Seems like a lot of people are doing exactly this, but interpreting it as “not having kids” instead of “having kids but not trying to compete with others in terms of educational investment/signaling”. As a parent myself I think this is pretty understandable in terms of risk-aversion, i.e., being worried that one’s unconventional parenting strategy might not work out well in terms of conventional success, and getting a lot of guilt / blame / status loss because of it.
Given it is a dystopian status competition hell, pay for it seems terrible, but if we have 98% participation now and 94% financial hardship, then this could be a way to justify a huge de facto transfer to parents.
I don’t understand how this justifies paying. Wouldn’t a big transfer to parents just cause more educational investment/signaling and leave the overall picture largely unchanged?
Seems like a lot of people are doing exactly this, but interpreting it as “not having kids” instead of “having kids but not trying to compete with others in terms of educational investment/signaling”. As a parent myself I think this is pretty understandable in terms of risk-aversion, i.e., being worried that one’s unconventional parenting strategy might not work out well in terms of conventional success, and getting a lot of guilt / blame / status loss because of it.
I don’t understand how this justifies paying. Wouldn’t a big transfer to parents just cause more educational investment/signaling and leave the overall picture largely unchanged?