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Saturday, 30 August 2025

The policy forever scrambling to find a rationale



Tom Jones has an interesting CAPX piece on attempts to build a rationale for mass migration on the back of problems posed by declining birth rates.


Infinite migration will not solve our fertility crisis

  • Some policymakers warn that foreign workers will be crucial to offset demographic decline – they're wrong
  • Why do we assume that migrants will continue to adopt the fertility patterns of the countries of origin?
  • We need productivity improvements, not population increases at all costs

At the annual Jackson Hole symposium in Wyoming this week, central bank leaders from Japan, the Eurozone and the UK warned that their economies need further immigration in order to fuel growth.

According to their warning, ageing populations and declining birth rates threaten long-term economic growth and price stability across advanced economies, and without a significant increase in foreign workers, labour shortages will intensify and inflationary pressures may rise...

When the mass migration project began, policymakers told us it was pure economic rocket fuel. As the huge economics benefits failed to materialise, we began to be told that the benefits were primarily cultural. Now we are told our societies will simply collapse without it. Immigration, as noted Christopher Caldwell, is the policy forever scrambling to find a rationale.


The whole piece is well worth reading, particularly in view of the fertility convergence issue. I recall reading a book about demographics and the impending first world problem of declining birth rates about fifty years ago. Even then, immigration was seen as an ineffective solution because of fertility convergence. It is not new.


The argument that immigration is essential to fix our ageing population works on the assumption that immigrants will not only supplement the working age population, but also increase the fertility rate. But the idea that migrant communities will continue the fertility patterns of their country of origin is not borne out by evidence, which shows that when women find themselves in a different fertility context, they adapt their behaviours accordingly – an effect known as fertility convergence. While the total fertility rate (TFR) of non-UK-born women is higher than UK-born women, that is not the full picture; the fertility of non-UK-born women has been in long-term decline and in 2021 stood at 2.03, below the TFR replacement rate of 2.1. In fact, the TFR rate of non-UK-born women has not reached above 2.1 since 2014.

7 comments:

The Jannie said...

How do the figures balance with the claimed muslim "immigrate and outbreed" strategy?

A K Haart said...

Jannie - if any group were to follow that policy across successive generations it should work, but that's a big 'if'.

Anonymous said...

There's a fundamental problem with the government's approach to low fertility. If there are fewer people to govern there will be less need for government - and that would be unthinkable.

dearieme said...

It's not just the average number of children per woman that matters, so does the generation time. If British women have one or two children in their mid thirties and immigrant women have two children before they are twenty, then in a century there will have been three generations of British breeding vs five.

A K Haart said...

Anon - that's an interesting aspect, bureaucrats don't want a shrinking bureaucracy as the population declines. It isn't all about economics and coping with an ageing population.

dearieme - yes, fertility convergence would have to converge that way too. It bothers me that our grandchildren will have to live with a problem which is not discussed as widely and openly as it should be.

Vatsmith said...

It reminds me of that Vietnam war meme 'We had to destroy the village in order to save it'. Mass immigration might save the economy in the short term but it will eventually destroy the country.

A K Haart said...

Vatsmith - that's a good analogy. It's an experiment taking us into the unknown which is bound to destroy what we were.