March 8, 2003
CLOSE YOUR EYES & THINK OF SWEDEN (via Mike Daley):
Population woes for Europe, but of a different kind (ASSOCIATED PRESS, 1/16/03)They're calling it the "baby summit." Host Sweden hopes a March meeting of European leaders will launch an appeal to reverse Europe's declining birth rates, rejuvenate the population and banish fears that a shrinking workforce will soon be unable to pay the continent's pensions bill."You can find no worse threat to sustainable development than to have too few children born," Environment Minister Kjell Larsson said recently. [...]
A UN report last year said Germany would need to import 487,000 immigrants a year to keep the working-age population stable up to 2050 at current birth and death rates. France would need 109,000 and the EU as a whole 1.58 million.
To keep the ratio of workers to old-age pensioners steady, the Union would need the influx of outsiders to swell to 13.5 million a year.
The Swedish government believes the population slump is the greatest social problem facing Europe. Its plan to reverse the decline is simple - create a "family friendly" society to make it easier for today's dual-breadwinner couples to have more babies without sacrificing their careers. The Swedes will be making the point when they host their first ever EU summit in Stockholm March 23-24. [...]
Sweden is already taking a lead, with the government planning to phase in a series of improvements to a support programme already among the world's most generous. New measures include increasing paid parental leave from 12 to 13 months, of which fathers must take two months; increasing monthly child benefit payments beyond the current 950 kroner ($102) per child; and introducing free pre-school for four and five-year-olds by 2003.
Swedish officials say paying to promote a baby boom has been shown to work.
When benefits were raised in the late 1980s, the birth rate soared to 14.5 per 1,000 citizens - second only to Ireland among the EU nations. When a recession forced cuts in the early 1990s the babies stopped coming and Sweden finished the decade with just 10 births per 1,000 people - almost bottom of the EU birth table.
Sweden has an advantage over other EU nations: Its people have shown they are prepared to tolerate some of the world's highest tax rates in return for cradle-to-grave welfare.
It is estimated that Swedes, numbering about nine million, pay around 60 per cent of their income on taxes. Increasingly that's the sort of price other nations may have to consider paying to keep the population going, experts say.
You seldom hear libertarian supporters of abortion explain why they'd be willing to pay 60% tax rates in the future, do you? Posted by Orrin Judd at March 8, 2003 9:13 PM
Can't wait to see those government ads telling people to go out and make babies...
Posted by: AWW at March 8, 2003 10:07 PMMr. Judd;
In a libertarian society there wouldn't be the pension problem that requires 60% tax rates.
AOG:
No, and we'd all be too busy dancing around the big rock candy mountain to notice anyway...
They'll never create their ideal libertarian world, but they are helping to keep abortion available on demand and thereby helping to snuff the very liberty they espouse.
oj,
Personally, I am pro-life; but help me understand: how do (pro-choice?) libertarians help to snuff out the very liberty they espouse?
Thanks in advance. And keep up the good work.
