The Daily - A Population Slowdown in the U.S.
Episode Date: May 4, 2021The latest census revealed that the United States had seen the second-slowest decade of population growth since 1790, when the count began.The country may be entering an era of substantially lower pop...ulation growth, demographers said.How could this redefine the nation’s future?Guest: Sabrina Tavernise, a national correspondent covering demographics for The New York Times. Sign up here to get The Daily in your inbox each morning. And for an exclusive look at how the biggest stories on our show come together, subscribe to our newsletter. Background reading: The numbers, the product of the most embattled census process in decades, underlined the long-running trend of population gains in the South and West.Here is a roundup of what you need to know about the census results.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
Transcript
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily.
A few days ago, the U.S. government revealed that the country's population
is growing at the slowest rate in nearly a century.
Today, Astead Herndon spoke with our colleague Sabrina Tavernisi about why that is,
and just how profoundly it could shape America's future.
It's Tuesday, May 4th.
So Sabrina, when the U.S. government finished counting the American people this time in the census,
it found that the American population was growing really slowly.
That was a bit surprising to me personally.
What's going on here?
So this is a very interesting and relatively new
thing for the United States. We have this extremely slow population increase, which is different for
the United States. The United States usually grows really quickly. What we saw with the census data
was the second slowest decade for population growth in American history. That is, since 1790,
when the United States government started taking the census. So that's really surprising. We had
known that there was some slowdown for some time, but this census data really tells us this is
really the new normal in the United States. So population is growing at a slower rate.
How do we explain this?
So, Ested, there are two forces that make up population growth.
One is immigration, and the other is births.
Then, of course, there are deaths.
So you put all of these things together, and that's what makes a population grow.
And so for the past decade or so, we've seen a real slowdown in immigration.
And there are a number of reasons for that. A lot fewer people coming from Mexico.
That's in part because the Mexican economy is a bit better. The birth rate in Mexico itself
has gone way down, so there's less pressure for people to come to the United States to work.
on way down, so there's less pressure for people to come to the United States to work.
But the real interesting part of what's going on and the real mystery is the birth rate.
So the birth rate began to decline in 2008 during the financial crisis. And we would expect that because birth rates tend to decline when countries have financial crises, when they're in economic distress, people put off having babies.
But usually once the economy starts to pick up again, the birth rate goes back up.
And that's precisely what demographers were expecting to happen in 2009, 10 and 11.
But something very strange happened, which was the birth rate kept going down.
It went down and down and down.
And no one could understand why.
So it used to be that there were 2.1 children
born to every American woman.
That was before 2008.
That's exactly enough to replace their parents when they die.
That's called replacement-level fertility.
But now it's 1.7 children per woman, which is below the rate of replacement.
So if we didn't have any immigration at all, our population would actually be declining.
Eventually, yes. And that has opened up this whole new line of inquiry.
Demographers are asking, why is this happening?
line of inquiry. Demographers are asking, why is this happening?
Well, let's get into those ideas. Why do folks think, why do demographers,
economists think that the birth rate is declining?
So the most straightforward theory right now is that it's about the economy. So essentially, you have this large group of American women, younger millennials, women in their 20s, who are putting off having children.
And it's not because they don't want to have kids.
They do want to have kids.
We know that from survey work that's been done.
But they just don't feel like they can afford to have kids.
think about it, this group of women, they're graduating and going out into the world as adults into a really different economy than their parents did. So they have huge amounts of student debt.
That wasn't the case in the past. Home prices and rents are just skyrocketing. That's also very
different than what their parents had. And there's also been 40 years of economic
inequality in this country. And that has essentially made a very, very difficult job market and life
for people in the lower middle classes who are trying to make it on, you know, essentially low
wage work, cobbling together a couple of different jobs. Schedules are incredibly erratic, which makes
it very difficult to plan around a daycare pickup, right? And are incredibly erratic, which makes it very difficult
to plan around a daycare pickup, right? And the other driver is that there's a very weak social
safety net in the United States. Unlike other countries, it has a lot of holes. So think about
it. No parental leave, no sick leave, extremely difficult to get a child care subsidy. So essentially what you have is this whole group
of young women looking out there into the economy, looking at their lives, and essentially saying,
no way can I afford to have a kid right now. It's too expensive. I can't afford it.
