The World by Numbers
“Here lies Europe, overwhelmed by Muslim immigrants and emptied of native-born Europeans,” goes the standard pundit line, but neither the immigrants nor the Europeans are playing their assigned roles.
by Martin Walker
Something dramatic has happened to the world’s
birthrates. Defying predictions of demographic decline, northern Europeans have
started having more babies. Britain and France are now projecting steady
population growth through the middle of the century. In North America, the
trends are similar. In 2050, according to United Nations projections, it is
possible that nearly as many babies will be born in the United States as in
China. Indeed, the population of the world’s current demographic colossus will
be shrinking. And China is but one particularly sharp example of a widespread
fall in birthrates that is occurring across most of the developing world,
including much of Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East. The one glaring
exception to this trend is sub-Saharan Africa, which by the end of this century
may be home to one-third of the human race.
The human habit is simply to
project current trends into the future. Demographic realities are seldom kind
to the predictions that result. The decision to have a child depends on
innumerable personal considerations and larger, unaccountable societal factors
that are in constant flux. Yet even knowing this, demographers themselves are
often flummoxed. Projections of birthrates and population totals are often
embarrassingly at odds with eventual reality.
In 1998, the UN’s “best guess” for
2050 was that there would be 8.9 billion humans on the planet. Two years later,
the figure was revised to 9.3 billion—in effect, adding two Brazils to the
world. The number subsequently fell and rose again. Modest changes in
birthrates can have bigger consequences over a couple of generations: The
recent rise in U.S. and European birthrates is among the developments factored
into the UN’s latest “middle” projection that world population in 2050 will be
just over 9.1 billion.
In a society in which an average
woman bears 2.1 children in her lifetime—what’s called “replacement-level”
fertility—the population remains stable. When demographers make tiny
adjustments to estimates of future fertility rates, population projections can
fluctuate wildly. Plausible scenarios for the next 40 years show world
population shrinking to eight billion or growing to 10.5 billion. A recent UN
projection rather daringly assumes a decline of the global fertility rate to
2.02 by 2050, and eventually to 1.85, with total world population starting to
decrease by the end of this century.
Despite their many uncertainties,
demographic projections have become an essential tool. Governments,
international agencies, and private corporations depend on them in planning
strategy and making long-term investments. They seek to estimate such things as
the number of pensioners, the cost of health care, and the size of the labor
force many years into the future. But the detailed statistical work of
demographers tends to seep out to the general public in crude form, and
sensationalist headlines soon become common wisdom.
Because of this bastardization of
knowledge, three deeply misleading assumptions about demographic trends have
become lodged in the public mind. The first is that mass migration into Europe,
legal and illegal, combined with an eroding native population base, is
transforming the ethnic, cultural, and religious identity of the continent. The
second assumption, which is related to the first, is that Europe’s native
population is in steady and serious decline from a falling birthrate, and that
the aging population will place intolerable demands on governments to maintain
public pension and health systems. The third is that population growth in the
developing world will continue at a high rate. Allowing for the uncertainty of
all population projections, the most recent data indicate that all of these
assumptions are highly questionable and that they are not a reliable basis for
serious policy decisions.
In 2007, The Times of London reported that in the
previous year Muhammad had edged out Thomas as the second most popular name for
newborn boys in Britain, trailing only Jack. This development had been masked
in the official statistics because the name’s many variants—such as Mohammed,
Mahmoud, and Muhamed—had all been counted separately. The Times compiled all the variants and
established that 5,991 Muhammads of one spelling or another were born in 2006,
trailing 6,928 Jacks, but ahead of 5,921 Thomases, 5,808 Joshuas, and 5,208
Olivers. The Times went on to predict that Muhammad would
soon take the top spot.
On the face of it, this seemed to
bear out the thesis—something of a rallying cry among anti-immigration
activists—that high birthrates among immigrant Muslims presage a fundamental
shift in British demography. Similar developments in other European countries,
where birthrates among native-born women have long fallen below replacement
level, have provoked considerable anxiety about the future of Europe’s traditionally
Christian culture. Princeton professor emeritus Bernard Lewis, a leading
authority on Islamic history, suggested in 2004 that the combination of low
European birthrates and increasing Muslim immigration means that by this
century’s end, Europe will be “part of the Arabic west, of the Maghreb.” If
non-Muslims then flee Europe, as Middle East specialist Daniel Pipes predicted
in The New York Sun, “grand cathedrals will appear as
vestiges of a prior civilization—at least until a Saudi-style regime transforms
them into mosques or a Taliban-like regime blows them up.”
