Joseph Chamie is a former director of the United Nations
Population Division and he has written an interesting article which explains that the real population problem is not re-producing enough.
He writes:
“Aside from a global mortality catastrophe, the future size
of the world’s population is determined basically by the number of children
women bear. If the average number of births per woman remains more than about
two, world population continues to increase. However, if women on average have
less than two births, then world population eventually decreases. A fertility
rate of 2.1 births per woman under low mortality conditions is the replacement
level, which over time results in population stabilisation…
…As a result of the high fertility rates and comparatively
low death rates, world population grew very rapidly during the 20th century,
especially in the second half. World population nearly quadrupled during the
past century, an unprecedented demographic phenomenon, increasing from 1.6 to
6.1 billion. Also during the past 50 years, historic declines in fertility
rates occurred, resulting in a halving of the world’s average rate to 2.5
births per woman. Those remarkable fertility declines are unequivocal and widespread,
with lower rates in virtually every country…
…The transition to below replacement fertility also occurred
across a broad and diverse range of developing countries, including Brazil,
China, Costa Rica, Iran, Lebanon, South Korea, Singapore, Thailand, Tunisia and
Vietnam. In sum, 75 countries, or close to half of the world’s population, are
experiencing fertility rates below the replacement level…
…The forces that brought about declines in fertility to
historic lows are widely recognised and include lower mortality rates,
increased urbanisation, widespread education, improvements in the status of
women, availability of modern contraceptives and delayed marriage and
childbearing. Other important factors include the costs of childrearing,
employment and economic independence of women, divorce and separation, the
decline of marriage, co-habitation, childless lifestyles and the need to save
for longer years of retirement and elder care. Those forces and factors are
likely to continue and become increasingly widespread globally…
…According to United Nations medium-variant population
projections, by mid-century the number of countries with below replacement
fertility is expected to nearly double, reaching 139 countries. Together those
countries will account for 75 percent of the world’s population at that time. Some
of the populous countries expected to fall below the replacement fertility
level by 2050 include Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Mexico, South Africa and
Turkey. Looking further into the future, below replacement fertility is
expected in 184 countries by the end of the century, with the global fertility
rate falling below two births per woman.
It is certainly difficult to imagine rapid transitions to
low fertility in today’s high-fertility countries, such as Chad, Mali, Niger
and Nigeria, where average rates are more than six births per woman. However,
rapid transitions from high to low fertility levels have happened in diverse
social, economic and political settings. With social and economic development,
including those forces favouring low fertility, and the changing lifestyles of
women and men, the transition to below replacement fertility in nearly all the
remaining countries with high birth rates may well occur in the coming decades
of the 21st century."
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