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Tyner🔸's avatar

I would have expected the rise in healthcare employment would result in more night work in the ED, hospice etc. But, looking at the charts in the paper, it seems that the proportion of healthcare work done at night has dropped along with all the other employment categories.

JH's avatar

The housing prices impact on fertility rates feels like a modern Malthusian trap. We’ve raised the bar for the quality of life we expect and then the world isn’t keeping up and so there are fewer kids.

I think this is obviously a very small part of a wider picture of why people are having fewer kids. 5% is a small fraction of the entire change, but it’s interesting to think Malthus’s thoughts might still be relevant.

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