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Associated Press, February 16, 2005
U.N Says World's
Population Is Aging Rapidly
Author : Leyla Linton
DATELINE: UNITED NATIONS
Half the world's population will live in cities
in two years, the U.N. chief said Wednesday,
adding that the number of elderly people is
rising rapidly, prompting a need for economic
and social changes.
The biggest problem for developing countries
was high mortality rates, while wealthy countries
faced falling birth rates and the decline in
the working-age population, Secretary-General
Kofi Annan said in a report to the U.N. Economic
and Social Council.
Annan said the population of all countries will
continue to age substantially, but the increase
will be faster in developing countries and
social security systems that depend on workers
to pay for those who are retired will be affected.
"Such rapid growth will require far-reaching
economic and social adjustments in most countries,"
he said.
More people also are living in cities, the report
found. It predicted that half the world will
live in urban areas by 2007. In less developed
regions, the number of urban dwellers will
equal the number of rural dwellers by 2017,
the report said.
The United States is the most highly urbanized
area of the world with 87 percent of its population
living in cities. Latin America and the Caribbean
followed, with 78 percent of the population
living in urban areas, the report said.
In 1950 only two cities had 10 million inhabitants
or more: the New York, Newark, N.J., area with
a population of 12.3 million and Tokyo with
11.3 million.
Today, the report said, 20 cities have more than
10 million inhabitants.
The 10 cities with the biggest populations are:
Tokyo with 35.3 million; Mexico City with 19.2
million; New York-Newark with 18.5 million;
Bombay, India, with 18.3 million; Sao Paulo,
Brazil, with 18.3 million; New Delhi with 15.3
million; Calcutta, India, with 14.3 million;
Buenos Aires, Argentina, with 13.3 million;
Jakarta, Indonesia, with 13.2 million; and
Shanghai, China, with 12.7 million.
The report also highlighted the aging of the
population, saying there were 600 million people
over the age of 60 in 2000, three times the
number in 1950, and that figure was expected
to triple again over the next 50 years to around
2 billion elderly.
The average number of children a woman gives
birth to, meanwhile, declined from five around
thirty years ago to three by the beginning
of this century, the report said.
Mortality declined sharply during the 20th century,
except in Africa, which has been hard hit by
the AIDS epidemic, Annan said.
Overall, the world's population reached 6.5 billion
in 2005 and could stabilize at 9 billion just
after 2050, Annan said.
<< Associated Press -- 2/16/05 >>
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