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From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of gary s
Sent: Saturday, October 29, 2011 9:18 PM
To: Triumph of Content
Subject: [TriumphOfContent] The Economist's take on 7 billion


  

The Economist seems considerably less worried about current population
growth.

Demography 


A tale of three islands


The world's population will reach 7 billion at the end of October. Don't
panic


Oct 22nd 2011 | from the print edition 

 
<http://media.economist.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/full-width/images
/print-edition/20111022_FBP001_0.jpg> 

IN 1950 the whole population of the earth-2.5 billion-could have squeezed,
shoulder to shoulder, onto the Isle of Wight, a 381-square-kilometre rock
off southern England. By 1968 John Brunner, a British novelist, observed
that the earth's people-by then 3.5 billion-would have required the Isle of
Man, 572 square kilometres in the Irish Sea, for its standing room. Brunner
forecast that by 2010 the world's population would have reached 7 billion,
and would need a bigger island. Hence the title of his 1968 novel about
over-population, "Stand on Zanzibar" (1,554 square kilometres off east
Africa).

Brunner's prediction was only a year out. The United Nations' population
division now says the world will reach 7 billion on October 31st 2011
(America's Census Bureau delays the date until March 2012). The UN will even
identify someone born that day as the world's 7 billionth living person. The
6 billionth, Adnan Nevic, was born on October 12th 1999 in Sarajevo, in
Bosnia. He will be just past his 12th birthday when the next billion clicks
over.

That makes the world's population look as if it is rising as fast as ever.
It took 250,000 years to reach 1 billion, around 1800; over a century more
to reach 2 billion (in 1927); and 32 years more to reach 3 billion. But to
rise from 5 billion (in 1987) to 6 billion took only 12 years; and now,
another 12 years later, it is at 7 billion (see chart 1). By 2050, the UN
thinks, there will be 9.3 billion people, requiring an island the size of
Tenerife or Maui to stand on.

Odd though it seems, however, the growth in the world's population is
actually slowing. The peak of population growth was in the late 1960s, when
the total was rising by almost 2% a year. Now the rate is half that. The
last time it was so low was in 1950, when the death rate was much higher.
The result is that the next billion people, according to the UN, will take
14 years to arrive, the first time that a billion milestone has taken longer
to reach than the one before. The billion after that will take 18 years.

 
<http://media.economist.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/290-width/images/
print-edition/20111022_FBC806.gif> 

Once upon a time, the passing of population milestones might have been cause
for celebration. Now it gives rise to jeremiads. As Hillary Clinton's
science adviser, Nina Fedoroff, told the BBC in 2009, "There are probably
already too many people on the planet." But the notion of "too many" is more
flexible than it seems. The earth could certainly not support 10 billion
hunter-gatherers, who used much more land per head than modern farm-fed
people do. But it does not have to. The earth might well not be able to
support 10 billion people if they had exactly the same impact per person as
7 billion do today. But that does not necessarily spell Malthusian doom,
because the impact humans have on the earth and on each other can change.

For most people, the big questions about population are: can the world feed
9 billion mouths by 2050? Are so many people ruining the environment? And
will those billions, living cheek-by-jowl, go to war more often? On all
three counts, surprising as it seems, reducing population growth any more
quickly than it is falling anyway may not make much difference.

Start with the link between population and violence. It seems plausible that
the more young men there are, the more likely they will be to fight. This is
especially true when groups are competing for scarce resources. Some argue
that the genocidal conflict in Darfur, western Sudan, was caused partly by
high population growth, which led to unsustainable farming and conflicts
over land and water. Land pressure also influenced the Rwandan genocide of
1994, as migrants in search of a livelihood in one of the world's most
densely populated countries moved into already settled areas, with
catastrophic results.

But there is a difference between local conflicts and what is happening on a
global scale. Although the number of sovereign states has increased almost
as dramatically as the world's population over the past half-century, the
number of wars between states fell fairly continuously during the period.
The number of civil wars rose, then fell. The number of deaths in battle
fell by roughly three-quarters. These patterns do not seem to be influenced
either by the relentless upward pressure of population, or by the slackening
of that pressure as growth decelerates. The difference seems to have been
caused by fewer post-colonial wars, the ending of cold-war alliances (and
proxy wars) and, possibly, the increase in international peacekeepers.

More people, more damage?

Human activity has caused profound changes to the climate, biodiversity,
oceanic acidity and greenhouse-gas levels in the atmosphere. But it does not
automatically follow that the more people there are, the worse the damage.
In 2007 Americans and Australians emitted almost 20 tonnes of carbon dioxide
each. In contrast, more than 60 countries-including the vast majority of
African ones-emitted less than 1 tonne per person.

