Do the Natcons Get Anything Right?
Plus: A listener asks if the Roundtable has given the arguments of those opposed to low-skilled immigration a fair hearing.
Plus: A listener asks if the Roundtable has given the arguments of those opposed to low-skilled immigration a fair hearing.
The right and the left are pushing pro-natalist polices that have never worked and are deeply misguided.
Falling birthrates, pro-natalist policies, and the limits of population control
A selection of Reason's most incisive articles on population, pollution, resource depletion, biodiversity, energy, climate change, and the ideological environmentalists' penchant for peddling doom.
Can Americans afford to welcome the huddled masses?
The authors of Superabundance make a strong case that more people and industrialization mean a richer, more prosperous world.
Politicians' go-to fixes like child tax credits and federal paid leave are known for creating disincentives to work without much impact on fertility.
There are many reasons people move, but overburdening your citizens is a good way to lose them.
Despite an apocalyptic media narrative, the modern era has brought much longer lives and the greatest decline in poverty ever.
The U.S. remains the top destination for the world's immigrants—but it must be careful not to squander its immigration advantage.
California's economy is growing despite Gov. Gavin Newsom's policies, not because of them.
It shouldn't be surprising that a misanthropic worldview like Paul Ehrlich's can be taken in xenophobic directions.
The Superabundance authors make a compelling case that the world is getting richer for everyone.
Superabundance explains why a world of 8 billion people is infinitely richer than one with 1 billion.
Financial pressure is the main reason why people say they move, and pandemic-era public policy created a lot more financial pressure in certain places.
Plus: Oregon ditches high school proficiency requirements, new vaccine rules in San Francisco and New Orleans, and more...
People who checked the "Some Other Race" or racial combination census boxes are now America's second largest ethnic group.
Why the Golden State is losing people, business, and a congressional seat
California has morphed from a land of limitless opportunity to a highly regulated land of limits and control. No wonder so many people are leaving.
The tax- and corruption-heavy state has lost a quarter-million people in the past decade.
The total fertility rate falls to its lowest level ever.
Negative population growth back in 1919 was largely the result of the Spanish flu pandemic
The Census Bureau sketches out scenarios in which immigration remains about the same, increases by 50 percent, falls by 50 percent, or halts entirely.
The Breakthrough Institute's Ted Nordhaus urges Americans to reject both doomism and denialism.
California's progressive political imperatives are having such glaring real-world repercussions that it's hard to keep ignoring them.
Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York City all have some easily identifiable management problems.
Documentary filmmaker Nanfu Wang on the horrors of China’s one-child policy
Thanks to global expansion of reproductive freedom, actual population growth is likely to be less and peak around the middle this century
America desperately needs more immigrants to support its economy.
Whether red vs. blue or city vs. country, political tensions are best addressed by letting people run their own lives.
Doomslayer Julian Simon vindicated after 40 years.
Skyrocketing debt and pension obligations make for a tough labor environment.
Exercising reproductive freedom is a good thing.
A new article in BioScience vindicates The End of Doom.
Ronald Bailey's 11-minute talk at Voice & Exit on the awesome 21st century.
There's an easy way to make more Americans: immigration.
Increased wealth and technological progress give people greater liberty to decide when, how, with whom, and if they want to reproduce.
Fortunately, even if conditions don't improve, economic freedom (and consequently growth) benefits not only the people who have it, but also people who don't.
For people, unlike rats, the human 'behavioral sink' seems to be greater creativity, not pathological collapse.
Population density portends greater creativity, not collapse
Take Hans Rosling's Test Your World Knowledge quiz and find out
Malthusianism might make a good movie plot, but it is just fiction.