When you use an open bracket, can you please remember to use a closing one. Not a big deal, but my OCD just can't handle it.
Thank you.
Edited.
(and you can edit the quote too, if you're quick!)
When you use an open bracket, can you please remember to use a closing one. Not a big deal, but my OCD just can't handle it.
Thank you.
Edited.
(and you can edit the quote too, if you're quick!)
Honestly? Not a f**king clue.
I decided that getting on the property ladder was more important than starting a family, because when I have a family, I want to be able to provide for them. So after three years without a holiday and saving hard, I've just about managed to do it. I should finally be moving in the next month or two. Unfortunately, in my opinion, it's those people that have a baby now and worry about supporting it later are the ones causing the problem. The more they take, the more everyone else has to suffer.
When is doing something you can't afford EVER a good idea?
How regressive have we become to feel like re-producing is anything to do with economics!
And this is the crux of the matter. There is a generation now who are what I would call the "entitled". Where there is a hard self-belief that they are entitled to do what they want without considering their "means", and then when they don't get it, or find out that they can't afford it, then spend the time moaning about it rather than tightening their belts.
I've been fortunate in my life , through a solid dependable well paid job, a working wife, low interest rates on my current repayment mortgage, and only 1 child (9 years old) that we've been able to maintain a reasonable standard of living. Had we had more than 1 child, then I would have expected our standard of living to drop, so we decided that one was enough.
There is no "entitlement", there's hard work.
reproduction has always been related economics. for generations people had large families so enough would survive to adulthood and care/provide for them in retirement. go back a generation or two and mothers took in work as soon as they could, child care was provided by aunts and grandparent who couldnt work any more. stay at is manageable if you have modest tastes and expenditure, thats whats changed since the 70s (blame Thatcher?).
Hate to say it but "do the sums".
Needs clarification. Is the number of kids you can afford gross or net of the cost of booze, cigs and Sky telly?
We have only one child as that's all I believe we can afford.
If it wasn't for parasitic babyboomer landlords I would have had more.
Is only having one selfish though? Are only children lonely?
Not having a go at your opinion at all just want to kick this around a bit. The premise of 'entitlement' suggests that if you're a couple, you are only entitled to have children if you can afford it, assuming that is, that entitlement works both ways, the couple who want the kid and the welfare state that may end up supporting them. As many couples already have kids ,who need this support, and you really need to include 'Tax Credits' (Jolly Green Giros), this means any family earning less than 40k joint income would fall under the spotlight of 'are you entitled'? Should we have a means test? What about areas of low unemployment and depravation? What happens to the childless couple who do have kids, are they to be criminalised or should we just make more poverty porn progs about them to deter other potential low income 'breeders' through ridicule and humiliation. I would not like to see 'childless' sections of society, based on incomes.
It is a difficult one, but one could also suggest that the areas of low income, and low unemployment are the very areas where larger sized families are more prevalent. This of course is a rather large sweeping assumption, and one that I am certainly not stating as fact.
About 11 years ago.....it was nowhere near as bad as I expected (and my wife was hoping [emoji23][emoji23][emoji23])
You’re right,but my two are 23 and 19, one has graduated (no debt) and working, the other is 2nd year at Uni, so I’m almost in the clear (apart from helping with property purchase I guess). Happy days [emoji16]
On the thread topic though, we waited until we could afford kids before we decided to have them.........
I've come to the decision that I don't want kids. Just need to break the news to my children.
Agree. I would suggest that from the perspective of a family in a deprived, benefit dependant community, that large families provide security/safety in numbers. Maybe in some cases, an aberrated sense of 'being productive' and having a sense of worth/belonging. Yes, anyone can have kids, but if you have no job or real job prospects, then maybe kids is all you've got to feel like your worth something.
The baby boomer generation have a lot that they really don't need to complain about.