🌍 Why the world is having fewer babies


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Today’s briefing:
— Why the world is having fewer babies
— The Intrigue jobs board
— A dessert to make kids cry

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Sponsored by:

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Good morning Intriguer. Today’s top story on global demographics is one that’s close to my heart. Why?

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Well, I was born in China during the country’s grand experiment with the ‘One Child Policy’ to rein in population growth back in the 1980s, which resulted in a whole generation of only-children (aka ‘little emperors’).

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I’ve also been thinking a lot about declining birth rates recently, because I’ve just started on the IVF journey. Here’s a shoutout to all our readers who might be on a fertility journey and to the wonders of modern science.

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PS – Will you be in New York the evening of Monday June 23rd? Join us for Intrigue drinks with special guests, hosted by the Czech ambassador to the UN! RSVP here.

Natality notions

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Why are a bunch of ex-diplomats talking about babies and birth rates?

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Sure, it’s like a mango sorbet palate-cleanser amid all the war and rumours of war. But natality is also one of those slow-moving forces that can completely transform our world.

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How? Last century, the dominant narrative was that populations were too big, with leaders in China, Vietnam and elsewhere limiting family sizes in an attempt to tap the demographic brakes. Why? The theory (for some) was that overpopulation would…

  • Strain limited resources of food, water, and energy

  • Cause poverty by swamping job markets and infrastructure

  • Fry environments by fuelling pollution and deforestation, and all that would…

  • Spark overcrowding, crime, and unrest, in turn straining government responses.

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But that demographic pendulum is now swinging in the opposite direction, with capitals now scrambling to offer cash payments, tax breaks, blind dating events (seriously) and even free honeymoons in an attempt to crank out those babies again.

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Why? The theory (again, for some) is that higher birth rates will

  • Stabilise economies by maintaining workforces and tax bases

  • Rejuvenate ageing demographics that can strain social security systems

  • Preserve cultural identities, and

  • Restore national strength (military recruitment, economic output, and optimism)

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So with all that in mind, we poured ourselves the world’s largest coffee and read all 100+ pages of the latest State of the World Population’ report, surveying 14,000 adults across 14 countries (🇧🇷, 🇩🇪, 🇭🇺, 🇮🇳, 🇮🇩, 🇮🇹, 🇲🇽, 🇲🇦, 🇳🇬, 🇿🇦, 🇰🇷, 🇸🇪, 🇹🇭, 🇺🇸), home to ~37% of the world’s people. And sure, we’ve now got the coffee jitters, but totally worth it because…

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Here are four of the report’s most intriguing stats:

  1. 39% 

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That’s how many folks said ‘financial limitations’ were a factor in having fewer children. Coming in at second was job insecurity at 21% followed by housing at 19%. But of course, these are all economic barriers, jointly accounting for more than half of all responses.

  1. 14% 

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This one kinda surprised us tbh, because it’s how many people flagged political and social risks (including possible wars or pandemics) as a reason to have fewer kids. It’s almost like the opposite of the post-WWII baby boom, with gloom now tapping those baby brakes rather than any glee smashing that accelerator.

  1. 31% 

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That’s how many participants over 50 said they had ended up having fewer kids than ideal, versus just 11% for those under 50. That gap could reflect lots of things: shifts in attitudes, more enabling environments, or even just younger folks feeling they have time to hit their ideal number. But it could also reflect a real gap between desired and actual family size, and a ‘window of opportunity’ for concerned governments.

  1. Two

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That’s the ‘magic number’ when it comes to kids, according to a plurality of respondents (~36%), followed by three children (15%), one (~10%), and then 4+ (~10%).

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Those results are interesting for a couple of reasons: first, two is just below the replacement level of 2.1 children per woman and below the current global birth rate of 2.3. But second, it’s above the current birth rate for nine out of the 14 surveyed countries. 

Intrigue’s Take

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This is one of those issues where there is a clear link between vast, historic, geopolitical forces, and deeply personal decisions shaped by strongly-held worldviews. But allow us to offer a few thoughts on something a little lighter like, ahem… the nature of mankind:

  • We’re complex beings: China’s four-decade ‘one child policy’ experiment and subsequent reversal from 2015 all suggests states can indeed suppress birth rates, but as for ramping them back up? Not so easy, pal. It seems our parallel norms, attitudes, and economic drivers are generational. But…

  • We’re also such simple beings: one of the clearest messages from this latest report is that if it wasn’t so pricey to (say) buy a pad or throw a few steaks on the grill, plenty of folks would be going full Brady Bunch right now.

