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  1. Aegeansunset12 on

    Greece begun losing population after 2010s (now it’s up again because of remigration and immigration) so turkey given it has a decade younger population on average has 3-4 decades before its population falls. Which means that as Greece falls bellow 10 million people Turkey may exceed 100 million people (!) not accounting the rise of Islam in the region and Erdogan inviting extreme Muslim people in Turkey.

  2. kicklhimintheballs on

    Turkey had an extreme birth rate collapse, now the TFR is on the same level as other European countries. If accounting only the Turkish majority regions it’d be even lower around 1.3-1.2

  3. Always hated this emphasys on the replacement TFR threshold. There is absolutely no problem if your TFR is 1.6-1.8, especially is you have limited immigration as well. Your population may decrease but very slowly. However a TFR of 1.0-1.2 is a complete disaster, the relationship is not linear. Instead, everyone treats all TFRs below 2.1 almost the same…

  4. Funny how it’s the same year as voting rights for women were introduced. (Switzerland)

  5. Secret_Wish_584 on

    Really shows that we went from bad to worse despite them telling us that we live better.

    Yes, all the world has knowm technological advancements lol

    If natality is so low it means it’s BAD for the continent. It has become less relevant than Asia and Africa

  6. SherbertMindless8205 on

    Would be interesting to see this compared to when birth control became widely available.

  7. Need to bring back „communism“ for the people to breed in Eastern Europe, noted

  8. Sufficient-Ocelot996 on

    Hey look it’s a map of the year each European country decided to get serious about stopping grown men from knocking up 15-16 year old girls

  9. We Europeans really need to get our birthrates up, from catastrophic to at least only bad. We have been below replacement level for decades now, as this map amply demonstrates, and with so much aging already baked in our current trajectory is one of demographic, economic and cultural suicide and geopolitical irrelevance. And while it’s true fertility rates are dropping across the world, timing matters greatly. Many countries and regions outside the West have only recently dropped below replacement and still have the benefit of demographic dividend for a few more decades due to large recent birth cohorts. Our period of demographic latency however is gone. Broad action is urgently needed to at least stabilise matters.

    https://www.mckinsey.com/mgi/our-research/dependency-and-depopulation-confronting-the-consequences-of-a-new-demographic-reality

    (Before anyone asks. I’m a European millenial and i have young children. My life did not end and in fact it has been a great, grounding and rewarding experience overall.)

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