Sultan Knish
In 1935, the year that FDR signed the Social Security Act into law, the
birth rate was 18.7 per 1,000. In 1940, when the first monthly check was
issued, it had gone up to 19.4. By 1954, when Disability had been
added, the birth rate at the heart of the Baby Boom stood at 25.3.
In a nation of 163 million people, 4 million babies were being born each year.
By
1965, when Medicare was plugged in, the birth rate had fallen back to
19.4. For the first time in ten years fewer than 4 million babies had
been born in a country of 195 million. Medicare had been added in the
same year that saw the single biggest drop in birth rates since the
Great Depression.
There could not have been a worse time for Medicare than the end of the Baby Boom.
Today
in a nation of 314 million, 4.1 million babies are being born each year
for a birth rate of 13.0 per 1,000. 40.7% of those births are to
unmarried mothers meaning that it will be a long time, if ever, before
those single families put back into the system, and most will never put
back in as much as they are taking out.Those children will cost more to
educate, be more likely to be involved in crime and less likely to
succeed economically. But even if they weren't, the system would still
be unsustainable.
Liberals and libertarians both act as if the
crisis facing us can be fixed if we take more from the "wealthy elderly"
or give them less. The crisis is born of demographics. It can't be
fixed by targeting the elderly because they haven't been the problem in
some time. It's the same crisis being faced by countries as diverse as
Russia and Japan. The difference is that Russia is autocratic and has
little concern for its people while Japan shuns immigration and has a
political system dominated by the elderly.
The United States
however takes in a million immigrants a year who also take out more than
they put in. In his 2013 State of the Union address, Barack Obama
praised Desiline Victor, a 102-year-old Haitian woman who moved to the
United States at the age of 79 and doesn't speak English, but did spend
hours waiting in line in Florida to vote for Obama.
Between 1990
and 2010, the number of immigrants over 65 doubled from 2.7 million to 5
million. 25 percent of these senior immigrants were over 80. Desiline
Victor wasn't an outlier. Elderly immigrants are also much more likely
to become citizens, in part because the requirements for them are lower.
Many, like Victor, don't even have to learn English to be able to stand
in line and vote.
15 percent of senior immigrants come from
Mexico largely as a result of family unification programs. If amnesty
for illegal aliens goes through, before long the country will be on the
hook not just for twelve million illegal aliens, but also for their
grandparents.
The welfare state has been spending more money
with an unsustainable demographic imbalance. There are fewer working
families supporting more elderly, immigrants and broken families. The
Russians invest money into increasing the native birth rate. Instead we
fund Planned Parenthood because liberal economic eugenics dictates that
we should extract "full value" from working women as a tax base to
subsidize the welfare state while discarding the next generation.
The
"modern" system that we have adopted with its low birth rates, late
marriages, working parents, high social spending and retirement benefits
is at odds with itself. We can have low birth rates, deficit spending
or Social Security; but there is no possible way that we can have all
three.
And yet we have all three.
Instead
of forming a comprehensive picture, our approach is to tackle each
problem as if were wholly separate from everything else. Working parents
are applauded because they swell out the tax base in the short term.
Young immigrants are applauded because they are supposed to swell out
the lower part of the demographic imbalance. Manufacturing jobs are cast
aside for modern jobs. The long term consequences of each step is
ignored.
In the European model that we have adopted, men and
women are supposed to spend their twenties being educated and their
thirties having two children. These Johns and Julias will work in some
appropriately "modern" field building apps, designing environmentally
sustainable cribs for the few children being born or teaching new
immigrants to speak enough English to vote. Then they plan to retire on
money that doesn't actually exist because they are still paying off
their student loans.
The reality is that John and Julia begin
their marriage with tens of thousands in debts, only one of them will
work full time, while the other balances part time work, and they will
do all this while being expected to support social services for new
immigrants and a native working class displaced by the outsourcing of
manufacturing jobs, not to mention the elderly and the entire
bureaucracy that has grown around them. If John and Julia are lucky,
they will find work in a technology field that is still growing, or,
more likely they will pry their way into the social services bureaucracy
which will keep on paying them and cover their benefits until the
national bankruptcy finally arrives.
John and Julia are Obama
voters. They have two children. They don't worry about the future. The
future to them seems to be a bright and modern thing overseen by experts
and meticulously planned out in every detail. The only dark clouds on
their horizon are the Republicans and the Great Unwashed in the Red
States who are resisting the future by clinging to their guns and
bibles.
In this post-work and post-poverty economy, those most
likely to have children are also least likely to work or to be able to
afford to have those children.
Birth rates for women on welfare
are three times higher than for those who are not on welfare. Within a
single year, the census survey found that unmarried women had twice as
high a birth rate as married women. These demographics help perpetuate
poverty and feed a welfare death spiral in which more money has to be
spent on social services for a less productive tax base.
Children raised on welfare are far more likely to end up on welfare than the children of working families.
Fertility
rates fall sharply above the $50,000 income line and with a graduate
degree; that has ominous implications in a country whose socio-economic
mobility rates continue to fall. There are a number of factors
responsible, but one simple factor is that work ethics and skills are no
longer being passed down to a growing percentage of the population.
Liberal
activists still talk as if we can afford any level of social service
expenditures if we raise taxes on the rich, but workers can't be created
by raising taxes. The issue isn't "investing more in education" which
is the liberal solution for everything including the imminent heat death
of the universe.
It's liberalism.
Everything that the
left has done, from breaking up the family to driving out manufacturing
industries to promoting Third World immigration has made its own
spending completely unsustainable. On a social level alone, we don't
have the people we need to pay the bills. And at the rate we are going,
we will only run up more bills that our demographics and our culture can
no longer cash.
By 2031, nearly a century after the Social
Security Act, an estimated 75 million baby boomers will have retired.
Aside from the demographic disparity in worker ages is a subtler
disparity in worker productivity and independence as senior citizens are
left chasing social spending dollars that are increasingly going to a
younger population. ObamaCare with its Medicare Advantage cuts was a
bellwether of the shift in health care spending from seniors to the
welfare population.
14 million people are now on Disability or 1
in 4 adults. That means that there are more people on Disability than
there were people in the country during the War of 1812. Half of those
on Disability are claiming back problems or mental problems. There are
over a million children on Disability and the program is packed with
younger recipients who are substituting it for welfare.
Increasing welfare is only a form of Death Panel economic triage that doesn't compensate for the lack
of
productive workers. It's easy to model Obamerica as Detroit, a country
with a huge indigent welfare population and a small wealthy tax base.
The model doesn't work in Detroit and it's flailing in New York,
California and every city and state where it's been tried.
After a
century of misery, the left still hasn’t learned that there is no
substitute for the middle class. It’s not just running out of money,
it’s running out of people.
The welfare state is bankrupt and
doesn't know it yet. Reality hasn't caught up with the numbers. Instead
the welfare state is floating on loans based on past productivity, old
infrastructure and a diminishing productive population whose
technological industries employ fewer people and don't require their
physical presence in the United States.
The welfare state has no
future. It is only a question of what terms it will implode on and what
will happen to the social welfare political infrastructure when it does.
The violence in Venezuela and the slow death of Detroit give us
insights into the coming collapse of the welfare state.
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