The Arabs should be worried about the demographic bomb


David P Goldman - Spengler,  May 24th, 2011



Like the vanishing point in a perspective painting, long-term projections
help us order our perceptions of what we see in front of us today. Here's
one to think about, fresh from the just-released update of the United
Nations' population forecasts: At constant fertility, Israel will have more
young people by the end of this century than either Turkey or Iran, and more
than German, Italy or Spain.



Source: United Nations Population Division

With a total fertility rate of three children per woman, Israel's total
population will rise to 24 million by the end of the present century. Iran's
fertility is around 1.7 and falling, while the fertility for ethnic Turks is
only 1.5 (the Kurdish minority has a fertility rate of around 4.5).

Not that the size of land armies matters much in an era of high-tech
warfare, but if present trends continue, Israel will be able to field the
largest land army in the Middle East. That startling data point, though,
should alert analysts to a more relevant problem: among the military powers
in the Middle East, Israel will be the only one with a viable population
structure by the middle of this century.

That is why it is in America's interest to keep Israel as an ally. Israel is
not only the strongest power in the region; in a generation or two it will
be the only power in the region, the last man standing among ruined
neighbors. The demographic time bomb in the region is not the Palestinian
Arabs on the West Bank, as the Israeli peace party wrongly believed, but
rather Israel itself.

The right way to read this projection is backwards: Israelis love children
and have lots of them because they are happy, optimistic and prosperous.
Most of Israel's population increase comes from so-called "secular"
Israelis, who have 2.6 children on average, more than any other people in
the industrial world. The ultra-Orthodox have seven or eight, bringing total
fertility to three children.

Europeans, Turks and Iranians, by contrast, have very few children because
they are grumpy, alienated and pessimistic. It's not so much the projection
of the demographic future cranked out by the United Nations computers that
counts, but rather the implicit vision of the future in the minds of today's
prospective parents.

People who can't be bothered to have children presumably have a very dim
view of days to come. Reams have been written, to be sure, about Europe's
demographic tailspin. Less has been said about Persian pessimism and
Anatolian anomie.

Paradoxically, this makes Israel's present position dangerous, for its
enemies understand that they have a very brief window in which to encircle
the Jewish superpower. The collapse of Egypt and possibly that of Syria
shortens this window. Nothing short of American support for a unilateral
declaration of a Palestinian state on the 1949 armistice lines followed by
economic sanctions against Israel, though, is likely to make a difference,
and this seems unlikely.

Israel already is a high-tech superpower. Israeli leads the Group of 7
industrial nations in patent applications. As Professor Reuven Brenner of
McGill University wrote in the January 2010 issue of First Things:

Today Israel's venture capital industry still raises more funds than any
other venue except the United States. In 2006 alone, 402 Israeli hi-tech
companies raised over $1.62 billion - the highest amount in the past five
years. That same year, Israel had 80 active venture capital funds and over
$10 billion under management, invested in over 1,000 Israeli start-ups.

Maintaining the stunning progress of the past decade will be a challenge,
because Israel's high-tech sector received a one-time boost from Russian
emigration. As Brenner observes:

Of the million Russians who moved to Israel during the 1980s and 1990s, more
than 55 percent had post-secondary education, and more than half held
academic and managerial positions in their former country . This made Israel
the world leader in the scientist and engineer workforce, followed by the
United States with 80 and Germany with 55 scientists and engineers per
10,000 members of its labor force.

Israel's prowess in the arts matches its accomplishments in technology and
business. Israel has become something of a superpower in that most
characteristically Western art form, classical music. In a July 21, 2010,
survey of Israeli music for the webzine Tablet, I wrote, "Israelis take to
classical music - the art form that most clearly creates a sense of the
future - like no other people on earth, to the point that music has become
part of Israel's character, an embodiment of the national genius for
balancing hope and fear."

Israel has one the largest local audience for chamber music recitals of any
country in the world, and its leading musicians occupy top slots around the
world - for example Guy Braunstein, concertmaster (principal violin) of the
Berlin Philharmonic.

This, I believe, explains the implacable hostility of Israel's neighbors, as
well as the Europeans. It is the unquenchable envy of the dying towards the
living. Having failed at Christianity, and afterward failed at neo-pagan
nationalism, Europe has reconciled itself to a quiet passage into oblivion.

Israel's success is a horrible reminder of European failure; its bumptious
nationalism grates against Europe's determination to forget its own ugly
embrace of nationalism; and its implicitly religious raison d'etre provokes
post-Christian rage. Above all, it offends Europe that Israel brims with
life. Some of Europe's great nations may not survive the present century. At
constant fertility, Israel will have more citizens than any of the Eastern
European countries where large numbers of Jews resided prior to the
Holocaust.



Source: United Nations Population Division

In the constant fertility scenario, Israel will end the century at a median
age of 32, while Poland will have a median age of 57. That is an inherently
impossible outcome, because in that case most of Poland's population would
be elderly dependents. To support them, the remaining young people would
have to emigrate and work overseas (perhaps in Israel).

