On 15/12/2019 10:44, Robin wrote:
On 15/12/2019 10:25, Graeme Wall wrote:
On 15/12/2019 09:19, Robin wrote:
On 14/12/2019 21:55, Graeme Wall wrote:
Actually the replacement rate is about 2.4 children per couple to
allow for infertility, , infant mortality, gay couples and those who
just don't want children. Currently the average is nearer 1.8 so in
the long term the population of this country is going to shrink
fairly rapidly. The downside is the population is getting older.
It's a phenomenon that is being repeated across the world as people
get better educated and the religious ties are loosened.
I don't know what you mean by "long term" but the ONS project the
population of the UK continuing to increase through to 2043.
After the middle of the century as the offspring of the baby boomers
start to die out and the influence of effective contraception took
hold from the mid 1960s onward.
Thanks for calibrating "long term".
While you may of course be right I'll merely note that the statisticians
at Eurostat do not agree.Â* They project the UK population continuing to
increase (albeit more slowly) through to 2100.
https://ec.europa.eu/eurostat/web/po...ta/main-tables
A quick look at the fertility table shows the rate in the UK varying
from a low of 1.27 in inner London to a high of 1.97 in outer London for
2017. The general trend is consistently falling across the country over
the 5 year period on the chart.
--
Graeme Wall
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