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World population to touch digit
of 9B by 2300
Pakistan
Times Health Desk
UNITED NATIONS: Three
hundred years from now, the world’s population will have stabilized at about
9 billion and we will look forward to living until age 95. In Japan, that
bastion of longevity, people will be hanging around until they’re 106.
India, China and the United States will still be the most populous countries
on the planet — if they still exist — and Africa’s share of the world’s
population will double to 25 percent. The average woman will give birth to
two children.
Those are just a few possibilities projected in a U.N. report released
Thursday, which lowers long-term population estimates because of new
thinking about fertility rates in the future.
The new report acknowledges that population projections are extremely iffy.
Beyond 2050?
“What will population trends be like beyond 2050? No one really knows,” the
report says. “Any demographic projections, if they go 100, 200 or 300 years
into the future, are little more than guesses.”
But the report says the exercise is necessary to help mankind reflect on
short-term trends and whether actions should be taken to change them. It
uses the metaphor of a basketball coach who calls a time-out just five
minutes into a game going badly to avoid an unfavorable outcome.
The projections reflect trends, common among many researchers including the
U.S. Census Bureau, revising populations downward. Previous long-range U.N.
estimates suggested that the population could hit 12 billion people.
Still, the global population will swell in the decades to come, when there
will be 57 million more people every year from now to 2050, fueled by growth
in less developed regions, the report projects.
The Trends
That means the world’s population will grow by 47 percent to 8.9 billion by
2050, with the biggest spike in African nations. By 2300, a quarter of the
world’s population will be African, the report projects.
Among the report’s other projections is that the average life expectancy
will rise to about 95 years in 2300. In Japan, where even today people tend
to live the longest, life expectancy will be 106. India will surpass China
as the world’s most populous nation, but China and the United States will be
two and three. The median age will rise from 26 years to 50 years. While the
population of young people will generally stabilize, the world will see more
people over 80. That means world population will grow slightly over time
because life expectancy will always rise, though by smaller and smaller
margins.
Fertility Rate
The authors of the report acknowledge that the slightest deviation from
their model would result in huge changes. If fertility rates stabilize at
1.85, the population would shrink to 2.3 billion. If it went to 2.35, the
population would balloon to 36.4 billion. If fertility rates remained
unchanged from the 2000 rate of 2.83, there would be 134 trillion people in
2300, impossible to sustain.
The middle-of-the-road fertility rate projection also assumes that women
around the world will have access to family planning including
contraceptives and would no longer ant many children as mortality rates
fall. “People can now have fewer children because children are not dying one
out of five as used to happen with our grandparents,” said Thomas Buettner,
one of the authors of the report. “The decline is a historical trend that is
irreversible.”
It also projects that HIV will slow its spread by 2010 and a cure for
HIV/AIDS will eventually be found, eliminating that downward pull on the
population. In a somewhat understated conclusion, it briefly contemplates
what could happen if some new, more virulent disease, arises.
“These projections also risk being upended by national crises, such as
outbreaks of civil strife or new epidemics or environmental emergencies,
which could produce short-run catastrophic mortality or large, unpredictable
migrant movements,” the report says.●
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