Connect with us

Canada News

Does anyone still want kids? Families are shrinking as people have fewer children — or none at all

Published

on

By Natalie Stechyson, CBC News, RCI

Canada recorded its lowest-ever fertility rate for the second year in a row in 2023

We’ve shifted from a society that had children to help ensure the survival of the household, to one where people choose to become parents out of a desire for personal fulfilment. (Pexels Photo)

Demographers, sociologists and your mother-in-law want to know: why aren’t people having as many kids?

Canada recorded its lowest-ever fertility rate for the second year in a row in 2023, according to Statistics Canada (new window), at 1.26 children born per woman. It now joins the ranks of lowest-low fertility countries, including South Korea, Spain, Italy and Japan.

Statistics Canada said the drop between 2022 and 2023 specifically reflects an increase in the number of women of childbearing age, but also noted the fertility rate has been steadily declining for more than 15 years.

Experts have linked a range of factors (new window) with reproductive decision-making, including the rising cost of living (new window) and eco-anxiety (new window).

More people are also delaying parenthood (new window) until later in life, which can shorten their reproductive window.

But there’s also a significant cultural aspect — larger families with multiple children are simply no longer the ideal (new window) like they were a few generations ago, said Lisa Strohschein, a sociology professor at the University of Alberta and the editor-in-chief of the journal Canadian Studies in Population.

We’ve shifted from a society that had children to help ensure the survival of the household, to one where people choose to become parents out of a desire for personal fulfilment. And you don’t need lots and lots of kids to derive meaning out of life, Strohschein said.

That’s reflected in a number of parenting platforms dedicated to those raising only children, like the One and Done subreddit (new window) with 72,000 members, or the 21,500 videos posted with the #OneAndDone hashtag on TikTok (new window).

There are also influencers like Jen Dalton of Sudbury, Ont., whose @oneanddoneparenting (new window) account on Instagram has 55,500 followers.

No longer do sleepless nights and postpartum anxiety and depression plague me. I do have time to focus on myself, while also focusing on my daughter and my marriage, Dalton wrote in a post in May (new window).

We have a beautiful balance in our lives.

WATCH | Is it harder to be a parent today?

Début du widget Widget. Passer le widget ?
Fin du widget Widget. Retourner au début du widget ?

‘They just don’t want to’

The recognition that having children is increasingly costly, time-consuming and stressful was reflected in a recent public health advisory (new window) issued by the U.S. surgeon general. In August, Vivek Murthy warned about the impact of modern stresses (new window) on parents’ mental health, saying today’s parents face unique challenges.

  • Just Asking wants to know: What questions do you have about fertility treatments? Fill out the details on this form (new window) and send us your questions ahead of our show on Oct. 5.

Parents across all backgrounds want to provide their kids with a foundation for happiness and success. Yet too many fear they won’t be able to provide what’s necessary or their kids won’t be able to access what they need in order to lead a fulfilling life, Murthy said in the report.

On top of that, some experts have argued that parenting has become more intense (new window). Data shows parents today spend more time with their children (new window) than in previous generations (even while more women are working full-time), and the predominant modern parenting style centres on acknowledging a child’s feelings — which has left many parents feeling burned out (new window).

And for some, that’s just not appealing — at all. For instance, the share of U.S. adults younger than 50 without children who say they are unlikely to ever have them rose from 37 per cent in 2018 to 47 per cent in 2023, according to a Pew Research (new window) survey of 8,638 respondents published in August.

The most common reason those adults gave, at 57 per cent? They just don’t want to, research analyst Kiley Hurst wrote in the report.

In Canada, one-third of adults aged 15 to 59 in 2022 said they didn’t intend to have any children, according to Statistics Canada (new window). The agency noted that younger respondents were more likely to desire fewer children, and suggested this could be due to variations in financial security.

WATCH | Why fewer people are having kids:

Début du widget Widget. Passer le widget ?
Fin du widget Widget. Retourner au début du widget ?

Broadly, it comes down to economics and culture, said Rania Tfaily, an associate professor in the department of sociology and anthropology at Carleton University who studies social demography.

Historically, getting married and having children were defining markers of adulthood, Tfaily explained. But these markers have been increasingly replaced with those related to independence, economic stability and pursuing individual interests.

Having children requires considerable time commitment and investment to ensure their well-being, Tfaily said. Given this and the increasing cost of having children, many are choosing to have one or two children only, or none at all.

One-child families on the rise

According to the 2021 census (new window), one-child families are the most common type in Canada, comprising 45 per cent of families with children that year. (Families with two children made up 38 per cent and those with three or more made up 16 per cent.) The totals include one-parent families, common-law families and step-families.

Economists (new window) have pointed out that the decision to have children is often a trade-off between quantity and quality — the number of children you have and how much you invest in their future prospects and wellbeing. The theory is that everyone only has a finite amount of time, money and affection; in the past, people would spread that out thinner between more children, Strohschein said, but in recent years, that calculation has flipped.

For instance, in 2022, the International Monetary Fund (new window) (IMF) pointed out that typically, as parents get richer, they invest more in the quality (like education and extra-curricular activities) of their children, which is costly. Additionally, the IMF notes how time-consuming it is to raise children, and that devoting time to childcare is also costly — especially for mothers who could otherwise earn more in the workforce. So, for these reasons, they have fewer children.

Families are also shrinking worldwide, according to a kinship study published in December in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences USA (new window). That study, using international demographic data for every country in the world, projected that by 2095, a 65-year-old person could have 38 per cent fewer living relatives than they did in 1950. (They determined this using data modelling based on a hypothetical 65-year-old from the population.)

Over time, this could mean more vertical family networks — grandparents, parents, children — and fewer lateral kin such as cousins, aunts and uncles, lead author Diego Alburez-Gutierrez told CBC News in an email interview.

There’s also a growing polarization in fertility behaviour, said Alburez-Gutierrez, who leads the Research Group on Kinship Inequalities (new window) at the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research in Rostock, Germany.

Fertility behaviour tends to be inherited over generations, he said, which essentially means if you grew up in a large family, it’s possible you will have more children, and vice versa.

This can lead to a polarization in family sizes, where some members of the population have large families, while other have increasingly small families, Alburez-Gutierrez said.

The low-fertility trap

Canada’s fertility rate has been falling since the 1970s, but this has historically been offset by admitting large numbers of immigrants, Tfaily said. It gets more challenging if Canada’s low rate persists long term, she added.

In such a case, Canada’s population growth would slow down and eventually become negative, Tfaily said.

Once the fertility rate falls below 1.3, it can set off a self-reinforcing cycle called a low-fertility trap (new window), Strohschein said. Demographers coined the term (new window) in the early 2000s, explaining that social inertia and self-reinforcing processes may make it difficult to return to higher levels once fertility has been very low for some time.

At that point, it becomes harder to convince people to become parents because they don’t see as many role models, Strohschein said. And they start to see having one child as the ideal — which is what happened in China as a result of its one-child policy (new window), she said. Now, the UN warns China’s population could shrink by half (new window) by the year 2100.

If we entrench in Canadian culture that only one child is good, we will be China in just a few decades, Strohschein said.

On the “One and Done (new window)” subreddit, meanwhile, some parents question their decisions, wondering if their child will suffer for not having siblings. Others note that it wasn’t a choice at all — medical issues or secondary infertility prevented them from having more than one child.

But many say having one child was the best choice they could have made.

It is hard undoing the brainwashing of ‘two kids, happy family’ but since I have made the decision, my mood has dramatically shifted, one parent wrote (new window) this week.


This article is republished from RCI.

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *