Debt


Debts and deficits: Help for whom?

Vincenzina Santoro | 07 April 2010
 
about this blog | Bookmark and Share

Search this blog

 Subscribe to Demography is Destiny
rss RSS feed of posts

 Recent Posts
Oh Canada!
10 Feb 2012
US Centenarians - Not as Common as Once Thought
8 Feb 2012
Auckland -1.5 million strong
7 Feb 2012
A New UN Report on our Impending Overpopulation
1 Feb 2012
Japanese Earthquakes -  Natural and Demographic
31 Jan 2012

 MercatorNet blogs
Style and culture: Tiger Print
Family social policy: Family Edge
US political scene: Sheila Liaugminas
News about bioethics: BioEdge
From the editors: Conniptions

 Archive
Feb 2012 | Jan 2012 | Dec 2011 | Nov 2011 | more >>

 From MercatorNet's home page

How hedonism became America’s official religion
9 Feb 2012
An edict from the Obama administration has ended the American experiment in religious liberty.

Bombs across the border
10 Feb 2012
The US makes a strong case that its military interventions in Pakistan are just and legal. Whether they’re good is…

A parental defence of highly effective nagging
10 Feb 2012
When a deadly habit becomes a useful tool in the parental armoury.

Lost in Transition III: A collective challenge
9 Feb 2012
Who is to blame for the moral ignorance of young adults, and what is to be done?

Pink Lego
8 Feb 2012
Why are feminists throwing their toys out of the cot over a victory for girl power?


 Tags
Old age, relationships, Underpopulaiton, marriage, population decline, Politics, Census, Belgium, Rugby World Cup, Curtin University, South Africa, Hong Kong, Paul Ehrlich, UNFPA, population, GDP, falling fertility, Nature magazine, videos, Vatican, world population, Norman Borlaug, Chian, Ehrlich, Anglican Church, New Zealand, euthanasia, debt, Washington rally, Moscow Demographic Summit 2011, food production, PETA, Demographic Intelligence, Hispanic, sex selection, demographic winter, human rights, Portugal, population control, sterilisation, fertitily, Brendan O'Neill, elderly, Rick Santorum, HIV, retirement age, Philippines, 7 billion people, Nicholas Eberstadt, demographic decline, Jonathan Sacks, centenarian, wealth, Sterilisation, US, One-child Policy, son preference, Japan earthquake, One Child Policy, Economy, Japan, workforce, Europe, IVF, austria, climate change, happiness, workforce shortage, Gompertz law, immigration, labor shortages, Republican presidential candidate, Brazil, morocco, subsidy, Middle East, Retirement, Recession, Korea, UN, Lithuania, UNICEF, sex ratio, utilitarianism, United States, Sweden, African Americans, birth rate, Asia, South Korea, China, Prince Charles, investment, One-Child Policy, Latvia, poverty, fertility rate, population change, Pension, Ageing, religion,