2070?
This article is a case in point for the situation where, if you
reduce everything down to ONE problem you come up with something that
is actually overoptimistic (depending, of course, on your
point-of-view)
Human
population may peak in 2070 and decline to extinction in the next few
centuries
9
January, 2013
The
world’s seemingly relentless march toward overpopulation achieved a
notable milestone in 2012: Somewhere on the planet, according to U.S.
Census Bureau estimates, the 7
billionth living person came into existence.
Lucky
No. 7,000,000,000 probably celebrated his or her birthday sometime in
March and added to a population that’s already stressing the
planet’s limited
supplies of food, energy, and clean water.
Should this trend continue, as the Los
Angeles Times noted
in a five-part
seriesmarking
the occasion, by midcentury, “living conditions are likely to be
bleak for much of humanity.”
A
somewhat more arcane milestone, meanwhile, generated no media
coverage at all: It took humankind 13 years to add its 7 billionth.
That’s longer than the 12 years it took to add the 6 billionth—the
first time in human history that interval had grown. (The 2
billionth, 3 billionth, 4 billionth, and 5 billionth took 123, 33,
14, and 13 years, respectively.) In other words, the rate of global
population growth has slowed. And it’s expected to keep slowing.
Indeed, according to experts’ best estimates, the total population
of Earth will stop growing within the lifespan of people alive today.
And
then it will fall.
This
is a counterintuitive notion in the United States, where we’ve
heard often and loudly that world population growth is a perilous and
perhaps unavoidable threat to our future as a species. But population
decline is a very familiar concept in the rest of the developed
world, where fertility has long since fallen far below the 2.1 live
births per woman required to maintain population equilibrium. In
Germany, the birthrate has sunk
to just 1.36,
worse even than its low-fertility
neighbors Spain
(1.48) and Italy (1.4). The way things are going, Western Europe as a
whole will most likely shrink from 460 million to just 350 million by
the end of the century. That’s not so bad compared with Russia and
China, each
of whose populations could fall by half.
As you may not be surprised to learn, the Germans have coined a
polysyllabic word for this quandary:Schrumpf-Gesellschaft,
or “shrinking society.”
American
media have largely ignored the issue of population decline for the
simple reason that it hasn’t happened here yet. Unlike Europe, the
United States has long been the beneficiary of robust immigration.
This has helped us not only by directly bolstering the number of
people calling the United States home but also by propping up the
birthrate, since immigrant women tend to produce far more children
than the native-born do.
But
both those advantages look to diminish in years to come. A report
issued last month by the Pew Research Center found that immigrant
births fell from
102 per 1,000 women in 2007 to 87.8 per 1,000 in 2012. That helped
bring the overall U.S. birthrate to a mere 64 per 1,000 women—not
enough to sustain our current population.
Moreover,
the poor, highly fertile countries that once churned out immigrants
by the boatload are now experiencing birthrate declines of their own.
From 1960 to 2009, Mexico’s
fertility rate tumbled
from 7.3 live births per woman to 2.4, India’s
dropped from
six to 2.5, and Brazil’s fell
from 6.15 to 1.9. Even in sub-Saharan Africa, where the average
birthrate remains a relatively blistering 4.66, fertility
is projected
to fall below replacement level by
the 2070s. This change in developing countries will affect not only
the U.S. population, of course, but eventually the world’s.
Why
is this happening? Scientists who study population dynamics point to
a phenomenon called “demographic transition.”
“For
hundreds of thousands of years,” explains Warren Sanderson, a
professor of economics at Stony Brook University, “in order for
humanity to survive things like epidemics and wars and famine,
birthrates had to be very high.” Eventually, thanks to technology,
death rates started to fall in Europe and in North America, and the
population size soared. In time, though, birthrates fell as well, and
the population leveled out. The same pattern has repeated in
countries around the world. Demographic transition, Sanderson says,
“is a shift between two very different long-run states: from high
death rates and high birthrates to low death rates and low
birthrates.” Not only is the pattern well-documented, it’s well
under way: Already, more than half the world’s population is
reproducing at below the replacement rate.
