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Carina's avatar

These are good ideas. It seems very hard to undo the two-income trap because it’s a collective action problem, and because the culture expects mothers to work.

I’ve seen countless posts on Reddit relationships where a man complains that the mother of his young children “won’t get a job.”

A lot of men expect their partners to work — or if they’re willing to support a SAHM, they become resentful and start to expect more control because “I pay for everything.”

Many of us grew up watching our mothers get treated as subordinate because they were dependent on our fathers’ income. I knew I’d never put myself in that position even if a spouse agreed to “let me” stay home.

Nushuz: Answering Islam's avatar

I actually love the idea of tying parenthood to Social Security benefits. It recognizes something we usually ignore: raising children isn’t just a personal choice, it’s labor that sustains the entire system.

At the same time, I don’t think everyone should have children. A child deserves to be loved, wanted, and cherished. That starts with being brought into a home where they are genuinely desired, not into a situation where they exist as a financial strategy or a means to secure benefits.

Children can be deeply fulfilling for those who want them. But for someone who doesn’t, it can feel like a life sentence. That’s not fair to the parent, and it’s certainly not fair to the child.

So I think the purpose of these kinds of interventions should be very clear: not to incentivize parenthood indiscriminately, but to enable it for those who already desire it and are holding back because of structural risks.

Make it easier, safer, and more rational for people who want children to have them. Not to push people into it who don’t.

Really well written piece.

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