November
10th
  8:01:19 AM

The Economist swings ‘round on population

The message is finally getting through: the population bomb has fizzled out and fertility is falling nearly everywhere in the world.

Sometime in the next few years (if it hasn’t happened already) the world will reach a milestone: half of humanity will be having only enough children to replace itself. That is, the fertility rate of half the world will be 2.1 or below. This is the "replacement level of fertility", the magic number that causes a country’s population to slow down and eventually to stabilise… The move to replacement-level fertility is one of the most dramatic social changes in history.

This is the cheerful message delivered in the October 29 issue of The Economist. If the world’s leading news magazine has finally swung around, the day is not far behind when population controllers will be looking for jobs:

At a time when Malthusian worries are resurgent and people fear the consequences for an overcrowded planet, the decline in fertility is surprising and somewhat reassuring. It means that worries about a population explosion are themselves being exploded—and it carries a lesson about how to solve the problems of climate change. (The Economist, "Falling fertility")

What The Economist is responding to is frightening scenarios of environmental destruction brought about by swelling populations. Its reassuring message to those who fret about over-population is that the world’s population will grow from 6 billion to 9 billion in 2050. But then it will plunge. It is already dropping in some countries – Russia’s population will probably fall by one-third! So there is no population lever that environmentalists can shift to stop the degradation of the environment and climate change.

If population policy can do little more to alleviate environmental damage, then the human race will have to rely on technology and governance to shift the world’s economy towards cleaner growth. Mankind needs to develop more and cheaper technologies that can enable people to enjoy the fruits of economic growth without destroying the planet’s natural capital… Falling fertility may be making poor people’s lives better, but it cannot save the Earth. That lies in our own hands.

So far, so good. But astonishingly, The Economist fails to see that there are any problems with falling fertility. Instead, it emphasises the notion of a "demographic dividend". As fertility falls, a bulge of working adults appears on the population pyramid, like the tummy on a well-fed, prosperous banker. With a significant proportion of adults working and paying taxes, conditions are right for economic development. It is, says The Economist, "a Goldilocks moment".

However, bafflingly, what it fails to take account of is what happens after the bulge works its way towards the top of the pyramid. Then younger workers will be staggering under the load of supporting both their children and their parents. The good news is also bad news, very bad news indeed. In fact, The Economist’s analysis of falling fertility must rank amongst the shallowest analyses it has ever published.



to make a comment, click here


 
about this blog | Bookmark and Share

Search this blog

 Subscribe to Demography is Destiny
rss RSS feed of posts

 Recent Posts
The Rhema Project
25 May 2012
A more religious future?
24 May 2012
Mexicans are no longer throwing themselves at the fence
18 May 2012
A New American Dream?
18 May 2012
Bollywood and gendercide in India
16 May 2012

 MercatorNet blogs
Style and culture: Tiger Print
Family social policy: Family Edge
US political scene: Sheila Liaugminas
News about bioethics: BioEdge
From the editors: Conniptions

 Archive
May 2012 | Apr 2012 | Mar 2012 | Feb 2012 | more >>

 From MercatorNet's home page

Sensing the sacred
25 May 2012
Is there a sense of the sacred that even the non-religious can share?

Could geoengineering save the planet?
25 May 2012
And who is thinking about the ethics of a technological quick fix?

A thought experiment about marriage
24 May 2012
A world in which sexual intimacy could not produce children would never have come up with the idea of marriage.

Australia’s lifeline: its precarious sea lanes
23 May 2012
Large, isolated and rich, Australia needs to cultivate a friendship with the US to survive in an dangerous world.

It’s only natural
22 May 2012
The bitterest debates today in the public square often turn on what is "natural". The Chinese sages had a lot…


 Tags
stock market, disasters, Zimbabwe, population decline, Ehrlich, Copenhagen, Pension, Rick Santorum, West Virginia, baby boomers, March for Life, Canna, homosexuality, 2012 election, euthanasia, overpopulation, World Bank, relationships, Underpopulaiton, religion, youth bulge, Adoption, propaganda, The Onion, unemployment, recession, GDP, labour market, Britain, populaiton growth, birth rate, healthcare, China, security, Brendan O'Neill, Detroit, superannuation, Bangladesh, sex, Birth, low fertility trap, Chinese New Year, Australia, Beneficiaries, Steven Mosher, birthrates, Paelstine, sustainable development, Islam, Gender-ratio, sex ratio, population growth, history, ageing population, retirement age, Population Centre, earthquake, population bomb, Uganda, Europe, subsidy, Wall Street Journal, Guardian, culture wars, Bulgaria, Birth Control, Pakistan, working class, increasing birth rates, Easter, demographic decline, Population reduction, satire, female feticide, Disabilities, census, Congress, funding, Paul Ehrlich, South Africa, overpopulation myth, Year of the Dragon, family policy, military, workforce shortage, elderly, Washington rally, abortions, Internet use, aging population, Chian, utilitarianism, Religious Practice, Ministry of Social Development, Birth rates, Japan earthquake, New York Times, Twins, International, Muslim-Christian demography,