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People Can't Afford To Have More Children (Read 111 times)
whiteknight
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People Can't Afford To Have More Children
May 11th, 2024 at 8:39am
 
Treasurer Jim Chalmers flags birth bolstering budget measures   Sad
Treasurer Jim Chalmers has flagged measures to encourage Australians to have more babies will be included in next Tuesday’s federal budget.


News.com.au
May 10, 2024

Treasurer Jim Chalmers has hinted at measures to bolster Australia’s dwindling birthrate in the upcoming May budget, but has ruled out lump-sum payments akin to the Howard government-era baby bonus scheme.

Australia’s recent surge in population growth, buoyed by a soaring migration intake, has become a hot button political issue, and has led to calls for the government to bolster natural population growth rather than solely rely on international arrivals.

Dr Chalmers, himself a father of three, on Friday flagged additional support in next Tuesday’s budget for Australian families to have more children if they wished.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers alluded to measures designed to bolster Australia’s dwindling birthrate.

“I know that people will make their own choices and I don’t pretend for a moment that the government should direct those choices, but we want to make it easier for people to have bigger families if they want to,” Dr Chalmers said.

Asked if the further support would mirror the now-dumped baby bonus, a program established in the 2004 budget by then-treasurer Peter Costello, Dr Chalmers said the government believed there were other options to give families more opportunities to grow.

“We found a better way to support people who make that choice,” he said.

The Treasurer also pointed to existing measures the government had announced which were designed to give people greater flexibility when planning for children.

“We’re making these enormous investments in early childhood education,” Dr Chalmers added.

“We can expand paid parental leave and pay the superannuation guarantee on that paid parental leave.”



Treasurer Jim Chalmers is preparing to hand down the federal budget in less than a week’s time.

According to official estimates published by the Bureau of Statistics, Australia’s population rose by 2.5 per cent in the year to September to 26.8 million, driven by a record jump in international migration, up more than half a million in the 12 month period.



Budget’s biggest focus revealed

Big win for young Aussie families
Meanwhile, the natural increase – which measures births minus deaths – fell to just 111,000 over the same period, 3.9 per cent lower than the prior 12 months.

Responding to demands to clampdown on migration, the upcoming budget forecasts are set to show net overseas migration will be slashed from 518,000 in the 2023 financial year, to 395,000 in the current financial year.

Net overseas migration is then tipped to decline further, easing to 260,000 in 2025-26, before returning to 235,000 in 2026-27 in line with its pre-pandemic trajectory.

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whiteknight
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Re: People Can't Afford To Have More Children
Reply #1 - May 11th, 2024 at 8:44am
 
W Dickinson   Sad

They just don’t get it !
.People can’t AFFORD to have children as most can’t afford the rent or mortgage .
Tents aren’t suitable for families .
Who wants to bring children into a world where it appears all the leaders want WAR
. A world of nanny state ideas , a world where politicians say what’s fact when it’s glaringly obvious that they are the ones spreading misinformation
A world of worldwide control media 
A place free speech is becoming shackled
a world lies are told to us without regard for know facts and radical free thinkers are labelled conspiracies even after they become fact
No way would I like to bring a child into this quagmire
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JC Denton
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Re: People Can't Afford To Have More Children
Reply #2 - May 11th, 2024 at 10:16am
 
so why did fertility fall below replacement levels in 1978 then, loooong before anyone uttered phrases such as 'cost of living crisis' or 'housing crisis'.

clearly there is  some effect on fertility at the margins from 'cost of living' pressures but it's mostly not the whole story. why would chad and niger have the highest fertility rates on earth if poverty is apparently such a powerful fertility suppressant? if anything it appears to be the other way around.
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« Last Edit: May 11th, 2024 at 10:37am by JC Denton »  
 
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