortage of workers and taxpayers in the near future. Meanwhile, the aging Baby Boom generation is retiring and beginning to draw on federal programs like Medicare and Social Security, leaving the retiree population to rely on a shrinking population of working-age people for support in their retirement years. For example, in 1970 there were twenty-three seniors for every 100 people of working age. By 2015, the senior-to-worker ratio climbed to twenty-eight seniors per 100 working-age people, and by 2030, that senior ratio will leap to forty-two seniors per 100 workers (Exhibit 1). This number possibly could rise still further under changed immigration policy.
We need to go back to the basic building blocks of family, committed relationships, and a society which values parenthood to help birth rates recover.


MercatorNet

December 1, 2017

When I was at primary school many moons ago there was an institution called The Fun Doctor. A man with a battered suitcase full of tricks would come to the school once, maybe twice a year, and entertain us with jokes and magical stuff. On the whole, I think we were quite amused as there were no smartphones or television then to turn us into bored little sophisticates.

The reason for mentioning this is that even back in the Dark Ages people recognised that laughter is good for your health – hence, Fun Doctor. Today, there’s a whole branch of psychology dedicated to happiness, and no end of life coaches telling us how to be happy for the good of our health.

This very day, while I was staring indifferently at my laptop screen, someone sent me a heads-up about an article on how much just smiling can do for our psyches and bodies as well. But the main point is this: you don’t have to wait to feel happy to get the benefit of a smile; you can be tense and worried and smile anyway  -- and presto! Your brain fires up, the dopamine and serotonin start flowing, your stress goes down and your heart rate lowers, and your mood lifts. And not only you, those whom you smile at feel better too.

Our articles today were not exactly designed with smiles in mind, but they are not lacking in wit and encouragement, starting with Zac Alstin’s reflections on providence and freedom. So smile – and take the plunge!

Carolyn Moynihan
Deputy Editor,
MERCATORNET
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