Right...... Only for the White's though, right?
"Don't have kids goy".
"No one has kids, import illegals goy".
"Look goy, its good you didn't have kids, its good for the economy".
You can never hate them enough.
Fuck. You.
Archive: https://archive.today/g6Wma
From the post:
>Fertility well below the replacement level of 2.1 is increasingly common in high-income countries, and this trend is often discussed as a source of concern. Here, we argue that persistently low fertility is not only likely but, under plausible economic and demographic conditions, may also be socially and economically advantageous. The demographic transition describes how populations move from initially high mortality and fertility to low and controlled levels of both. As mortality typically declines first, this process initially leads to population growth, which ends when fertility falls to very low levels. Beginning in nineteenth-century France, the transition is now well advanced around the globe, although sub-Saharan Africa lags behind. Originally, it was expected that at the end of the transition life-expectancy gains would level off and fertility would stabilize around the replacement level of 2.1 children per woman, and result in long-term population stability in the absence of migration1. This assumption also underpinned UN population projections for many decades.
Right...... Only for the White's though, right?
"Don't have kids goy".
"No one has kids, import illegals goy".
"Look goy, its good you didn't have kids, its good for the economy".
You can never hate them enough.
Fuck. You.
Archive: https://archive.today/g6Wma
From the post:
>>Fertility well below the replacement level of 2.1 is increasingly common in high-income countries, and this trend is often discussed as a source of concern. Here, we argue that persistently low fertility is not only likely but, under plausible economic and demographic conditions, may also be socially and economically advantageous. The demographic transition describes how populations move from initially high mortality and fertility to low and controlled levels of both. As mortality typically declines first, this process initially leads to population growth, which ends when fertility falls to very low levels. Beginning in nineteenth-century France, the transition is now well advanced around the globe, although sub-Saharan Africa lags behind. Originally, it was expected that at the end of the transition life-expectancy gains would level off and fertility would stabilize around the replacement level of 2.1 children per woman, and result in long-term population stability in the absence of migration1. This assumption also underpinned UN population projections for many decades.