The Swedish birth rate reached a new historical low last year, with only 1.43 children born per woman.
However, not everyone sees the demographic crisis as negative. In a broadcast by state television SVT, viewers were told that “people with children are generally less happy” and that parents supposedly derive more joy from drinking alcohol than spending time with their kids.
Erik Angner, a professor of practical philosophy and SVT’s “expert” on happiness, argues that it is a persistent myth that children make us happier and that research supports this thesis.
– Baby happiness is talked about, but it’s also very much a myth. Among single American women, the effect of having children is the same as becoming unemployed or chronically ill. It’s a sure way to be less happy, he says.
According to the professor, this is not talked about out loud because of “strong norms” that do not allow people to complain about their children or express dissatisfaction as a parent.
– People with children are generally less happy than people without, and people who spend time with their children enjoy it less than when they do many other things, such as going to the movies, drinking alcohol or watching sports on TV, he further argues.
“Clearly negative effect”
Angner points out that childless people have “alot more money to move around with” than those with children – and can also spend their time on various “festive activities”.
– One child costs about two million (€180,000), and that adds up if you have a few. The effect of having children appears to be quite clearly negative, the professor repeats.
Across the Western world, the birth rate has fallen sharply in recent decades and in the EU the birth rate is now below 1.4 children born per woman – where 2.0 is required for the population not to decline.
Instead of encouraging and incentivizing family formation, European political leaders have long prioritized mass immigration from the developing world, but this has brought with it a whole new set of worries and intractable problems of various kinds.