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You are here: Home1 / Articles2 / In the News3 / There’s a Baby Bust in CA, and it’s Hurting the Economy

There’s a Baby Bust in CA, and it’s Hurting the Economy

May 18, 2018/in In the News

By: 89.3 KPCC

On: Take Two, hosted by A. Martínez

Having a baby just isn’t a priority for a lot of Southern Californians right now, and baby, that’s a problem.

/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/baby-bust-CA.mp3

The state has hit a record low birth rate that’s even lower than during the Great Depression.

While that means fewer diapers to change, it can also lead to adult-sized economic problems.

“I think what’s pretty clear is that with the cost of living,” says Joel Kotkin, professor of Urban Studies at Chapman University, “people are looking at their situation and saying, ‘I can’t afford to have a kid!'”

Con: 30-year-olds are more likely to leave

On the one hand, SoCal has no problem attracting young 20-year-olds drawn to the beaches, food and weather.

The economy suffers, however, when 30-year-olds start thinking about buying a home and having families.

“Employers are finding it very hard to hold on to people in their 30s,” says Kotkin.

If the state can’t hold onto those people as they head into their prime earning years, it loses out on their productivity, spending and tax contributions.

Con: any “boom” you see right now only benefits the rich

California’s economy recently grew to become the world’s fifth-largest economy if it were its own country.

Sounds like great news, but that wealth mostly benefits the very rich in the tech sector.

“Almost all the income growth and high-end job growth took place in Silicon Valley,” he says.

Con: communities are less likely to support each other

With fewer children in a city, a community’s commitment to education for everyone wanes.

There’s less of an investment in parks, too, and fewer neighbors meeting each other through their kids.

“It’s really a self-absorbed society,” says Kotkin, who’s written more in the article, “The Childless City.”

Pro: kids aren’t great for the environment, or avant garde communities

“Each one of those little kids are [greenhouse gas] emitters,” says Kotkin, echoing a sentiment by some environmentalists. “Plus, there’s a certain advantage to not accommodating children.”

People won’t be annoyed by crying children in restaurants, for example. And taking part in NSFW festivities gets easier. “You can be a little edgier.”

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