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Crémieux
@cremieuxrecueil
Today's total fertility rates look very worrisome.

Since people today are delaying fertility more and more, they look worse than eventual, completed fertility rate.
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Crémieux
@cremieuxrecueil
This delay–a tempo effect–really only becomes worrying when it translates to health problems or a decline in completed fertility–a quantum effect.

In several countries, completed fertility is stable despite generally falling TFRs.
Crémieux
@cremieuxrecueil
A really wonderful thing is that you can make likely accurate projections about future completed fertility levels.

In the case of Sweden, here's how @Scientific_Bird's projections look:
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Crémieux
@cremieuxrecueil
Doing this for the western Mediterranean nations, the projections are actually quite... happy!

It seems they're likely to have stable fertility in the near future.
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Crémieux
@cremieuxrecueil
The levels could still serve to be higher, and there's a lot we can do to make that happen.

But stabilization is still something to cheer about when the default assumption is universal decline.

And there *are* areas that even this optimistic method shows to be in free-fall:
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Crémieux
@cremieuxrecueil
If you want to learn more about this, I highly recommend reading the piece these charts came from, here: inquisitivebird.xyz/p/cohort-ferti…

And for a case where tempo led to a quantum decline, see: demographic-research.org/articles/volum…
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