The failure of Hungary’s pro-natalist policies to meaningfully reverse population decline is a stark warning to the West. Despite spending 5% of GDP on childcare subsidies, housing support, and tax breaks for larger families, the country’s fertility rate has stagnated at 1.5 children per woman — well below the replacement level of 2.1. This is not merely a Budapest problem; it mirrors the demographic sclerosis afflicting much of the developed world. And the market is correct to price in long-run stagnation: a shrinking labour force, rising dependency ratios, and fiscal drag.
Investors would be fools to ignore the implications. Lower birth rates mean fewer workers, weaker consumption, and higher social costs. In Hungary, the government’s spending spree has inflated the budget deficit to 6.7% of GDP, pushing up bond yields and stoking inflationary pressure. The forint has lost 12% against the euro over the past year — a classic symptom of capital flight from a nation grappling with structural decline. This is what happens when politicians treat demographics as a short-term spending problem rather than a deep-seated cultural and economic malady.
The unfortunate truth is that throwing money at childbearing fails to address the core issues: housing affordability, labour market rigidity, and the opportunity cost of parenthood. In London, we understand that markets hate uncertainty. The demographic trend is one of the most predictable certainties there is, yet policymakers act as if a few billion in subsidies can reverse it. They cannot. The result is a costly experiment that delivers neither demographic stability nor fiscal credibility, leaving taxpayers to foot the bill.
Britain’s own fertility rate has fallen to 1.6, and the Treasury’s coffers are already feeling the strain. With an ageing population, gilt yields are increasingly sensitive to long-term growth expectations. The Bank of England may keep rates high to contain imported inflation from a falling pound, but this only chokes the private sector. The lesson from Hungary is clear: pro-natalist policies are a politically convenient stick to beat the demographic drum, but they treat the symptom, not the cause.
What actually works? Immigration is the obvious, if unpalatable, answer — but it comes with its own frictions. The other is productivity growth. A smaller workforce must be more efficient. Yet the UK’s productivity growth has been stuck at 0.5% annually, barely enough to sustain living standards. Central banks are running out of tools. Quantitative easing has become a crutch; real change requires structural reform to housing, childcare, and education.
This is not a column for alarm - it is a call for clear-eyed realism. The market knows what the politicians refuse to admit: that demographics are destiny. Ignoring them only deepens the crisis. The bottom line? We are spending our way into a demographic hole, and the interest payments are coming due.