So you're describing young women waiting. But when they do decide to have children eventually,
are they still having the same number of children that they would have had before or not?
So the short answer is it's really too early to tell.
We know that when women do delay having kids, they tend to have fewer kids because they start later.
We do also know that older millennials have been having kids. It has not been them foregoing having children altogether. But we really don't know what will happen with the big bulk of this generation, whether this is a delay or foregoing altogether.
Okay, so what's going on with millennials then does not seem to explain the entirety of this trend.
No, it doesn't.
But there is this other theory that goes beyond economics.
If you look at the data, you see that the absolute biggest decline has been among teens, ages 15 to 19.
It's declined by around 80% over the past 20 years.
And that's really interesting, right? Because those are
people who really aren't quite yet in the labor force. So what is motivating them? Why have
teenagers practically stopped having pregnancies? That's a really big change. And so when we look
at that, what we see is a couple of reasons. Again, these are theories. One is that contraception
use has gone up. So that's a behavioral change for teens that didn't used to be the case in the 1980s, 1990s. Another is that teenagers are actually having sex less. There's a whole kind of new area of thinking and research and work about, you know, how social media has changed us, how smartphones have changed us. Kids are spending more time online.
There's pornography people are using.
They have much easier access to.
And then another idea about this very young group
is that perhaps there's something good going on for them
about the American economy and the way they see their futures.
That these young women feel like there's a real reason
to hold off having children because there's a real chance for them to make it, to go to community
college, to come out in a place where it makes sense to not have their baby until they're 28 or
29 instead of 21 and 22, which it had always been. So these are obviously really good things, right?
Public health officials spent decades trying to convince young women not to have babies in their teens. Teen pregnancy was a whole public
health problem that people were trying to solve. And they essentially solved it. I mean, it's for
all intents and purposes, dramatically declined. And women are taking more control over their lives
and over childbearing. And when you look at the
rates of unintended pregnancy, those are down really dramatically. So that gives us another
clue as to what's going on here, that there's some behavioral change as well as the economics.
There's something else going on. Okay, so you're describing changes that happen among millennial
women and also women who are younger than millennials.
So that spans from teenagers all the way through women in their 30s.
But I'm also interested in a different slice of that population, immigrants.
Are birth rates declining among that population as well?
So, Ested, this is very interesting because, in fact, the birth rate is declining most precipitously among precisely that group. So for a long time,
the kind of story about what was going on was that immigrants who were coming in were having
many more children. And to a certain extent, that was true. Women who were coming from Mexico in the
1980s and 1990s, and even in the early 2000s, they were coming from families where there were six and
seven children in the family. And they were arriving to the United States and they were
having more babies and having babies younger. So this was really kind of boosting the birth rate a
lot. But what happened was their children changed. Their children were born in the United States
But what happened was their children changed.
Their children were born in the United States, and they acted a lot more like everyone else who was born in the United States, which meant they had far fewer children and later. So this is a huge change from the immigrant generation to their native-born children.
Okay, so many women are delaying childbirth as an economic calculation or as just a general life calculation.
That seems to make total sense.
It does seem to make sense.
But here's the thing.
When you zoom out and compare the U.S. to other developed countries, it actually gets a lot more confusing.
Because actually, this is starting to happen in all rich countries around the world.
Most developed countries are seeing this decline in the birth rate.
Germany, Spain, Italy, France, lots of countries in Europe and also countries in East Asia, South Korea, Japan.
And so it's very confusing because these countries have really different economies than the United States. And these countries have really different social safety nets. The Scandinavian countries have very strong social safety nets. But yet this birth rate is also dropping in these places. So what is going on? That these countries with certainly stronger social safety nets and to some extent better economies are also experiencing the same thing.
So one of the working hypotheses is that this fundamentally is the place where women want to be,
that they want fewer children, that they want precisely the number of children that they're
actually having, that as time has gone on, they've become more attached to the labor market.