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So this report is about a lot of things, but it’s also really about the economy, stupid.

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Overheard in the Intrigue chat:
(free to join if you refer 5 friends using your unique code!)

  • It’ll be interesting to see how advanced economies will contend with their growing need for immigration as a way to boost their population, and a growing anti-immigration sentiment-A.P.J

  • I refuse to engage with the research until someone does proper peer-reviewed analysis into the obvious correlation between global fertility decline and World of Warcraft coming out in 2004/5-D.G

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Today’s newsletter is sponsored by Growth School

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But here’s the real picture — companies aren’t simply eliminating roles, they’re hiring people who are AI-skilled, understand AI, can use AI & even build with AI.

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Meanwhile, elsewhere…

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🇨🇳 CHINA China ditches its rare earth curbs.
This easing of China’s rules around rare earth and magnet exports to the US has emerged after two days of US-China trade talks. China has a near monopoly on these inputs for anything from cars to AI to fighter jets. (Reuters) 

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🇫🇯 FIJI Trouble in paradise?
After a bombshell (yet still secret) official report alleging corruption among ministers, judges, and lawyers, Suva is now rife with mutual recriminations of both corruption, and using anti-corruption rules to vanquish rivals. (Fiji Sun)

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Comment: Fiji has had four coups since independence, so there’s often a slow simmer of speculation, but we’re hearing this week’s political and constitutional intrigue has flared that fear up again, just as the US and China compete for local influence.

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🇦🇿 AZERBAIJAN Gas galore.
Baku’s state-run oil giant SOCAR has signed a 10-year deal to sell energy to Germany, with deliveries starting later this year. (Upstream)

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Comment: The Azerbaijanis are kinda picking up where the Russians left off, and they’re using their own pipeline across the Caspian to do so. But that won’t silence the whispers around why Baku’s gas imports from Russia have spiked while simultaneously exporting to Europe.

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🇬🇧 UNITED KINGDOM Big new sanctions.
In a Western first, the UK, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Norway have sanctioned two hardline Israeli ministers (Ben-Gvir and Smotrich) “for inciting violence against Palestinians in the West Bank. (ABC)

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Comment: We’ve previously flagged that a Trump-Bibi rift might’ve meant Western capitals could criticise Israel with less likelihood of US pushback. But while Trump and Bibi do indeed seem to be at odds right now, US Secretary of State Rubio has just condemned these US allies, reminding them “not to forget who the real enemy is.”

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🇳🇿 NEW ZEALAND Environmental lawyers have entered the chat.
Barely months after New Zealand’s new conservative government unveiled its own emissions reduction plan, it’s now facing a court battle as several Kiwi lawyers argue the plan doesn’t meet existing law’s basic requirements. (ELI)

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🇲🇽 MEXICO An easy $10M?
The US has announced a $10M bounty for two fugitive sons of the (former) Sinaloa Cartel leader Joaquin ‘El Chapo’ Guzman, who’s now serving life in a Colorado supermax — two other sons are already facing prosecution in Chicago. (AP)

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Comment: His sons used to have a big social media presence, flaunting their wealth and taunting authorities by blurring out geolocation clues. But geolocation has gotten better, the Guzman family’s fortunes have gotten worse, and these two sons have now long since gone dark online (one is rumoured to be leading a new cartel alliance).

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🇿🇦 SOUTH AFRICA Brrr.
A severe cold front has swept South Africa, bringing snow, road closures, car accidents, and power outages. (eNCA)

Extra Intrigue

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The Intrigue jobs board 💼

From our sponsors

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Meal of the day

Credits: Brigitte

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Take a good look at the dish above. Is that spaghetti with a side of strawberries?! Nope. It’s ice cream! Or Spaghettieis, to be exact — a beloved dish for summer-lovin’ Germans.

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Back in ‘69, a son of Italian immigrants in Mannheim decided to shove some vanilla ice cream through a potato ricer, slapped on some strawberry sauce, and topped it all with white chocolate flakes. Legend has it, the first kids to try it actually cried (and not with joy).

Today’s poll

Do you think a declining birth rate is a national crisis?

Login or Subscribe to participate in polls.

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Yesterday’s poll: Where do you think the Russian internal intel report came from?

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💻 A cybercrime hack (17%)
🇷🇺 A disgruntled Russian insider (36%)
💼 A Western intelligence agency (45%)
✍️ Other (write us!) (1%)