Comment by Supermancho

Comment by Supermancho 4 days ago

5 replies

> The problem isn’t a lack of housing, it’s a lot of breeding.

> As long as people keep having babies in excess of the replacement rate

To reiterate, the thread was about "breeding". The birth rate has fallen behind.

You are referring to the overall population growth being due to immigration. This may be true, but is unrelated. Respond to the post about why overpop is driving the housing pricing, not to the factual corrections.

lazide 4 days ago

So immigrants don’t count as people, or have babies?

The birth rate for immigrants in america is still quite positive, and has more than offset the low birth rate from ‘non-immigrants’.

  • Supermancho 4 days ago

    > So immigrants don’t count as people, or have babies?

    Births for immigrants are not counted separately. Again, the birth rate is the topic (which includes immigrant births). Granted, all kinds of residents have births outside of hospitals, but that's a tiny minority that is not counted.

    This focus on immigrant vs non-immigrant is more noise in the wrong thread.

  • derektank 4 days ago

    No it hasn't. Even among immigrants the birth rate reached replacement in the late 00's and has since fallen below 1.8 births per woman.

    • lazide 3 days ago

      Cite? Data I saw shows 2.19

      • Supermancho 3 days ago

        https://www.macrotrends.net/datasets/global-metrics/countrie...

        The trend is clear. The outliers from 2024 onward (which are pretty big outliers) are likely due to data not being curated correctly. The administration would be to blame for that. The US is faring better than most other western nations specifically because of immigration, so the political environment will likely have a negative downward pressure on that benefit.