After people have kids, their opinions change about how to raise kids. They become much more in favor of having one parent work and one stay home with them.pic.twitter.com/9Q4SDniMf9
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A lot of them will have kids but not all. The concern is therefore valid and causality not necessary, though not implausible either.
Even the reverse causal relationship is possible where people who think one parent should take care of children are more likely to have kids. And these links are not mutually exclusive either.
Struggling to find evidence for this? The best I could find: "a representative sample of 2,000 adults aged 18–50 living in the United States". So it would just be the base rate of having kids?https://americancompass.org/essays/home-building-survey-part-1/ …
Other major issue here is a potential cohort effect.
It's similarly misleading to imply one demographic evolves into the other. If you look at the graph immediately following (which separates by social class), it's clearer that these could easily be separate demographics.https://americancompass.org/essays/home-building-survey-part-2/ …
Another thing is that not everyone shares the same outlook on kids and parenting. Married men with no kids is between married men with kids and single men with no kids. This just makes sense statistically as-is if some married men with no kids want kids and some don't.
Regardless all of the people who will never have kids are in the no kid buckets
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