They've developed careers. They have rising pay in relation to men. And that means that they are
wanting to have babies at times that make sense for them in the labor market. So one of the
arguments is that this is simply going to be the new normal for modern societies in which women are more equal with men.
Okay, Sabrina. So what I am hearing is the common reporter frustration
that we have a lot of theories as to why this is happening,
but we don't know for sure why it's happening.
Yeah, that's right. There's not a lot of certainty.
Demographers will be really quick to tell you we're really just in uncharted waters right now.
We haven't seen this trend before ever in the United States,
and we've only seen it in the very, very early stages in Europe and in East Asia.
So the question we have to ask ourselves is, how worried should we be about these falling birth rates?
So, as said, as usual, the answer is it's complicated.
birthrights? So, as said, as usual, the answer is it's complicated. But the fact is a number of economists and demographers have raised some pretty troubling alarms. What are those?
They start with what might happen with the economy. So if you have a really, really slow
growing population, that means at some point in the pretty near future, you're going to have a much smaller workforce. And that could be potentially a real problem for economic growth.
It's harder to keep up with big, growing, booming economies like China.
And there are fewer workers to support older Americans who rely on Social Security,
on Medicare, Medicaid. There are not as many workers to pay into the tax system to
support this much larger population of older people. So to think of our society as kind of
a pyramid, it requires a base of people paying in for to support those at the top. If we don't have
enough babies, if we aren't having enough young people, that pyramid gets messed up. Exactly,
like flip the pyramid. So you
have this kind of tiny spindly bottom trying to support everybody at the top, and that becomes
very difficult. Americans are living much, much longer lives, and they're living at the end of
their life with lots of care from caretakers who tend to be disproportionately young,
disproportionately female. That is also a concern. Who will take care
of these people? Who will take care of the mostly older Americans once we get down the road into
this demographic future? But the economic effects also kind of trickle down into the culture.
So in places that are already experiencing this in an advanced way in the United States,
like a lot of counties in New England and the Plain States, some people living in communities
like this do feel like there is a sense of kind of loss or of sadness. I say this because I
am from a little town in western Massachusetts that has had a lot of
these same problems. It's an aging population. My parents still live there. They're almost in
their 80s. And it's really hard to get someone to come shovel out their walk because there's
not the large population of young people that there used to be. My little grammar school closed,
I believe, three years ago because there just weren't enough kids to fill it.
And I think that some people have this sense that growth means vitality, that getting bigger
is good and better, and that decline is in some sense kind of signifying a death or a weakness.
Well, when you put it like that, I mean, both in the economic sense and in the personal senses,
the schools closing, the folks without the ability to shovel out their driveways,
it definitely feels as if this trend is a bad trend, if it is one that sustains.
Are policymakers already thinking about this issue?
There's some thinking going on around the edges of this, but it's a very big problem,
and it has implications for all parts of the economy and all parts of American society.
And the real question at this point is whether policymakers are going to try to stop it or
reverse it or adapt and embrace it.
Well, that's interesting.
What are the options on that front? What could
policymakers do to actually reverse the declining birth rates? So there are a few things. One is,
you know, we see in Russia and in Hungary, populist leaders rewarding women for having
more children. And in some sense, you know, the fact that the United States right now is getting
more serious about patching up the social safety net is some nod to the fact that, you know, yes, women need more support.
So you could go directly to the issue of the birth rate itself and try to make conditions more advantageous for women to have more children more often.
But the other piece of this, which we need to remember, is, of course,
immigration. That is the other big driver of population growth. And immigration has gone down
substantially over the past 10 years, but that is a policy decision. The government could open up
immigration to many more people. Now, as we know in the United States, that is quite politically fraught,
and that is potentially a big fight.
So it's not so easy as to just, you know, turn on or off a spigot.
But in terms of the economy and growth and what the future is for the population,
immigration is an absolutely critical piece of that.
So those are the options to reversing the declining birth rate.
What are the options of adapting to that reality and basically living with an aging and changing population?
