Demographics Now and Then
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Demographics Now and Then
TFR in Afro Caribbean countries has absolutely cratered. Jamaica now has a TFR of sub 1.4. Bahamas the same. Barbados even lower at ~1.3, Dominica likely just as low if not lower (births have collapsed & TFR likely 1.3). USVI has also seen births collapse.…
Many Caribbean countries now rely of foreign labor (often from Haiti). But Haitian TFR has also declined from 4.39 in 2000 to sub 3.5 in 2010 to 2.81 in 2021. Haitian TFR will likely be at replacement by 2030.
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Remember that the United States is heading for a TFR of sub 1.63 this year (the lowest ever recorded). If the trends in the above graphic hold expect TFR to be sub 1.5 by 2026 & as low as 1.3 by 2030 with deep economic+social consequences from pensions to healthcare to national security.
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Demographics Now and Then
Remember that the United States is heading for a TFR of sub 1.63 this year (the lowest ever recorded). If the trends in the above graphic hold expect TFR to be sub 1.5 by 2026 & as low as 1.3 by 2030 with deep economic+social consequences from pensions to…
However, know that this is far from a foregone conclusion. American young people want more not less children. While the vast majority will come nowhere near the desired TFR of 2.5, increasing TFR from ~1.62 to 1.8 is well within the realm of the possible.
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Hungary has now recorded births for the first eleven months of 2023 & the country has witnessed a birth decline of ~3% from 2023. Hungarian TFR may even fall to sub 1.5. This is very disheartening as this fall comes in spite of unprecedented pronatalist policy.

The β€œtwo speed Hungary” likely explains a lot. TFR in Budapest is very low and many young people there are far less interested in having large families than those in the rest of the country who take Orban up on his pronatalist incentives.
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Demographically 2023 was a very rough year for the EU:
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πŸ‡©πŸ‡ͺπŸ‘ΆGermany may see less than 700,000 births for 2023 for the first time since 2013. The fertility rate is also likely to sink to below 1.4 for the first time since 2011. Ethnic German births likely to be ~75% of the total & ethnic German TFR will be lower than national TFR.
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Demographics Now and Then
πŸ‡©πŸ‡ͺπŸ‘ΆGermany may see less than 700,000 births for 2023 for the first time since 2013. The fertility rate is also likely to sink to below 1.4 for the first time since 2011. Ethnic German births likely to be ~75% of the total & ethnic German TFR will be lower…
Very interesting Destatis chart shows the population pyramid of Germany with the population with & without migrant background. As you can see those without a migrant background have an absolutely massive percentage above age 50.
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This latest German population pyramid shows that both foreigners & those with a migrant background (many Europeans amongst them btw) have a much younger and healthier pyramid than the much larger ethnic German population. Ethnic Germans largest single cohort is currently 50-65.

But you can also see that both foreigners and Germans with a migrant background are having fewer children which is something witnessed in most EU countries. Not only is titular nation TFR falling but migrant TFR as well (in many cases plummeting even further).

Also side note: Ethnic German births in Germany may be as low as 64% of total births this year.
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If this report is true and births in the PRC come in at only ~8M for 2023 then (even with a substantial Dragon Year boost) we are probably looking at a maximum of 10-11.5M births and possibly as low as 9.8M in 2024. This is a very big deal.

https://t.co/rUFPCLnQRZ
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Of the worlds ten largest economies SIX (China, Germany, Japan, Italy, Brazil & Canada) are facing degrees of demographic crisis. Falling fertility and it’s impact on our societies should be THE topic of 2024. Wishing all of you a safe, healthy, happy & prosperous New Year!
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The European Union & the United States are diverging sharply demographically. The EU has the absolutely massive 1959-1969 cohort beginning to enter retirement now being replaced by the much smaller 2000-2010 cohort. In the US boomers being replaced in labor force by huge Gen Z.
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Demographics Now and Then
The European Union & the United States are diverging sharply demographically. The EU has the absolutely massive 1959-1969 cohort beginning to enter retirement now being replaced by the much smaller 2000-2010 cohort. In the US boomers being replaced in labor…
Hard to see the EU having anywhere near the level of influence they have today into the 2030s. Many industries look set to move away & it is unclear if the EU will have the labor & resources for their massive planned β€œgreen transition” of the entire economy & energy grid.
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Aging East Asia will depend more & more on Southeast Asia for migrants in the years ahead. The problem? There are few countries left with decent birth rates. Developed Economies in East Asia are below 7 births per 1,000. Vietnam, Indonesia & Burma last large ones with 15+ birthrate.
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Demographics Now and Then
Aging East Asia will depend more & more on Southeast Asia for migrants in the years ahead. The problem? There are few countries left with decent birth rates. Developed Economies in East Asia are below 7 births per 1,000. Vietnam, Indonesia & Burma last…
Bear in mind that South Korea, Japan, Taiwan & eventually China will have an absolutely enormous demand for Southeast Asian labor by 2030 with the first three alone likely looking for 600,000 annually from then onwards. Southeast Asians also have many other potential immigration destinations (Filipinos have Canada & the US, Vietnamese the US & Australia etc).
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Demographics Now and Then
Bear in mind that South Korea, Japan, Taiwan & eventually China will have an absolutely enormous demand for Southeast Asian labor by 2030 with the first three alone likely looking for 600,000 annually from then onwards. Southeast Asians also have many other…
Some Southeast Asian countries are already immigration destinations in their own right. Thailand (with a TFR of sub 1.1) already hosts hundreds of thousands of Burmese, Cambodian, & Laotian labor migrants as well as tens of thousands of other Southeast Asian immigrants.
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Demographics Now and Then
Some Southeast Asian countries are already immigration destinations in their own right. Thailand (with a TFR of sub 1.1) already hosts hundreds of thousands of Burmese, Cambodian, & Laotian labor migrants as well as tens of thousands of other Southeast Asian…
South Korea, Taiwan & Japan in particular will face an acute labor shortage starting in 2030 which will dramatically undermine their respective economies. This will obviously have significant global knock on effects.
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US destined for a TFR of ~1.62 for 2023. Lowest fertility rate ever recorded. Births also on track to be the fewest since 1980 when the U.S. was home to only 227 million people as opposed to 334 million plus today. Hispanics only major group with an increase in births.

Vermont TFR likely to be lowest low (~1.3 or lower) for 2023, Alaska falls to 1.8, Hawaii falls to 1.6. Tennessee stays close to 1.8.
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South Korea looks set to squander their last chance cohort (born 1991-1995). The youngest from this group are turning 29 this year with the oldest 33. There is really not the time needed for a significant cultural turnaround. Such shifts often take years to fully materialize.
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