Combating Europe’s Demographic Winter
The Hungarian presidency of the EU Council can place demography at the heart of European policy making.
The Hungarian presidency of the EU Council can place demography at the heart of European policy making.
There seems to be a uniparty consensus that state-funded wetnurses are the best way to raise children.
Countries should take notice of Hungary’s family policies, before the demographic crisis becomes truly intractable.
The West has enjoyed living standards previously unimaginable, but demographic challenges imperil its future.
Anti-natalism leads to societal decay and a decline in overall happiness.
Having children is a responsibility; it takes sacrifices, but it is also the greatest gift and the highest level of human fulfilment.
Poles have learned the hard way that there are no holidays from history.
Assimilation is a utopian idea. As we have seen throughout Europe, it simply does not happen.
With fewer than 400,000 babies born last year, Italy has the third lowest fertility rate in the OECD.
Previously, Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni had warned that “Italy is a nation destined to disappear” if its demographic crisis is not solved in the near future.
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