The Office for National Statistics has released data confirming that the proportion of women in England and Wales who remain childless by the age of 45 has reached a historic high of 19.2%. This figure, drawn from the 2021 census, represents a 4% increase from a decade ago and has prompted an urgent review of demographic policy by the Cabinet Office. The trend is not isolated: across the developed world, fertility rates have fallen below replacement level, with South Korea’s rate of 0.72 births per woman being the most extreme example. The implications for the UK are profound, from labour shortages to pension sustainability, and the government is now considering what levers it has to address what some are calling a “baby bust”.
To understand the scale of this shift, consider the physics of population dynamics. A stable population requires a total fertility rate of approximately 2.1 children per woman. The UK currently sits at 1.57, a figure that has been declining steadily since the 1970s. While immigration has masked the effect on headcount, the underlying structure is ageing. By 2030, one in five UK residents will be over 65. This is not a policy choice; it is a consequence of women having fewer children, later in life, or not at all. The reasons are complex and intertwined: the rising cost of housing and childcare, the precarity of the labour market, and a cultural shift towards individualism and career fulfilment all play a role. But the data points to a clear trend that no amount of wishful thinking can reverse.
The government’s review is tasked with examining policies such as enhanced maternity and paternity leave, universal childcare, and direct financial incentives. But evidence from other countries is sobering. Sweden, with its generous parental leave and subsidised childcare, has seen fertility hover around 1.8 for decades. Hungary’s “pro-family” policies, including tax breaks and loans forgiven for couples who have three children, yielded only a temporary bump. Demographer Jennifer Sciubba has described the phenomenon as a “global baby bust” driven by fundamental economic and social changes. The question is not whether we can reverse it, but how we adapt to a smaller, older population.
The analogy I often use is that of a coastline eroding. We can build sea walls and replenish sand, but until we address the rising sea level of economic inequality and gender norms, the tide will keep coming. The real solution may lie in redesigning our economies to be less reliant on perpetual growth and more resilient to demographic decline. This means investing in automation, rethinking pensions, and recognising that a society with fewer children can still thrive if it values all citizens equally. The clock is ticking, but unlike climate change, there is no physical law preventing us from adapting. It is a choice, and it is ours to make.








