FACTOID # 1: Andorrans live the longest, four years longer than in neighbouring France and Spain.
 
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People Statistics > Total fertility rate (2010) by country

VIEW DATA:   Totals  
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Showing values for 2010. Select another time period:
Rank   Countries  Amount  Date  
Weighted average: 0.0 children born/woman  

Historical countries, unions or other regions:
European Union 1.51 children born/woman   


DEFINITION: The average number of children that would be born per woman if all women lived to the end of their child-bearing years and bore children according to a given fertility rate at each age. The total fertility rate is a more direct measure of the level of fertility than the crude birth rate, since it refers to births per woman. This indicator shows the potential for population growth in the country. High rates will also place some limits on the labor force participation rates for women. Large numbers of children born to women indicate large family sizes that might limit the ability of the families to feed and educate their children.

SOURCE: CIA World Factbooks 18 December 2003 to 28 March 2011

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CITATION

"Total fertility rate (2010) by country", CIA World Factbooks 18 December 2003 to 28 March 2011. Retrieved from http://www.NationMaster.com/graph/peo_tot_fer_rat-people-total-fertility-rate&date=2010

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COMMENTARY     

Jenny
7th September 2011
I need to say that, Taiwan and Hong Kong are not countries.
Chitransh
29th June 2011
India is at better position any how! do dashamlaha chhaha, bachche per woman, accha hai, pure world ka average hai!
José Álvarez
27th May 2011
It seems that a lot of countries are in the process of disappearing. Pope Paul VI's "Humanae Vitae" was derided by progressive Europe, that now is in the process of disappearing. May be Africa is the future (see that China is also below replacement level). This is the consequence of demographic global policies of the rich countries of the West, mainly EE.UU. and Great Britain, throughout the 20th century.
Paganel
22nd August 2010
Cautious parents have one or two children in order to give them the best possible educations. Careless parents have as many children as they can, not caring about the future. As a result, strangely, cautious parents make weak nations while careless parents make strong nations. This paradox was observed by Paul Valéry.
Nerd
16th January 2010
Norways total fertility rate was 1.96 in 2008. Not 1.78 as stated in the table.
Source:
http://www.ssb.no/en/fodte/tab-2009-04-02-05-en.html

How reliable are the numbers presented here? Does anyone noe better sources?
Alan
24th November 2009
Ok, there are hoo ha over the recent report that Malaysia's TFR is at 2.2, rather than 2.9 something. How can we confirm this fact?
Lithuanian20
6th November 2009
In Lithuania now it's 1.47 per woman
ng
7th September 2009
My country is so f-uped that people don't wanna breed anymore. Or Maybe for once in 5000 years, women of my nation feel liberated in this respect!
T.F.
17th August 2009
It seems that even if you fix the numbers in error on this table the point is the same. Nations fail to follow God's general revelation from the Bible to keep personal responsibility, marriage, family, government and nationalism all in check by keeping corruption out of them. Those nations will be removed from history. Nations that heed God's advice are sustained within a four generational cycle so maybe poor people have more going for them than we think.
Frederic Payeur
21st July 2009
Most of the data in this table is wrong. Check for example the latest TFR of UK or Sweden in their respective statistical office to confirm. UK is 1.95 in 2008, not 1.66. Sweden is 1.91, not 1.67. Finland is 1.85, not 1.73.
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