So if the trend sticks, policymakers are going to have a lot of work to do to plan for how we care for this much larger older population. That inverted pyramid we talked
about where we're going to have many more older people than younger people, that will continue
to be true unless this trend reverses. And that's going to be really expensive. So we have to figure
that out. We have to plan for it. And it's really, really difficult. So the other piece of this is the economy. If we choose to accept this and to adapt, that might mean accepting that we're just not going to be the major market superpower that we had been. And that adaptation, you know, that might be hard to swallow. America's superpower status and super economic status is pretty fundamental to how the country sees
itself in the global stage.
Both these options seem pretty fraught then.
I mean, what you're explaining for either incentivizing new births or in terms of adapting
to a declining birth rate, both those options seem like they require a real societal restructuring.
Those are big things.
So how do we decide which one to choose? For example, is there any reason that a declining birth rate could be a
good thing and that it's actually preferable for us to continue down the road with this trend?
So first of all, it could be good for the climate. Climate change is happening all around us,
and a smaller population could be a more sustainable way to live on the earth. And that is something that around us, and a smaller population could be a more
sustainable way to live on the earth, and that is something that people are talking about a lot.
Also, in the economy, a slightly smaller population of workers would give workers
themselves more clout and more ability to bargain, to have higher wages. Another example is for the
next generation of children. Fewer children and
families could lead to more investment in each individual child. More likely that that child
will be able to go to college, more tutoring time, more invested in each kid. Sabrina, personally,
I never thought much about America's birth rate. And I think a lot of folks are like that.
America's birth rate. And I think a lot of folks are like that. But what you seem to be describing is that those issues we do think about often, things like immigration and healthcare and
climate change, that all of those are actually a part of this growth rate question. And that
doing something about the birth rate will require thinking about all of these issues all at once?
the birth rate will require thinking about all of these issues all at once?
Yeah, that's right, Ested. I mean, it seems like just a nerdy little number,
but the truth is, it's incredibly important because it touches on almost every aspect of American life. I mean, think about it. Immigration, the social safety net, health insurance,
the social safety net, health insurance, hospitals, elder care, the role of government,
how large it should be. I mean, these are huge arguments in this country, and they have been for a long time. And the problem is, we as Americans have gotten unused to thinking of
ourselves as one group. It's much less we and much more I. We've become tribal in a way that
will really complicate collective decision-making on these really, really important issues.
So that is potentially a very serious problem because we are barreling toward a very fundamental change in American society.
And it is going to take all of our collective effort to solve this problem.
Thank you so much for your time.
Thank you, Ested. Here's what else you need to know today.
The Times reports that the FDA is preparing to authorize the use of Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine in adolescents 12 to 15 years old by early next week.
That would mark a crucial new phase in the U.S. vaccination campaign,
since immunizing children is considered essential to limiting the spread of the virus.
And today is a milestone for New York State and a significant moment of transition.
On Monday, officials from three neighboring states, New York, New Jersey and Connecticut,
said they would allow many businesses to fully reopen on May 19th,
from restaurants and offices to theaters and gyms,
and said they were acting together because their economies are deeply interconnected.
We live in a tri-state area.
We say the restaurants are open in Connecticut, but not in New York.
You'll have New Yorkers driving to Connecticut.
You'll have New Yorkers driving to New Jersey.
The coordination is important.
But there were caveats.
In New York, for instance, businesses will still have to abide by the federal government's six-foot social distancing rules unless they require workers and customers
to provide proof that they are vaccinated
or that they have tested negative for the virus.
Finally, President Biden said he would allow
about 62,000 refugees into the U.S. over the next six months,
reversing a limit of 15,000 put in place by President Trump.
A few weeks ago, Biden had said he would maintain the 15,000 limit,
drawing criticism from Democratic lawmakers and advocates for refugees,
and prompting the White House to change course.
for refugees and prompting the White House to change course.
Today's episode was produced by Luke Vander Ploeg and Eric Krupke.
It was edited by Paige Cowett and engineered by Chris Wood. That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Bilbaro.
See you tomorrow.