Will making pregnancy profitable save Italy from demographic destruction?

December 29, 2005

Volume 7 / Number 51

Should Motherhood Pay?

Dear Colleague:

Will making pregnancy profitable save Italy from demographic destruction?

Steven W. Mosher

President

It’s a sad society, full of sad women–not to mention men–when mothers

have to be paid not to kill their own children. Yet the situation in

Italy, a country once known for a strong family-oriented and Catholic

culture, has become so dismal that a parliamentary proposal made this

month to pay women not to abort their babies has gained considerable

support. On average, Italian women have about 1.2 children each in their

lifetimes–far, far below the minimal replacement rate of 2.1. Italy is a

nation rapidly committing suicide.

With social security programs already severely strained, Italian society

will not survive what is to come: The proportion of the population over 65

will go from 20% today to 36% by 2050. The proportion of people over 80

will triple to 15%. At the same time, the number of young people entering

or about to enter the workforce will go down: The proportion of people

aged 15-24 will go from 10% to 9% as Italy’s population shrinks from 58

million to 51 million. And these statistics come from the overly

optimistic medium variant of the United Nations Population Division’s

projections.

There is evidence that in the past year or two, Italy’s birthrate may have

bumped up to 1.4 children per woman due to the greater fertility of

immigrants. This is death by another method–replacement of a country’s

native population with unassimilated, largely Muslim foreigners. The UN

Population Division has said that countries such as Italy will have to

increase their already-high immigration rates by an astonishing 15 times

to maintain the same worker-to-retiree ratio that she had in the 1990s.

This is what is called an unsustainable development.

Perhaps to deflect pressure to change Italy’s permissive 1978 abortion

law, leftist parties in Italy have proposed paying lower-income women not

to abort their children. Also, a general election is likely to be held

early next year, and this may be a way for left-wing parties to attract a

few Catholic votes. Some conservatives have welcomed the idea. The

payments wouldn’t be much–$250 to $350 or so for three to six months of

pregnancy–but have a private precedent. “It is the same method used by

the pro-life movement, funded by contributions from volunteers,” noted

Msgr. Elio Sgreccia of the Pontifical Academy for Life.

How much difference would this make? Strongly pro-life Rocco Buttiglione,

an Italian Cabinet member, says that 10%-15% of abortions are due to

economic reasons. The payments would be restricted to single women, but

in Italy, married women have most abortions. After they have had the one

“lifestyle accessory” child they want, married Italian women tend to abort

subsequent children.

Excluding married women from these payments is unconscionable. In fact,

single women ought to be excluded, or else some women will deliberately

have children out of wedlock in order to collect money from the

government, as they do in the United States under welfare. Setting up

incentives for more illegitimacy, and disincentives for women to marry the

fathers of their children, will in the long run destroy the family as a

social unit–and lower the birthrate–even more.

“To provide families financial help from the State to raise the Italian

birthrate is tricky,” says Silvio Dalla Valle, Executive Director of the

Italian pro-life group Voglio Vivere (“I Want to Live”) and also a

director of the magazine Radici Cristiane (“Christian Roots”). “First, if

the government really wants families to have more money the way is simple:

Drastically reduce the outrageous taxes Italians pay every year for the

government. Those taxes are misused, wasted and, worst, they don’t give

Italians the services they were promised. Second, to state the reason the

Italian birthrate is low is due to families’ financial problems is very

superficial, and doesn’t t go the core of the problem. It is a fact that

a century ago Italy was a rather poor country, and nevertheless the

birthrate was very high. The real reason the Italian birthrate is

extremely low is moral and religious.”

Currently, abortion-on-demand is legal in Italy for the first three months

of pregnancy and then for the health of the mother after that. Despite

reports in the English-speaking press over the growing debate about

abortion in that country, Dalla Valle thinks that more legal restrictions

on abortion are not on the horizon. “When the Faith and the sense of the

family vanish, when the sense of perpetuating certain values disappears,

when selfishness takes over charity, it is natural that the birthrate

declines,” he says. “Because children are no longer seen as a gift from

God but rather a burden. In Italian society as elsewhere, the more

individuals are practicing Christians, the more children they have.”

Dalla Valle is not necessarily against the pay-to-prevent-abortion idea:

“It is very possible that such a measure to provide financial aid will

also increase the illegitimate birthrate, and again weaken the concept of

family. But the alternative is to kill an innocent child.”

In the meantime, a Spanish government report says that abortion went up by

73% over the last decade in that country, which has a birthrate on par

with Italy’s. In Germany, ideas to increase that country’s low birthrate

are gaining steam as France considers financial incentives aimed at more

affluent couples to raise her birthrate, already second-highest (after

Ireland) in the 25-member European Union. But France’s birthrate, perhaps

as high as 1.9, is raised by Europe’s largest Muslim population.

Any incentives would take a long time to have a significant effect

demographically, and aren’t expected to raise the native-born European

populations’ birthrates up to replacement level in any case. As Dalla

Valle pointed out, the problem is not primarily financial in any case,

though high taxation and an economy predicated on the two-income family

are certainly parts of the puzzle. In more metaphorical ways than one, it

seems that the proposals to save Western European civilization are a day

late and a dollar short.

Joseph A. D’Agostino is Vice President for Communications at the

Population Research Institute.

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