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David Galinsky's avatar

Very well reasoned post. I do lament the the shrinking population. Are there any solutions that do not involve government or taxes? I'm concerned that any solution to this problem will involve government intervention. We don't need so-called "experts" from government agencies proposing tax incentives. In a free society, taxes should only be for revenue to fund essential functions. Incentives only give incentives to government to continue its social engineering.

We as individuals and families must show how rewarding a bigger family can be. Keep up the good work.

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forumposter123@protonmail.com's avatar

1) Paying per child makes everyone with at least one child a potential supporter of the program.

2) Paying per child naturally scales. Someone with three kids gets 3x the benefit of someone with one kid.

3) Paying per child lines up with the "point" of the reform. To internalize the external value of childbearing from society to the parents.

https://www.investopedia.com/articles/personal-finance/090415/cost-raising-child-america.asp

The cost of raising a child is $310,605, or $17,000 a year. This is higher in higher income areas.

And as a parent I can attest this is only the financial cost. There is a lot of unpaid labor in that number.

The goal should be to make having children financially neutral. Children produce surplus value for society, if we share more of that with parents they will have more children.

4) Old's get $15,000 in Medicare a year and $24,000 or so in Social Security. They also get Medicaid and lots of other tax breaks. So we spend a lot more on olds then it would cost to fully fund the expenses of having more children.

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