

YAWA GUYS NA VIDEO ALL NAKO SI COLET @bini_colet HELLO AKO TO PERO WALA NA SCREEN RECORD PATYA NAKO
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YAWA GUYS NA VIDEO ALL NAKO SI COLET @bini_colet HELLO AKO TO PERO WALA NA SCREEN RECORD PATYA NAKO

[🎥] #BINI Voice Diaries | for Blooms, from #COLET — 260407 Only a few days left before our Coachella debut! 🎵🎡🌴✨ Here's a little something for BLOOMs, from BINI Colet. 🌸 🔗 weverse.io/bini/media/2-1… #BINI_Colet #BINI_Coachella

CRUSH NA CRUSH KITA AIAH ARCETA

The Philippines is a fantastic example of how deep and fast the drop in fertility is nearly everywhere on the planet. Just last week, on March 30, 2026, the Philippine Statistics Authority released the 2025 National Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS). The total fertility rate for the last three years has reached 1.7 children per woman, a dramatic fall from 4.1 in 1993, and well below the replacement rate (around 2.1 for a country like the Philippines). Since the NDHS computes the total fertility rate over three years, and it is dropping quickly, the total fertility rate for 2025 alone should be around 1.6, the same level as in the U.S. Let me repeat this: the Philippines and the U.S. have roughly the same total fertility rate. But U.S. income per capita is about 7.3 times the Philippine income per capita (when adjusted for purchasing power parity). Or to put it differently, Philippine income per capita today is the same as the U.S. had in 1910. In that year, the total fertility rate of the U.S. was around 3.5. At the same level of income per capita, the Philippines has a total fertility rate that is less than half. In some more urban regions, such as Calabarzon, the total fertility rate is 1.3. Historically, the rest of the country has followed the patterns of regions like Calabarzon with some lag, so the most likely scenario is that in a few years, the Philippines will have a total fertility rate of around 1.3 as well. Compared with the United Nations World Population Prospects (WPP), the Philippines is now at the fertility level the WPP had forecast for 2047, despite the aggressive reduction it made to the Philippines’ forecast fertility between 2022 and 2024. The Philippines is interesting because, compared with other Asian countries, it is a relatively religious and rural country without the Confucian obsession with education found in China or South Korea. It is also a country that many still associate with high fertility. Just yesterday, one reader left a comment on my previous post on fertility, using the Philippines as an example of high fertility, that “refuted” my claims. No, it does not. Finally, three technical points. First, I am reporting total fertility, not completed fertility (and yes, I am keenly aware of the difference between the two). Looking at age-specific fertility rates suggests that completed fertility for younger women will actually be below the current total fertility rate. Second, no, emigration does not matter here. I am talking about fertility rates, not birth rates. Third, the official release: psa.gov.ph/content/fertil…



BINI lands on @RollingStone’s ‘20 Acts We Can’t Wait to See at #Coachella’ 🔥🌴 Ranking No. 15 on the list!💝 Read the full article: rollingstone.com/music/music-li… #BINI #BINI_Coachella