Fertility Rates

How does deportation policy impact the United States economy. It was predicted in and around 2006, decreasing birth rates in the United States would have an economic impact. Consider for a moment, Trumps deportation and limiting immigrants to the United States will only aggravate the need for Labor input. Fewer birth and an anti-immigrant policy will aggravate the US economy.

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The Issue:

The Facts:

  • Fertility rates affect the federal budget because they affect dependency ratios. The dependency ratio is the number of dependents (children and the elderly) relative to the working-age population. The old-age dependency ratio is far more important for understanding federal budget trends than the child dependency ratio because federal spending on the elderly on a per capita basis is five times larger than federal spending on children. Higher dependency ratios mean more spending on programs supporting dependents relative to tax revenue generated by the working-age population. A growing imbalance between spending on dependents and revenues leads to rising federal deficits.  
  • The projected increase in old-age dependency ratios is the source of the projected rise in the US federal debt over the next three decades. Old-age dependency ratios are expected to continue rising over the next three decades. During this period, the still relatively large cohorts born just after the baby boom will age into retirement and this, combined with longer life expectancies, mean higher payments to the elderly and rising federal debt. Current projections indicate that by 2040, the number of elderly dependents per 100 working-age people will rise to 41. If, instead, the old-age dependency ratio remained at its 2025 level and current tax and spending plans remained in place, we estimate that the government would have a primary budget surplus around 2040. 

Past declines in fertility are an important driver of the secular increase in deficits and debt in recent decades. And rising old-age dependency ratios are expected to continue to exert pressure on the US fiscal situation for the next three decades. However, the long-run fiscal outlook will ultimately depend on a range of economic and policy factors. While demographic trends are putting upward pressure on deficits and debt, other forces could materially alter this trajectory. For example, higher immigration or faster productivity growth, potentially driven by technological advances such as AI, could expand the labor force and improve fiscal sustainability. Policy choices, including raising taxes or reforming old-age entitlement programs, would also play a central role in shaping long-run outcomes. In addition, the long-run projections from the Congressional Budget Office for economic growth, interest rates, and government spending used to conduct this analysis are highly uncertain and do not account for potential future economic shocks that could alter the fiscal trajectory.