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Associated Press, February 25,
2005
U.N.: World population
to hit 9B in 2050
By Edith M. Lederer, Associated Press Writer
UNITED NATIONS The world's population
will increase by 40% to 9.1 billion in 2050,
but virtually all the growth will be in the
developing world, especially in the 50 poorest
countries, the U.N. Population Division said.
n a report Thursday, the division said the population
in less developed countries is expected to
swell from 5.3 billion today to 7.8 billion
in 2050. By contrast, the population of richer
developed countries will remain mostly unchanged,
at 1.2 billion.
"It is going to be a strain on the world,"
said Hania Zlotnik, the division's new director.
She said the expected growth will be concentrated
in countries that already struggle to provide
adequate shelter, health care and education.
The report reconfirmed many trends, including
an increasingly aging population in developed
countries. But it said immigration would prevent
the overall population in richer countries
from declining.
The United States is projected to be the major
net recipient of international migrants, 1.1
million annually, with its population increasing
from 298 million in 2005 to 394 million in
2050, the report said.
Between 2005 and 2050, population growth in eight
countries India, Pakistan, Nigeria,
Congo, Bangladesh, Uganda, the United States,
Ethiopia and China is likely to make
up half the world's increase, the report said.
Median fertility is expected to decline from
2.6 children per woman today to slightly over
2 children per woman in 2050.
Zlotnik said India's population will surpass
China's in the coming decades because its fertility,
currently at 3 children per woman, is higher
than China's, estimated at 1.7 children per
woman.
In 2000-2005, fertility levels remained above
5 children per woman in 35 of the 148 developing
countries, including 30 of the poorest nations.
The pace of decline in several countries in
sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia was slower
than anticipated.
In southern Africa, the region with the highest
AIDS prevalence, life expectancy has fallen
from 62 years in 1995 to 48 years in 2000-2005,
and is projected to decrease further to 43
years over the next decade before a slow recovery
starts, it said.
Thoraya Obaid, executive director of the U.N.
Population Fund, said the new projections should
spur more action to stop the spread of HIV/AIDS
and help couples freely determine the size
of their families.
"We must take more urgent action to promote
access to reproductive health, including family
planning, and fight HIV/AIDS to save millions
of lives from AIDS and maternal death, as well
as to reduce poverty in developing countries,"
she said in a statement.
In 2002 the Population Division had estimated
global population in 2050 of 8.9 billion.
Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights
reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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