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Decline in birth rates in Argentina

Edgardo

New member
In Argentina, the drop in birth rates is often treated as a statistical footnote, when in reality it is reshaping the foundations of the economy. By around 2040, the number of people outside the workforce will exceed those who are working. That shift places enormous strain on the pay-as-you-go pension system, which relies on a large and stable base of formal workers. As that base shrinks, pension financing, consumption, and tax revenue all weaken at the same time.

Against this backdrop, the idea has emerged that artificial intelligence and robotics will compensate for the lack of people. Productivity may rise and many tasks can be automated, but pension systems still depend on human wages and contributions flowing through the economy. Machines do not participate in that cycle. Expanding automation without a strong working-age population risks deepening the imbalance rather than solving it.

What is at stake is not technological progress itself, but the sustainability of the social contract. Without higher birth rates, formal employment, and real incomes to support demand, demographic change stops being a silent trend and becomes a hard economic constraint. It forces a rethink of the system—either by choice or by crisis.

The key questions are unavoidable: can a welfare state survive as traditional wage-based contributions erode? And are we prepared to tax machine-driven productivity or redirect concentrated capital to provide the material foundation for human life?


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It is not just Argentina that will have severe problems. All around the world the pension programs are going to go belly up. Cristina Kirchner pushed through 3 million retirees that didn't contribute much to the system. Birthrates are in a doom spiral. Big pyramid scheme with future generations not contributing.
 
It isn't just Argentina it is everywhere. I got laid off today along with 16,000 of my co-workers at Amazon today. My boss posted about it here. Hard to plan to raise kids when all our jobs are getting outsourced to India.

 
It isn't just Argentina it is everywhere. I got laid off today along with 16,000 of my co-workers at Amazon today. My boss posted about it here. Hard to plan to raise kids when all our jobs are getting outsourced to India.


I am sorry you got laid off. I know a few that also got laid off. It's not just Amazon but many companies. I used to think that computer science was a good degree but with AI many of those jobs are going to get eliminated. My nephew is switching careers and getting out of computer engineering. He mentioned with Claude all the jobs are getting eliminated.
 
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