This implies that population growth in poorer countries (where it is
concentrated) has had a smaller impact on the climate in recent years than
the rise in the population of the United States (up by over 50% in
1970-2010). Most of the world's population growth in the next 20 years will
occur in countries that make the smallest contribution to greenhouse gases.
Global pollution will be more affected by the pattern of economic growth-and
especially whether emerging nations become as energy-intensive as America,
Australia and China.

Population growth does make a bigger difference to food. All things being
equal, it is harder to feed 7 billion people than 6 billion. According to
the World Bank, between 2005 and 2055 agricultural productivity will have to
increase by two-thirds to keep pace with rising population and changing
diets. Moreover, according to the bank, if the population stayed at 2005
levels, farm productivity would have to rise by only a quarter, so more
future demand comes from a growing population than from consumption per
person.

Increasing farm productivity by a quarter would obviously be easier than
boosting it by two-thirds. But even a rise of two-thirds is not as much as
it sounds. From 1970-2010 farm productivity rose far more than this, by over
three-and-a-half times. The big problem for agriculture is not the number of
people, but signs that farm productivity may be levelling out. The growth in
agricultural yields seems to be slowing down. There is little new farmland
available. Water shortages are chronic and fertilisers are over-used. All
these-plus the yield-reductions that may come from climate change, and
wastefulness in getting food to markets-mean that the big problems are to do
with supply, not demand.

None of this means that population does not matter. But the main impact
comes from relative changes-the growth of one part of the population
compared with another, for example, or shifts in the average age of the
population-rather than the absolute number of people. Of these relative
changes, falling fertility is most important. The fertility rate is the
number of children a woman can expect to have. At the moment, almost half
the world's population-3.2 billion-lives in countries with a fertility rate
of 2.1 or less. That number, the so-called replacement rate, is usually
taken to be the level at which the population eventually stops growing.

 
<http://media.economist.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/290-width/images/
print-edition/20111022_FBC807.gif> 

The world's decline in fertility has been staggering (see chart 2). In 1970
the total fertility rate was 4.45 and the typical family in the world had
four or five children. It is now 2.45 worldwide, and lower in some
surprising places. Bangladesh's rate is 2.16, having halved in 20 years.
Iran's fertility fell from 7 in 1984 to just 1.9 in 2006. Countries with
below-replacement fertility include supposedly teeming Brazil, Tunisia and
Thailand. Much of Europe and East Asia have fertility rates far below
replacement levels.

The fertility fall is releasing wave upon wave of demographic change. It is
the main influence behind the decline of population growth and, perhaps even
more important, is shifting the balance of age groups within a population.

When gold turns to silver

A fall in fertility sends a sort of generational bulge surging through a
society. The generation in question is the one before the fertility fall
really begins to bite, which in Europe and America was the baby-boom
generation that is just retiring, and in China and East Asia the generation
now reaching adulthood. To begin with, the favoured generation is in its
childhood; countries have lots of children and fewer surviving grandparents
(who were born at a time when life expectancy was lower). That was the
situation in Europe in the 1950s and in East Asia in the 1970s.

But as the select generation enters the labour force, a country starts to
benefit from a so-called "demographic dividend". This happens when there are
relatively few children (because of the fall in fertility), relatively few
older people (because of higher mortality previously), and lots of
economically active adults, including, often, many women, who enter the
labour force in large numbers for the first time. It is a period of smaller
families, rising income, rising life expectancy and big social change,
including divorce, postponed marriage and single-person households. This was
the situation in Europe between 1945 and 1975 ("les trente glorieuses") and
in much of East Asia in 1980-2010.

But there is a third stage. At some point, the gilded generation turns
silver and retires. Now the dividend becomes a liability. There are
disproportionately more old people depending upon a smaller generation
behind them. Population growth stops or goes into reverse, parts of a
country are abandoned by the young and the social concerns of the aged grow
in significance. This situation already exists in Japan. It is arriving fast
in Europe and America, and soon after that will reach East Asia.

A demographic dividend tends to boost economic growth because a large number
of working-age adults increases the labour force, keeps wages relatively
low, boosts savings and increases demand for goods and services. Part of
China's phenomenal growth has come from its unprecedentedly low dependency
ratio-just 38 (this is the number of dependents, children and people over
65, per 100 working adults; it implies the working-age group is almost twice
as large as the rest of the population put together). One study by
Australia's central bank calculated that a third of East Asia's GDP growth
in 1965-90 came from its favourable demography. About a third of America's
GDP growth in 2000-10 also came from its increasing population.

The world as a whole reaped a demographic dividend in the 40 years to 2010.
In 1970 there were 75 dependents for every 100 adults of working age. In
2010 the number of dependents dropped to just 52. Huge improvements were
registered not only in China but also in South-East Asia and north Africa,
where dependency ratios fell by 40 points. Even "ageing" Europe and America
ended the period with fewer dependents than at the beginning.

