Global birth rates are crashing to levels not seen since the pre-industrial era
New demographic reports published this week confirm that global fertility has plummeted so far that two-thirds of people now live in areas with shrinking populations.
While historical fears centered on "overpopulation," the modern crisis is a "fertility bust" caused by high housing costs, economic instability, and shifting social norms. This crash is pushing many nations back to birth levels last seen before the Industrial Revolution, threatening to bankrupt pension systems and hollow out labor forces. Even aggressive government experiments, such as Hungary’s tax breaks for mothers, are largely failing to convince young families to have more children.
Demographers are now watching to see if countries will pivot to massive automation or high-stakes immigration policies to survive the coming population cliff.
.Trending News
Here are the top political news stories for today.
3 Replies
More conversations
Join in on more popular conversations.







