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Contrary to popular belief, the biggest threat to humanity is not overpopulation but underpopulation. Specifically, societies that produce productive, intelligent, and stable citizens are not having enough children, while those who can't support them are, creating an existential crisis for the future.

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Capitalism, socialism, and communism are all growth-based systems predicated on an expanding population to balance labor, capital, and demand. As the world enters demographic decline with shrinking working-age populations, the fundamental assumptions of these 500-year-old models collapse, requiring a complete reinvention of economic theory.

As global birth rates fall, there won't be enough young people to care for the aging population. Cisco's Jeetu Patel argues AI is not a job-killer but a necessity to prevent massive human suffering by filling this impending labor and care gap.

The drop in national birth rates is primarily driven by an increasing number of women who never become mothers at all. The total number of children per mother has remained relatively stable. This highlights a crisis of family formation and coupling, rather than a decision by parents to have fewer kids.

We have had housing technology for 10,000 years, yet have made it artificially scarce through regulation. This engineered scarcity prevents young people from starting families, directly causing the crash in birth rates that poses an existential threat to Western civilization.

The falling birth rates in many Western nations are a direct consequence of economic pressures. Young people are postponing or forgoing having children because the high cost of housing and living makes it financially impossible to start a family, a phenomenon exemplified by adults in their 30s still living with their parents.

As women gain more economic power and education, they often choose to have fewer or no children. This global trend is reversing previous fears of a 'population bomb,' creating a new challenge for nations struggling to maintain population growth and support an aging populace.

AI's arrival is serendipitous, providing the necessary productivity boost and labor substitution to counteract a future of economic shrinkage caused by declining global populations. Without AI, we'd be facing a crisis.

Marc Andreessen argues that AI isn't a job threat but a necessary solution. It arrives just as declining population growth and 50 years of slow technological progress in the physical economy would have otherwise led to economic stagnation and decline. AI and robotics are needed to fill the labor gap.

A futurist prediction suggests AI's greatest demographic impact may be a baby boom. By automating the drudgery of parenthood (forms, scheduling, shopping), AI makes the experience more appealing, potentially reversing declining birth rates in developed nations.

Many countries, including China, are facing a demographic crisis with falling birth rates and an aging population. This creates an economic imbalance with too few young workers to support the elderly. AI and robotics can fill this gap, effectively becoming the "young workforce" that sustains these economies.