These folks are all pro-life.    Christians should celebrate.

 

REH

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Robert Stennett
Sent: Wednesday, May 04, 2011 7:30 AM
To: EDUCATION RE-DESIGNING WORK INCOME DISTRIBUTION
Subject: [Futurework] U.N. Forecasts 10.1 Billion People by Century's End -
NYTimes.com

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/04/world/04population.html?nl=todaysheadlines
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/04/world/04population.html?nl=todaysheadline
s&emc=tha2> &emc=tha2

 


U.N. Forecasts 10.1 Billion People by Century's End


 
<http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2011/05/04/world/POPULATION_span/POPULA
TION-articleLarge.jpg> 

Moises Saman for The New York Times

Women waiting at a health clinic in southern Malawi. Outreach health
services in remote villages are one of the reasons Malawi has experienced a
drop in child mortality. 


By JUSTIN GILLIS
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/g/justin_gillis/
index.html?inline=nyt-per>  and CELIA W. DUGGER
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/d/celia_w_dugger
/index.html?inline=nyt-per> 


Published: May 3, 2011


The population of the world, long expected to stabilize just above 9 billion
in the middle of the century, will instead keep growing and may hit 10.1
billion by the year 2100, the United Nations
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/u/united_
nations/index.html?inline=nyt-org>  projected in a report
<http://esa.un.org/unpd/wpp/index.htm>  released Tuesday.

Growth in Africa remains so high that the population there could more than
triple in this century, rising from today's one billion to 3.6 billion, the
report said - a sobering forecast for a continent already struggling to
provide food and water for its people. 

The new report comes just ahead of a demographic milestone, with the world
population expected to pass 7 billion in late October, only a dozen years
after it surpassed 6 billion. Demographers called the new projections a
reminder that a problem that helped define global politics in the 20th
century, the population explosion, is far from solved in the 21st. 

"Every billion more people makes life more difficult for everybody - it's as
simple as that," said John Bongaarts, a demographer at the Population
Council, a research group in New York. "Is it the end of the world? No. Can
we feed 10 billion people? Probably. But we obviously would be better off
with a smaller population." 

The projections were made by the United Nations population division, which
has a track record of fairly accurate forecasts. In the new report, the
division raised its forecast for the year 2050, estimating that the world
would most likely have 9.3 billion people then, an increase of 156 million
over the previous estimate for that year, published in 2008. 

Among the factors behind the upward revisions is that fertility is not
declining as rapidly as expected in some poor countries, and has shown a
slight increase in many wealthier countries, including the United States,
Britain and Denmark. 

The director of the United Nations population division, Hania Zlotnik, said
the world's fastest-growing countries, and the wealthy Western nations that
help finance their development, face a choice about whether to renew their
emphasis on programs that encourage family planning. 

Though they were a major focus of development policy in the 1970s and 1980s,
such programs have stagnated in many countries, caught up in ideological
battles over abortion, sex education and the role of women in society.
Conservatives have attacked such programs as government meddling in private
decisions, and in some countries, Catholic groups fought widespread
availability of birth control. And some feminists called for less focus on
population control and more on empowering women. 

Over the past decade, foreign aid to pay for contraceptives - $238 million
in 2009 - has barely budged, according to United Nations estimates. The
United States has long been the biggest donor, but the budget compromise in
Congress last month cut international family planning programs by 5 percent.


"The need has grown, but the availability of family planning services has
not," said Rachel Nugent, an economist at the Center for Global Development
in Washington, a research group. 

Dr. Zlotnik said in an interview that the revised numbers were based on new
forecasting methods and the latest demographic trends. But she cautioned
that any forecast looking 90 years into the future comes with many caveats. 

That is particularly so for some fast-growing countries whose populations
are projected to skyrocket over the next century. For instance, Yemen, a
country whose population has quintupled since 1950, to 25 million, would see
its numbers quadruple again, to 100 million, by century's end, if the
projections prove accurate. Yemen already depends on food imports and faces
critical water shortages
<http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/01/world/middleeast/01yemen.html> . 

In Nigeria, the most populous country in Africa, the report projects that
population will rise from today's 162 million to 730 million by 2100.
Malawi, a country of 15 million today, could grow to 129 million, the report
projected. 

The implicit, and possibly questionable, assumption behind these numbers is
that food and water will be available for the billions yet unborn, and that
potential catastrophes including climate change
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/news/science/topics/globalwarming/index.html?
inline=nyt-classifier> , wars or epidemics will not serve as a brake on
population growth. "It is quite possible for several of these countries that
are smallish and have fewer resources, these numbers are just not
sustainable," Dr. Zlotnik said. 

Well-designed programs can bring down growth rates even in the poorest
countries. Provided with information and voluntary access to birth-control
methods, women have chosen to have fewer children in societies as diverse as
Bangladesh, Iran, Mexico, Sri Lanka and Thailand. 

One message from the new report is that the AIDS epidemic, devastating as it
has been, has not been the demographic disaster that was once predicted.
Prevalence estimates and projections for the human immunodeficiency virus
made for Africa in the 1990s turned out to be too high, and in many
populations, treatment with new drug regimens has cut the death rate from
the disease. 

But the survival of millions of people with AIDS who would have died without
treatment, and falling rates of infant and child mortality - both heartening
trends - also mean that fertility rates for women need to fall faster to
curb population growth, demographers said. 

Other factors have slowed change in Africa, experts said, including women's
lack of power in their relationships with men, traditions like early
marriage and polygamy
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/p/polygamy/ind
ex.html?inline=nyt-classifier> , and a dearth of political leadership. While
about three-quarters of married American women use a modern contraceptive,
the comparable proportions are a quarter of women in East Africa, one in 10
in West Africa, and a mere 7 percent in Central Africa, according to United
Nations statistics. 

"West and Central Africa are the two big regions of the world where the
fertility transition is happening, but at a snail's pace," said John F. May,
a World Bank
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/organizations/w/world_b
ank/index.html?inline=nyt-org>  demographer. 

Some studies suggest that providing easy, affordable access to
contraceptives is not always sufficient. A trial by Harvard researchers in
Lusaka, Zambia, found
<http://www.poppovresearchnetwork.org/Research/InsightonProgramDesign/Experi
mentalApproachesContraceptiveZambia.aspx>  that only when women had greater
autonomy to decide whether to use contraceptives did they have significantly
fewer children. Other studies have found that general education for girls
plays a critical role, in that literate young women are more likely to
understand that family size is a choice. 

The new report suggests that China, which has for decades enforced
restrictive population policies, could soon enter
<http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/29/world/asia/29census.html>  the ranks of
countries with declining populations, peaking at 1.4 billion in the next
couple of decades, then falling to 941 million by 2100. 

The United States is growing faster than many rich countries, largely
because of high immigration
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/i/immigration_
and_refugees/index.html?inline=nyt-classifier>  and higher fertility among
Hispanic immigrants. The new report projects that the United States
population will rise from today's 311 million to 478 million by 2100. 

Neil MacFarquhar contributed reporting.


A version of this article appeared in print on May 4, 2011, on page A1 of
the New York edition with the headline: U.N. Sees Rise For the World To 10.1
Billion.

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