The Muslim world, meanwhile, is turning grey at an unprecedented rate.
Turkey's and Iran's median age will surpass the 40-year mark by mid-century,
assuming constant fertility, while Israel's will stabilize in the mid-30s.
Europe will become an impoverished geriatric ward.



 

 

Source: United Nations Population Division

The implications of these trends have not escaped the leaders of the
affected countries. "If we continue the existing trend, 2038 will mark
disaster for us," Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned in May 2010
(see The heart of TurknessAsia Times Online, March 23, 2011).

I do not know whether Erdogan chose the year 2038 by statistical projection,
or whether he consulted the Muslim counterpart of Harold Camping, but it
will do as well as any. Iran's President Mahmud Ahmadinejad, meanwhile, has
warned repeatedly of "national extinction" if the country's low birth rate
persists.

What happens to Egypt and Syria in this scenario is of small importance.
Neither country will come out of the present crisis in any condition to
fight, if they come out of it at all. Egypt's social structure - with
two-fifths of the country immured in extreme rural poverty, and another
quarter starving on thin subsidies in Cairo and Alexandria - simply is not
viable.

It needed only one swift kick to shatter, and that came from the doubling of
food prices. The rebellion that deposed Hosni Mubarak made things much
worse; the collapse of tourism and other sources of foreign exchange, the
jump in import prices, and flight capital have left Egypt without the funds
to cover half its annual import bill. The country will be broke by year-end,
despite US President Barack Obama's aid package (The hunger to come in Egypt
Asia Times Online, May 10, 2011).

Development economists have known for years that a disaster was in the
works. A 2009 World Bank report on Arab food security warned, "Arab
countries are very vulnerable to fluctuations in international commodity
markets because they are heavily dependent on imported food. Arab countries
are the largest importers of cereal in the world. Most import at least 50
percent of the food calories they consume." The trouble is that the Arab
regimes made things worse rather than better.

Egypt's rulers of the past 60 years intentionally transformed what once was
the breadbasket of the Mediterranean into a starvation trap. They did so
through tragedy, not oversight. Keeping a large part of one's people
illiterate on subsistence farms is the surest method of social control.

Crop yields in Egypt are a fifth of the best American levels, and by design,
for no Egyptian government wished to add more displaced peasants to the 17
million people now crowded into Cairo. Syrian President Basher al-Assad made
a few tentative steps in this direction, and got a 100,000 landless farmers
living in tent cities around Damascus (Food and Syria's failure Asia Times
Online March 29, 2011).

Gamal Abdel Nasser, Anwar Sadat and Mubarak did not invent the system.
Post-revolutionary Russia imprisoned its peasants on collective farms; as
the Mexican historian Enrique Krauze showed (in his 1992 book
TextosHereticos), post-revolutionary Mexico emulated the Stalinist model of
social control and imposed its own system of collective farms during the
1930s.

Mexico eventually dumped a fifth of its population on its northern neighbor,
mainly rural people from the impoverished south. The remaining Mexican poor
provided an inexhaustible source of foot-soldiers for the drug cartels with
which the Mexican government is fighting a low-intensity civil war.

Egypt, the most populous Arab country, postponed these problems for three
generations. It is governable only by military rule, de facto or de jure,
because the military is the only institution that can take peasants straight
from the farm and assimilate them into a disciplined social structure.

There is no civil society underneath the military. The collapse of Mubarak's
military dictatorship came about when food price inflation revealed its
incapacity to meet the population's basic needs. But the collapse of
military rule and the flight of the army-linked oligarchy that milked the
Egyptian economy for 60 years is a near-term disaster.

In place of the orderly corruption over which Mubarak presided, there is a
scramble on the part of half-organized political groups to get control of
the country's shrinking supply of basic goods. Civic violence likely will
claim more lives than hunger.

Refugees from Libya and Tunisia have swamped the refugee camps on the
closest Italian island, and hundreds have drowned in small boats attempting
to cross the Mediterranean. By the end of this year, tourists on the Greek
islands may see thousands of small boats carrying hungry Egyptians seeking
help. Europe's sympathy for the Arab side may vanish under an inundation of
refugees.

Events are most likely to overtake diplomacy. The sort of economic and
demographic imbalances implied by the projections shown above reflect back
into the present. Chaos in Egypt, Syria and other Arab countries probably
will pre-empt the present focus on Israel and the Palestinians. It would not
be surprising if the Palestinians were to mount another Intifada, or Egypt
and Syria were to initiate one last war against Israel. It might be their
last opportunity.

But I rate the probably of another war at well under 50%. The internal
problems of Egypt and Syria are more likely to make war too difficult to
wage.

Spengler is channeled by David P Goldman. Comment on this article in
Spengler's Expat Bar forum.



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