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jimboston wrote:this is a smallsoft idea from smallsoftralph
bigtoughralf wrote:jimboston wrote:this is a smallsoft idea from smallsoftralph
jimmie-boi continues to show his true nature, most of which is his STOOOOPIDITY. Period.
autoload wrote:I got excited to see the now locked, "Should Politics be banned from CC?" thread.
Lots of peeps from the past in that thread.
jimboston wrote:autoload wrote:I got excited to see the now locked, "Should Politics be banned from CC?" thread.
Lots of peeps from the past in that thread.
Too bad your excitement was crushed by the admin lockdown!
Dukasaur wrote:jimboston wrote:autoload wrote:I got excited to see the now locked, "Should Politics be banned from CC?" thread.
Lots of peeps from the past in that thread.
Too bad your excitement was crushed by the admin lockdown!
Don't worry. I'm pretty sure he has enough excitement left to hose down your back.
riskllama wrote:why limit it to just 'murican politics, ralphie? seems to me that the current economic crash & impending demographic collapse over china way are fairly noteworthy & seem like something worth a thread or two, imo...*shrugs*
jimboston wrote:riskllama wrote:why limit it to just 'murican politics, ralphie? seems to me that the current economic crash & impending demographic collapse over china way are fairly noteworthy & seem like something worth a thread or two, imo...*shrugs*
China having a major economic collapse is very scarey.
China is experiencing unprecedented demographic transition together with the radical
social and economic transformation. Demographically speaking China is now a
developed country. However, China’s future population growth is substantial, a solely
result of the population momentum built into the age structure by past fertility and
mortality. 10 percent or 135 million increase is expected in the next 25 years under
the medium fertility scenario. China would reach a maximum population of 1443
million in 2030, followed by a long-term population decline.
Two major changes of the future population age structure of China are continuing
demographic dividend and rapid population ageing. China’s demographic window of
opportunity opened at 1990 and will close at 2033. Having a work force of around one
billion has many advantages if we consider only the dependency ratio in the
population or the labour supply for the development. However, China will be also
experiencing a rapid population ageing after 2015. One fifth to one quarter of the
Chinese population would be older people at age 65 or over after 2035. The year of
2029 would be a turning point in China’s age structure transition, when for the first
time in Chinese history the elderly population would exceed the child population.
jusplay4fun wrote:jimboston wrote:riskllama wrote:why limit it to just 'murican politics, ralphie? seems to me that the current economic crash & impending demographic collapse over china way are fairly noteworthy & seem like something worth a thread or two, imo...*shrugs*
China having a major economic collapse is very scarey.
I have addressed this in another thread:
(...) the birthrate and the declining/aging population of China.China is experiencing unprecedented demographic transition together with the radical
social and economic transformation. Demographically speaking China is now a
developed country. However, China’s future population growth is substantial, a solely
result of the population momentum built into the age structure by past fertility and
mortality. 10 percent or 135 million increase is expected in the next 25 years under
the medium fertility scenario. China would reach a maximum population of 1443
million in 2030, followed by a long-term population decline.
Two major changes of the future population age structure of China are continuing
demographic dividend and rapid population ageing. China’s demographic window of
opportunity opened at 1990 and will close at 2033. Having a work force of around one
billion has many advantages if we consider only the dependency ratio in the
population or the labour supply for the development. However, China will be also
experiencing a rapid population ageing after 2015. One fifth to one quarter of the
Chinese population would be older people at age 65 or over after 2035. The year of
2029 would be a turning point in China’s age structure transition, when for the first
time in Chinese history the elderly population would exceed the child population.
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=236280&start=50
riskllama wrote:jusplay4fun wrote:jimboston wrote:riskllama wrote:why limit it to just 'murican politics, ralphie? seems to me that the current economic crash & impending demographic collapse over china way are fairly noteworthy & seem like something worth a thread or two, imo...*shrugs*
China having a major economic collapse is very scarey.
I have addressed this in another thread:
(...) the birthrate and the declining/aging population of China.China is experiencing unprecedented demographic transition together with the radical
social and economic transformation. Demographically speaking China is now a
developed country. However, China’s future population growth is substantial, a solely
result of the population momentum built into the age structure by past fertility and
mortality. 10 percent or 135 million increase is expected in the next 25 years under
the medium fertility scenario. China would reach a maximum population of 1443
million in 2030, followed by a long-term population decline.
Two major changes of the future population age structure of China are continuing
demographic dividend and rapid population ageing. China’s demographic window of
opportunity opened at 1990 and will close at 2033. Having a work force of around one
billion has many advantages if we consider only the dependency ratio in the
population or the labour supply for the development. However, China will be also
experiencing a rapid population ageing after 2015. One fifth to one quarter of the
Chinese population would be older people at age 65 or over after 2035. The year of
2029 would be a turning point in China’s age structure transition, when for the first
time in Chinese history the elderly population would exceed the child population.
https://www.conquerclub.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=236280&start=50
yeah,maybe...but no one reads what you post because tl;dr...
jusplay4fun wrote:
And let me put this real simple and short for a-llama: Chinese population is declining, and precipitously, too.
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