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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "New York Times on the miracles of Universal Pre-K in DC"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Those countries are all massively broke (except Norway, which breaks even due to its oil production), and the high cost of their taxes and other government interventions has made young adult unemployment and underemployment epidemic, with the result that middle income people are not having kids at all. The average birthrate is 1.5 per woman, and if immigrants are taken out of that number, it is close to or below 1 per woman for the native born depending on the county. The very high cost of these social programs is not, on average, helping moms and kids; it is leading to fewer women becoming moms / fewer kids. I do not understand why this is seen as a positive, pro-woman, or pro-kid thing. It would be lovely if you could spend money on families without also using high tax rates to take money away from families to fund that spending. Unless you are planning to strike a North Sea oil gusher (Norway), no one can do this. The statistics are grim: more spending, means less freedom for individuals' spending decisions, and also means that educated people who get hit by the taxes (since they are the earners) don't have as many kids, and often have no kids. That is a social disaster. [/quote] No, the European countries are not all massively broke. And the ones that are broke are broke because of the real estate bubble, stuff the banks did, people cooking the books (Greece in particular), and not being able to set their own monetary policy because of the Eurozone. The birthrates in Europe have been low for decades. And the question of how to pay for the increasing proportion of old people is a question that the US is facing as well (see Social Security and Medicare).[/quote]
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