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Hartford Courant (US), December 29, 2004
The Graying of
the Global Population
The disasters
of the world are due to its inhabitants not
being able to grow old simultaneously. There
is always a new and intolerant nation eager
to destroy the tolerant and mellow.
-- Cyril Connolly, ``The Unquiet Grave,'' 1945
That's history for you. King Lear was a striking
exception, but half the kings and princes in
Shakespeare were under 30. Many of them were
under 20. Their hormones were still raging,
so of course they committed murders, massacres
and the like. In a world where average life
expectancy was 30 and most people didn't even
survive childhood, politics was bound to be
pretty turbulent. It was always the same, in
every part of the planet -- but what if all
the nations grew up together?
At the end of a discouraging year, here is an
encouraging thought: the world is growing up.
The average age in the world today is 28. (In
Shakespeare's time, it was around 15.) By 2050,
it will be 40. At the age of 40, calculations
of long-term self-interest have largely prevailed
over hormones. It doesn't necessarily make
people nicer, but it certainly makes them more
careful.
When the experts play around with population
growth statistics these days, they are mostly
concerned about overpopulation (current world
population is 6.5 billion), pressure on resources
and the environment, all the usual worries
-- and they are right to worry about those
things. They pay less attention to the political
effects, because they are less easy to trace.
But they are there, and they are very important.
There has been a steady run of good news on the
population front in the past few decades. In
1968 the United Nations Population Division
predicted that the world population would grow
to 12 billion by 2050. By 1992, the same office
was predicting 10 billion people by 2050. Last
month it predicted that the world's population
would peak at 8.9 billion, and not until 2300
-- although it will already be pretty close
to that figure by 2050.
In 1950 there was not a single country on the
planet where the population was not growing
rapidly, the average woman had more than five
children in her lifetime, and the birthrate
was not dropping significantly anywhere. Then
came the new birth-control technologies and
the rise of women's liberation ideologies,
and in many Western countries the birthrate
halved in 10 years. As recently as 1974, however,
the median birthrate worldwide was still 5.4
children per woman, so the pessimists were
still winning the arguments.
They believed that only literacy could spread
the ideas and techniques that made the birthrates
fall, and that literacy would not grow fast
enough. Well, literacy has grown a lot faster
than they expected -- between 1980 and 2000,
literacy rose from 18 percent to 47 percent
in Afghanistan, from 33 percent to 64 percent
in Nigeria, from 66 percent to 85 percent in
China, and from 69 percent to 87 percent in
Indonesia. But birthrates have dropped even
more steeply than literacy has risen: the global
average is now 2.7 children per woman.
Some of the most startling recent drops have
been in places where women's illiteracy is
still quite high -- Bangladesh and parts of
India, for example -- so we clearly need a
broader criterion than mere literacy. In fact,
any form of mass media, including broadcast
media that do not require literacy, seem to
produce the same effect in many places. (Though
purely local cultural factors also play a role:
Pakistan and Bangladesh both had a birthrate
of 6.3 in 1981; now Bangladesh's is 3.3, while
Pakistan's is still 5..6.)
The global birthrate may be no more than a decade
away from dropping to replacement level, only
2.2 children per woman. Most developed countries
have already dropped well below that rate.
This does not immediately stop population growth,
because all the children who have already been
born will have a child or two themselves, and
then live for another 50 years. It does not
solve the environmental crisis either, because
all of these 7 or 8 billion human beings will
aspire to the kind of lifestyle now enjoyed
only by the privileged billion or so.
But it does mean that populations almost everywhere
will start graying within the next decade,
and in due course the old will come to outnumber
the young. (The exceptions are practically
all African and Arab countries, amounting altogether
to only a tenth of the world's population.)
Countries where the average age is rising are
unlikely, on all historical precedent, to become
aggressor nations. Peace through exhaustion,
perhaps?
<< Hartford Courant -- 12/29/04 >>
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