The Modernity Trap : Structural Constraints on Fertility in Wealthy Democracies

Read the full article

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

The "Optimistic Consensus" suggested that fertility would recover at high development levels. We test this hypothesis using panel data from 161 countries (1990–2023, N=2,989) and find no evidence of J-curve recovery. Instead, wealthy democracies converge on a synchronized fertility decline toward a total fertility rate of 1.3–1.5 as of 2023—persistently below replacement.We construct a "Modernity Index" via principal components analysis of education, gross domestic product, and urbanization, and then estimate interaction models with cluster-robust standard errors. Modernity emerges as the primary predictor of fertility decline (β=-0.68, p<0.001), consistent with prohibitive opportunity costs that fiscal transfers cannot offset. Democracy shows no independent main effects but significantly moderates modernity's impact through an interaction term (β=+0.48, p=0.020): at high development, stronger democratic institutions correlate with marginally higher fertility. Robustness analysis with larger samples (N=5,589) strengthens these findings.Israel constitutes a statistically identified exception due to religio-cultural forces. We formalize these constraints as the "Liberal Trilemma": advanced societies struggle simultaneously sustain meritocratic education, demographic continuity, and economic growth. Policy implications are stark—even pro-natalist spending achieves TFRs 20–30% below replacement, confirming that transfers address direct costs but have not reversed structural decline.

Article activity feed