A question for the historians
Aug. 19th, 2009 11:40 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Just one more for now, I promise.
Question for the historians: We hear a lot today about how the low birth rate in many industrialized countries (U.S., Europe, parts of Asia) is leading to an "economic time bomb," when a small number of working-age people will need to support a large number of elderly people.
Are there any historical periods with an analogous situation? Perhaps after a plague or a war, when many young people were killed but not so much of the older generation? Anyone know what happened to those societies?
Question for the historians: We hear a lot today about how the low birth rate in many industrialized countries (U.S., Europe, parts of Asia) is leading to an "economic time bomb," when a small number of working-age people will need to support a large number of elderly people.
Are there any historical periods with an analogous situation? Perhaps after a plague or a war, when many young people were killed but not so much of the older generation? Anyone know what happened to those societies?
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Date: 2009-08-19 03:57 pm (UTC)Don't think that there is a historical precedent - closest was Black Death which made peasant labour valuable and broke much of hold that the nobility had on their serfs.
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Date: 2009-08-19 04:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-19 04:13 pm (UTC)