sadangel
angel Graham!!
- Joined
- Nov 30, 2008
- Posts
- 5,879
Well said and thank you.Ok, I'll bite.
The entrance of women into the workforce brought about one of the biggest booms in the US economy ever seen. Over several decades productivity soared, jobs were created, standards of living rose and many more intelligent and qualified women gradually replaced less talented men.
There were of course downsides. Certain formerly female dominated fields like nursing and primary education suffered a bit of a "brain drain" as women left these relatively non-lucrative field for areas like sales, law, medicine and business in a stunning show of free-market gumption. And of course the monopoly on high paying jobs held by christian white men eroded, one of the big stories of the late 20th century: good if you're in the majority and not a christian white male, bad if you are.
It's of course not trivial to mention the role of The Pill in helping create this revolution. The Pill served to normalize delaying childbirth and has helped avoid a lot of "shotgun" weddings (along with safe and legal abortion).
Statistics clearly show that children born to parents later in life beat their peers in almost all aspects of aptitude and success. Correlation is not causation; more often it's college-bound kids who successfully delay unplanned pregnancy and intelligence is probably tied to this rational thought process.
Also, in a post-globalization world, there just aren't any good jobs available to your typical "blue collar joe" anymore. When Amicus was a young man I'm sure he could have walked to any number of factories and gotten a job he could easily support a family of 4 or 5 on. Today those jobs have been outsourced. The economic earning power of men without college degrees has steadily fallen.
Having fewer children later in life with more resources to support each child is a highly rational choice. Private schools, tutors, and college education sure aren't free, and each child increases the cost of those. Not to mention clothes and luxury items like video games. It's rational to have one or two children late in life and commit a lot of resources to those two rather than having 5 or 6 and relying on the Public School system to raise them. Every family has a budget, and each child increases strain on that budget. While many people choose to have large families for non-rational, non-economic reasons, the fact is for most Americans children are an emotional decision.
Of course there are downsides. There's evidence that long-term pill usage may have some negative impact on fertility for at least some women. And it's pretty well established that a woman's fertility is highest in her teens and early 20s. This doesn't mean women in their 30s can't conceive healthy children. For every woman I know who had trouble conceiving, I know another who went off the pill and was knocked up within 2-3 months. The tricky thing is there's no way for a woman to know if she'll have trouble conceiving until she tries.
Still, women in the workforce gave us an unprecedented period of economic growth that isn't likely to be repeated any time soon. It may have given us unrealistic expectations of how fast our economy "should" grow.
