Annual growth will soon be negative everywhere except Africa.
For almost every issue we talk about on TreeHugger, there are always comments that the biggest cause of all our problems is population, that there are just too many people. But as we have noted before, population growth is slowing and we really have a consumption crisis, not a population crisis.
Declining Population Growth
Now, the United Nations Population Division has revised their population projections down again, as growth is declining more quickly than expected, populations are shrinking everywhere except Africa, and even it is slowing down. According to the Economist,
Population growth rate is declining…./ United Nations Population Division/CC BY-NC 3.0
Increasing Older Population
People are also living longer, particularly in Africa thanks to improved HIV treatments. “In America, however, the opioid epidemic has pushed up the death rate, especially for men. The chance of a 15-year-old boy dying by the age of 50 is now higher in America than in Bangladesh.”
worldwide, the fertility rate is crashing / United Nations Population Division/CC BY 3.0
The fact that people are having fewer kids and living longer means that the world’s population is skewing ever older. This is creating problems in developed countries like Japan, where the government is offering incentives to encourage more babies. But when one politician suggested that young families should aim for three kids, there was a backlash, according to Japan Today:
Meanwhile, the percentage of population over 70 goes up fast. /United Nations Population Division/CC BY 3.0
So we will have ever more old people being taken care of by fewer young people.
Interesting Times Ahead
Some are positive about this change; John Ibbitson and Darrell Bricker, authors of the recent book Empty Planet, envision good things all around. The CBC reviewer notes: “Fewer workers will command higher wages; the environment will improve; the risk of famine will wane, and falling birthrates in the developing world will bring greater affluence and autonomy for women.“ The CBC quotes the book:
Three decades. Really, between the climate crisis and the population bust, our millennials and Generation Z are in for interesting times.