As nations develop (when citizens earn an average of over $5,000 a year) birth rates fall below replacement rate. This is exacerbated by gender equality, education, and technology. Fertility rates are falling much faster than dominant social narratives imply. For example, at its current fertility rate (0.78), for every hundred South Koreans there will be 5.9 great grandchildren (the average fertility rate in the developed world is currently 1.56). In addition, the regions we use to supplement collapsing birth rates in countries like the US are themselves undergoing fertility collapse (with South America, Central America, and the Caribbean) collectively falling below repopulation rate in 2019.
Our Goal
Pronatalist Foundation is working to find a way for prosperity, gender equality, education, and technology to coexist with stable populations.
Population Ecology
If we we view social ecosystems like ecological ecosystems: prosperity, gender equality, access to education, and technology (P.G.E.T.) act like a pollutant sterilizing most cultures in an ecosystem. However, unlike a normal pollutant we want to maintain and grow P.G.E.T. As such, we must foster a diverse array of cultures that can survive in the face of P.G.E.T.
Just as an ecologist's goal is not to maximize the amount of bunnies in the world the Pronatalist Foundation's goal is not a forever expanding human population. Like an ecologist our goal is to try to help as much of the existing cultural ecosystem as possible through the filter created by P.G.E.T. and preserve the diverse pluralistic cultural ecologies that have allowed our species to thrive.
Social Experimentation
If existing social structures can't motivate people to have kids we will have to build new ones. To this end, we work with a variety of groups experimenting with new ways of building communities, new ways of developing cultures, and new forms of education.
Reproductive Technology
In the last 50 years, average human sperm concentrations dropped by 51.6 percent, and total sperm counts dropped by 62.3 percent, similar biological fertility collapse can be seen wherever one looks.
We work both to isolate the cause of this collapse as well as develop and expand access to technologies to circumvent it.
Policy Research
The most obvious policy interventions seem largely infective against fertility collapse from cash handouts to banning abortion or decreasing the cost of child care. To that end we work to find non-intuitive policy interventions that have a real impact outside of pandering to one's base.