A demographic dividend does not automatically generate growth. It depends on
whether the country can put its growing labour force to productive use. In
the 1980s Latin America and East Asia had similar demographic patterns. But
while East Asia experienced a long boom, Latin America endured its "lost
decade". One of the biggest questions for Arab countries, which are
beginning to reap their own demographic dividends, is whether they will
follow East Asia or Latin America.

But even if demography guarantees nothing, it can make growth harder or
easier. National demographic inheritances therefore matter. And they differ
a lot.

Where China loses

Hania Zlotnik, the head of the UN's Population Division, divides the world
into three categories, according to levels of fertility (see map). About a
fifth of the world lives in countries with high fertility-3 or more. Most
are Africans. Sub-Saharan Africa, for example, is one of the fastest-growing
parts of the world. In 1975 it had half the population of Europe. It
overtook Europe in 2004, and by 2050 there will be just under 2 billion
people there compared with 720m Europeans. About half of the 2.3 billion
increase in the world's population over the next 40 years will be in Africa.

 
<http://media.economist.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/full-width/images
/print-edition/20111022_FBM946.gif> 

The rest of the world is more or less equally divided between countries with
below-replacement fertility (less than 2.1) and those with intermediate
fertility (between 2.1 and 3). The first group consists of Europe, China and
the rest of East Asia. The second comprises South and South-East Asia, the
Middle East and the Americas (including the United States).

The low-fertility countries face the biggest demographic problems. The
elderly share of Japan's population is already the highest in the world. By
2050 the country will have almost as many dependents as working-age adults,
and half the population will be over 52. This will make Japan the oldest
society the world has ever known. Europe faces similar trends, less acutely.
It has roughly half as many dependent children and retired people as
working-age adults now. By 2050 it will have three dependents for every four
adults, so will shoulder a large burden of ageing, which even sustained
increases in fertility would fail to reverse for decades. This will cause
disturbing policy implications in the provision of pensions and health care,
which rely on continuing healthy tax revenues from the working population.

At least these countries are rich enough to make such provision. Not so
China. With its fertility artificially suppressed by the one-child policy,
it is ageing at an unprecedented rate. In 1980 China's median age (the point
where half the population is older and half younger) was 22 years, a
developing-country figure. China will be older than America as early as 2020
and older than Europe by 2030. This will bring an abrupt end to its
cheap-labour manufacturing. Its dependency ratio will rise from 38 to 64 by
2050, the sharpest rise in the world. Add in the country's sexual
imbalances-after a decade of sex-selective abortions, China will have 96.5m
men in their 20s in 2025 but only 80.3m young women-and demography may
become the gravest problem the Communist Party has to face.

Many countries with intermediate fertility-South-East Asia, Latin America,
the United States-are better off. Their dependency ratios are not
deteriorating so fast and their societies are ageing more slowly. America's
demographic profile is slowly tugging it away from Europe. Though its
fertility rate may have fallen recently, it is still slightly higher than
Europe's. In 2010 the two sides of the Atlantic had similar dependency
rates. By 2050 America's could be nearly ten points lower.

But the biggest potential beneficiaries are the two other areas with
intermediate fertility-India and the Middle East-and the high-fertility
continent of Africa. These places have long been regarded as demographic
time-bombs, with youth bulges, poverty and low levels of education and
health. But that is because they are moving only slowly out of the early
stage of high fertility into the one in which lower fertility begins to make
an impact.

At the moment, Africa has larger families and more dependent children than
India or Arab countries and is a few years younger (its median age is 20
compared with their 25). But all three areas will see their dependency
ratios fall in the next 40 years, the only parts of the world to do so. And
they will keep their median ages low-below 38 in 2050. If they can make
their public institutions less corrupt, keep their economic policies
outward-looking and invest more in education, as East Asia did, then Africa,
the Middle East and India could become the fastest-growing parts of the
world economy within a decade or so.

 
<http://media.economist.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/290-width/images/
print-edition/20111022_FBP002_0.jpg> Here's looking at you 

Demography, though, is not only about economics. Most emerging countries
have benefited from the sort of dividend that changed Europe and America in
the 1960s. They are catching up with the West in terms of income, family
size and middle-class formation. Most say they want to keep their cultures
unsullied by the social trends-divorce, illegitimacy and so on-that also
affected the West. But the growing number of never-married women in urban
Asia suggests that this will be hard.

If you look at the overall size of the world's population, then, the picture
is one of falling fertility, decelerating growth and a gradual return to the
flat population level of the 18th century. But below the surface societies
are being churned up in ways not seen in the much more static pre-industrial
world. The earth's population may never need a larger island than Maui to
stand on. But the way it arranges itself will go on shifting for centuries
to come.

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