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What America Do We Want to Be?

Join Living Room Conversations, our civil dialogue partner, and America Indivisible for a nationwide conversation on April 13, Thomas Jefferson’s 276th birthday. "Reckoning with Jefferson: A Nationwide Conversation on Race, Religion, and the America We Want to Be" will be held via in-person and online video discussions. Sign up today!

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Join Living Room Conversations, our civil dialogue partner, and America Indivisible for a nationwide conversation on April 13, Thomas Jefferson’s 276th birthday. "Reckoning with Jefferson: A Nationwide Conversation on Race, Religion, and the America We Want to Be" will be held via in-person and online video discussions. Sign up today!

What America Do We Want to Be?

Join Living Room Conversations, our civil dialogue partner, and America Indivisible for a nationwide conversation on April 13, Thomas Jefferson’s 276th birthday. "Reckoning with Jefferson: A Nationwide Conversation on Race, Religion, and the America We Want to Be" will be held via in-person and online video discussions. Sign up today!

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We have rated the bias of nearly 600 outlets and writers!

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People in the developed world are getting older and having fewer kids, demographic data shows, raising questions about how governments and societies will adapt in the coming decades. 

The Details: According to a weekend analysis from The New York Times (Lean Left bias), “By 2050, people age 65 and older will make up nearly 40 percent of the population in some parts of East Asia and Europe.” While countries like China will have to figure out how to support an elderly population, others in India and Sub-Saharan Africa will see booms in young and working-age people. 

For Context: The world’s changing demographics cause many of today’s most contentious political issues. Retirement savings programs, burdened with supporting more seniors with income from fewer working-age adults, have spurred debate in the U.S. and riots in France. A swell of young people from less-developed countries is migrating to developed regions like Europe and the U.S.

How the Media Covered It: Right-rated outlets appeared much less likely to analyze demographic data, instead highlighting opinions supporting higher birthrates in the U.S. Coverage in left-rated outlets often appeared more comfortable with slower population growth but generally matched coverage from the center in describing the issue as an economic and geopolitical shift.

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Within two decades, China’s retirement-age population is projected to surpass the entire population of the United States. By 2040, an estimated 402 million people, or 28 percent of China’s population, will be older than 60 years old—the current legal retirement age for most men in the country—more people than the expected 379 million in the United States that same year. This trend means the end of China’s comparative advantage in cheap and skilled labor and the rise of the daunting financial challenge of caring for its rapidly aging population.

The world’s demographics have already been transformed. Europe is shrinking. China is shrinking, with India, a much younger country, overtaking it this year as the world’s most populous nation.

But what we’ve seen so far is just the beginning.

Underpopulation, not overpopulation, is the bigger problem. We need to take steps to encourage more births.