If
the Germany of today is the rest of the world tomorrow, then the
future is going to look a lot different than we thought. Instead of
skyrocketing toward uncountable Malthusian multitudes, researchers at
Austria’s International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis
foresee the global population maxing out at 9 billion some time
around 2070. On the bright side, the long-dreaded resource shortage
may turn out not to be a problem at all. On the not-so-bright side,
the demographic shift toward more retirees and fewer workers could
throw the rest of the world into the kind of interminable economic
stagnation that Japan
is experiencing right now.
And
in the long term—on the order of centuries—we could be looking at
the literal extinction of humanity.
That
might sound like an outrageous claim, but it comes down to simple
math. According to a 2008
IIASA report,
if the world stabilizes at a total fertility rate of 1.5—where
Europe is today—then by 2200 the global population will fall to
half of what it is today. By 2300, it’ll barely scratch 1 billion.
(The authors of the report tell me that in the years since the
initial publication, some details have changed—Europe’s
population is falling faster than was previously anticipated, while
Africa’s birthrate is declining more slowly—but the overall
outlook is the same.) Extend the trend line, and within a few dozen
generations you’re talking about a global population small enough
to fit in a nursing home.
It’s
far from certain that any of this will come to pass. IIASA’s
numbers are based on probabilistic projections, meaning that
demographers try to identify the key factors affecting population
growth and then try to assess the likelihood that each will occur.
The several layers of guesswork magnify potential errors. “We
simply don’t know for sure what will be the population size at a
certain time in the future,” demographer Wolfgang Lutz told IIASA
conference-goers earlier this year. “There are huge uncertainties
involved.” Still, it’s worth discussing, because focusing too
single-mindedly on the problem of overpopulation could have
disastrous consequences—see China’s one-child policy.
One
of the most contentious issues is the question of whether birthrates
in developed countries will remain low. The United
Nation’s most recent forecast,
released in 2010, assumes that low-fertility countries will
eventually revert to a birthrate of around 2.0. In that scenario,
the world
population tops out at about 10 billion and
stays there. But there’s no reason to believe that that birthrates
will behave in that way—no one has every observed an inherent human
tendency to have a nice, arithmetically stable 2.1 children per
couple. On the contrary, people either tend to have an enormous
number of kids (as they did throughout most of human history and
still do in the most impoverished, war-torn parts of Africa) or far
too few. We know how to dampen excessive population growth—just
educate girls. The other problem has proved much more intractable: No
one’s figured out how to boost fertility in countries where it has
imploded. Singapore has been encouraging
parenthood for
nearly 30 years, with cash incentives of up to $18,000 per child. Its
birthrate? A gasping-for-air
1.2.
When Sweden started offering
parents generous support,
the birthrate soared but then fell back again, and after years of
fluctuating, it now
stands at 1.9 —very
high for Europe but still below replacement level.
The
reason for the implacability of demographic transition can be
expressed in one word: education. One of the first things that
countries do when they start to develop is educate their young
people, including girls. That dramatically improves the size and
quality of the workforce. But it also introduces an opportunity cost
for having babies. “Women with more schooling tend to have fewer
children,” says William Butz, a senior research scholar at IIASA.
In
developed countries, childrearing has become a lifestyle option
tailored to each couple’s preferences. Maximizing fertility is
rarely a priority. My wife and I are a case in point. I’m 46, she’s
39, and we have two toddlers. We waited about as long to have kids as
we feasibly could because we were invested in building our careers
and, frankly, enjoying all the experiences that those careers let us
have. If wanted to pop out another ankle-biter right now, our ageing
bodies might just allow us to do so. But we have no intention of
trying.
As
much as we adore our little guys, they’re a lot of work and
frighteningly expensive. Most of our friends have just one or two
kids, too, and like us they regard the prospect of having three or
four kids the way most people look at ultramarathoning or
transoceanic sailing—admirable pursuits, but only for the very
committed.
That
attitude could do for Homo
sapiens what
that giant asteroid did for the dinosaurs. If humanity is going to
sustain itself, then the number of couples deciding to have three or
four kids will consistently have to exceed the number opting to raise
one or zero. The 2.0 that my wife and I have settled for is a decent
effort, but we’re not quite pulling our weight. Are we being
selfish? Or merely rational? Our decision is one that I’m sure
future generations will judge us on.
Assuming there are any.
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