This is on the very generous end of normal subsidizes, it might not be fiscally sustainable. Interesting test of affordable family formation theory. Nothing revolutionary about it however unless it eventually raises total fertility rate above 2.1https://twitter.com/matthewschmitz/status/1016670747950047233 …
If no such policy or set of policies is discovered, countries favoring selective mass immigration, will be economically, technologically and demographically dominant.
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The best candidate so far seems to be having a demographically viable ultra-religious but economically unproductive community. See Israel.
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At least at first... As the shortage grows more acute, only a handful of the riches and relatively city states, like Singapore will be able to compete. For large developed or developing states of 30 or 100M+ protectionist policies might come to be the least bad option.
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In a low high human capital fertility world, the most powerful countries in the world might by the end of this century be those that limit emigration, through policies ranging from current US taxation of former citizens all the way to the old East German model.
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