@Husky_Khan @Ricardolindo Just how much do you think that extreme German male longevity (ages 107+) is going to be affected in Germany by the fact that Germans lost an extremely massive amount of their 1910s-born and 1920s-born men in World War II?
Take a look at just how much of a demographic hole WWII caused for Germany:
Here's a German population pyramid for 1939:
And for 1950:
Adjust the ages by 11 years from pyramid 1 to pyramid 2 to get a proper comparison, since 11 years have passed between 1939 and 1950.
The 1939 one doesn't show any dip in male population from WWI - what it does seem to show is that from 1914 to 1919, the Germans were having far fewer children.
Not really seeing any big loss in the 1950 one from WWII - despite the Germans having lost 11 million men in the war.