The truth is that falling birth rates aren't about direct financial costs -- its about opportunity costs. The opportunity to do things that you frankly just lose the freedom to do when you become a mother or father. And lowering tax rates doesn't really solve that problem.
I hear this, but the majority of couples I know would be fine with kids if decent housing was available and affordable, especially on one income. This is coastal California not conservative rural area.
toomuchtodo•2h ago
Interesting to see if this incentive is sufficient to convince those with less than two children to get to two. €2820/year seems...insufficient to move the needle.
dash2•1h ago
toomuchtodo•1h ago
> While different agencies use slightly different methodologies to calculate fertility rate, according to the Population Reference Bureau, a US-based NGO, only eight countries in the world had a lower number than Poland’s figure of 1.1 in 2024. They include Singapore, Thailand, Ukraine (all 1.0) and, in last place, South Korea (0.7). Poland’s rate is lower than Japan’s (1.2), a country that has long struggled with demographic issues, as well as those of western European states such as Germany, the UK (both 1.4) and France (1.6).
> A recent University of Warsaw study found that, among members of Gen Z (born 1995 to 2012) the most commonly cited reasons for not wanting children were poor housing conditions, unstable work, and a difficult financial situation. But over half said that nothing would convince them to have a child.
Poland’s fertility rate fell to new low in 2024 - https://notesfrompoland.com/2025/06/02/polands-fertility-rat... - June 2nd, 2025
https://www.tvp.info/87031294/demogorafia-w-polsce-badanie-p...
> Given that South Korea recently broke its own record for the world’s lowest fertility rate for the fourth year in a row, with a TFR which currently stands at just 0.72, I will focus on South Korea as the obvious case of a nation-state vying to get its citizens to procreate. South Korea has spent $270 billion in the past 16 years to promote childbirth, and ideas for pronatalist incentives to date have included baby bonuses, cash rewards, exemption from mandatory military service and even state-sponsored dating events. Superficially, these heterogeneous incentivising measures don’t seem all that morally objectionable, though a question that will loom large in the background for the foreseeable future is the extent to which they actually work, and at what cost.
Towards an ethics of pronatalism in South Korea (and beyond) - https://jme.bmj.com/content/51/6/371 | https://doi.org/10.1136/jme-2024-110001
TLDR Poland doesn't have the financial capacity at nation state scale to encourage their target demographic outcome.
(think in systems)