Global fertility rates are declining, with concerns raised about the impact on various countries such as Canada and South Korea. Canada faces challenges due to low fertility among white Canadians since the 60s, while South Korea recently set a record for the lowest birth rate. The issue extends to Asia, where women are having fewer babies, raising questions about the future ethnic compositions of countries.
No, developed Asia TFRs are the real short termism. https://t.co/wo0hi0lMxg
Why women in Asia are having fewer babies: https://t.co/LxWf9iC2CL
No one talked about returning to anything. That’s a straw man. Fertility is not the question either, with Asian fertility either lower than white or heading that way fast. Question is where, between Japan and Dubai, does the country wish to go on ethnic change rates *going… https://t.co/eCMzP8C9VH
What declining birth rates mean for the world This week, South Korea broke its own world record for the lowest birth rate in the world. 230,000 babies were born there last year, in a country with a population over 50 million. But declining birth rates isn’t exclusive to… https://t.co/ejwuoNtx9L
The idea that Canada can somehow magically return to the ethnic composition of 1950, 1970 or even 2000 is a pipe dream for at least two reasons which I repeat: -Low fertility among white Canadians, a trend that started in the 60s and early 70s before mass migration. By the 70s,… https://t.co/cQ5utEIfs1
The troubling decline in the global fertility rate https://t.co/Qz0RK5trdM