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by toomuchtodo
1605 days ago
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Birth rates are down worldwide except in Africa, and if I had to forward look based on current developed world policy (Japan, US, Europe migrant policy), I don’t think the US is going to drastically increase immigration quotas. Again, like Japan. Older citizens will want to keep their culture static, and they weight that higher than economic growth. |
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Japan is trying to increase its immigration for the same reasons I mentioned, and they're struggling for the reasons you mentioned. Only 2% of their population is foreign born[1], which is up from past figures, but still a drop in the bucket compared to the US system.
You're totally right that there's going to be political and cultural issues over immigration, there always is. But America has the political and social institutions necessary to maintain a high level of immigration over long periods of time, which can help damped the blow of fertility change even if it's insufficient to fully reverse the trend.
0 - https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2020/08/20/key-finding...
1 - https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/sites/e025d47d-en/index.html?i...