top of page
Search

Do new born babies predict the future economy

No sex, No babies, No economy

Gerald Mullaney

15 August 2025

Certainly babies predict the future economy from hospitals, to child care, to schooling, to trades schools, to university and on into society producing goods and services.


Lets look at predictability for the future


New Zealand produce 156 babies per day.


The Philippine's for example produces 3,960 per day


The predictability is that the future Pilipino economy is secure because each year they are producing the future consumers and that is where economies are heading into a consumer based society.


In the case of NEW ZEALAND it will continue to try and survive with immigration.


Does this mean NZ is a sexless society the figures tell the story.


Yes the future society does rely on babies, marriage and work and also of course religion and praising GOD.


What has caused NZ's sex less society the view is feminism has a lot to do with it, as the female population have been misguided on their true life purpose and that is to get married and have children and produce families with their husband paying the bills.


The future does not look good for NZ and due to nz sexless society the country will be handed to the rich and immigrants and the poor doing the work to keep the rich in style that they are accustomed to.


Yes sex and children are the base of our society and economy and it predicts and produces the future.



 
 
 

Recent Posts

See All
Yawn or jolt

Gerald Mullaney 26 Nov 2026 The question is will the RSBNZ give the economy a huge jolt to liven up the economy today 26 Nov 2025 The view is a 50 basis point cut is possible today if the RBNZ is seri

 
 
 
OCR Pathway is now clear

Gerald Mullaney 21 August 2025 The view is the OCR will reach a low of 2.50% by Nov 2025 From Nov 2025 there will be no further OCR...

 
 
 
Decision made slow is the go

Today 20 AUGUST 2025 the RBNZ decided to keep there foot at the throat of the economy Gerald Mullaney 20 August 2025 What it means they...

 
 
 

Comments


Copyright 2025 © thinkr Publications NZ Limited.

bottom of page