The world is being quietly rearranged by people who write very long documents.


The title they went with The Empathy Channel in Fertility Noisy translates that to

People have babies when they see babies, not when they get a tax break

Research confirms that falling fertility is a social contagion. You can’t bribe people to have children if they’ve stopped seeing infants in their daily lives.

A new economic model shows that simply being around babies makes people want to have their own children. This means governments could justify paying families to have children, not just for economic reasons, but to keep babies visible in society.
Fertility rates are falling in many countries. This paper suggests a new reason: people are less exposed to babies in their daily lives, which reduces their desire to have children. This changes how governments might think about boosting birth rates, moving beyond just financial incentives to consider policies that increase public exposure to infants.
Watch for the shift from "private cash" to "public space." We are looking for the transition where this logic finally moves from research journals into the municipal code. It won’t look like a new tax rebate; it will look more like a policy pivot based on the idea that urban design can drive demographic changes:
  • Department of Transportation mandates for "stroller-first" transit corridors.
  • Housing rules that ban "adults-only" shared amenities in high-density developments.
  • Zoning changes that mandate on-site, visible play areas for any commercial permit.

If you insist
Read the original →

The Sendoff
The calibrated model concludes that the empathy channel accounts for 13.4 percent of the global fertility decline. What's the other 86.6 percent?

Staring, staring, staring down at our phones, Noisy wagers.