The reality, however, looks rather
different from such dire scenarios. Upon closer inspection, it turns out that
while Muhammad topped Thomas in 2006, it was something of a Pyrrhic victory:
Fewer than two percent of Britain’s male babies bore the prophet’s name. One
fact that gets lost among distractions such as the Timesstory is that the
birthrates of Muslim women in Europe—and around the world—have been falling
significantly for some time. Data on birthrates among different religious
groups in Europe are scarce, but they point in a clear direction. Between 1990
and 2005, for example, the fertility rate in the Netherlands for Moroccan-born
women fell from 4.9 to 2.9, and for Turkish-born women from 3.2 to 1.9. In
1970, Turkish-born women in Germany had on average two children more than
German-born women. By 1996, the difference had fallen to one child, and it has
now dropped to half that number.
These sharp reductions in
fertility among Muslim immigrants reflect important cultural shifts, which
include universal female education, rising living standards, the inculcation of
local mores, and widespread availability of contraception. Broadly speaking,
birthrates among immigrants tend to rise or fall to the local statistical norm
within two generations.
The decline of Muslim birthrates
is a global phenomenon. Most analysts have focused on the remarkably high
proportion of people under age 25 in the Arab countries, which has inspired
some crude forecasts about what this implies for the future. Yet recent UN data
suggest that Arab birthrates are falling fast, and that the number of births
among women under the age of 20 is dropping even more sharply. Only two Arab
countries still have high fertility rates: Yemen and the Palestinian
territories.
In some Muslim countries—Tunisia,
the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain, Kuwait, and Lebanon—fertility rates have
already fallen to near-European levels. Algeria and Morocco, each with a
fertility rate of 2.4, are both dropping fast toward such levels. Turkey is
experiencing a similar trend.
Revisions made in the 2008 version
of the UN’s World Population
Prospects Report make it
clear that this decline is not simply a Middle Eastern phenomenon. The report
suggests that in Indonesia, the country with the world’s largest Muslim
population, the fertility rate for the years 2010–15 will drop to 2.02, a shade
below replacement level. The same UN assessment sees declines in Bangladesh (to
2.2) and Malaysia (2.35) in the same period. By 2050, even Pakistan is expected
to reach a replacement-level fertility rate.
Iran is experiencing what may be
one of the most dramatic demographic shifts in human history. Thirty years ago,
after the shah had been driven into exile and the Islamic Republic was being
established, the fertility rate was 6.5. By the turn of the century, it had
dropped to 2.2. Today, at 1.7, it has collapsed to European levels. The
implications are profound for the politics and power games of the Middle East
and the Persian Gulf, putting into doubt Iran’s dreams of being the regional
superpower and altering the tense dynamics between the Sunni and Shiite wings
of Islam. Equally important are the implications for the economic future of
Iran, which by midcentury may have consumed all of its oil and will confront
the challenge of organizing a society with few people of working age and many
pensioners.
The falling fertility rates in
large segments of the Islamic world have been matched by another significant
shift: Across northern and western Europe, women have suddenly started having
more babies. Germany’s minister for the family, Ursula von der Leyen, announced
in February that the country had recorded its second straight year of increased
births. Sweden’s fertility rate jumped eight percent in 2004 and stayed put.
Both Britain and France now project that their populations will rise from the
current 60 million each to more than 75 million by midcentury. Germany, despite
its recent uptick in births, still seems likely to drop to 70 million or less
by 2050 and lose its status as Europe’s most populous country.
In Britain, the number of births
rose in 2007 for the sixth year in a row. Britain’s fertility rate has
increased from 1.6 to 1.9 in just six years, with a striking contribution from
women in their thirties and forties—just the kind of hard-to-predict behavioral
change that drives demographers wild. The fertility rate is at its highest
level since 1980. The National Health Service has started an emergency
recruitment drive to hire more midwives, tempting early retirees from the
profession back to work with a bonus of up to $6,000. In Scotland, where births
have been increasing by five percent a year, Glasgow’s Herald has reported “a mini baby boom.”
Immigrant mothers account for part
of the fertility increase throughout Europe, but only part. And, significantly,
many of the immigrants are arrivals from elsewhere in Europe, especially the
eastern European countries admitted to the European Union in recent years.
Children born to eastern European immigrants accounted for a third of
Scotland’s “mini baby boom,” for example.
In 2007, France’s national
statistical authority announced that the country had overtaken Ireland to boast
the highest birthrate in Europe. In France, the fertility rate has risen from
1.7 in 1993 to 2.1 in 2007, its highest level since before 1980, despite a
steady fall in birthrates among women not born in France. France’s National
Institute of Demographic Studies reports that the immigrant population is
responsible for only five percent of the rise in the birthrate.
A similar upturn is under way in
the United States, where the fertility rate has climbed to its highest level
since 1971, reaching 2.1 in 2006, according to the National Center for Health
Statistics. New projections by the Pew Research Center suggest that if current
trends continue, the population of the United States will rise from today’s
total of some 300 million to 438 million in 2050. Eighty-two percent of that
increase will be produced by new immigrants and their U.S.-born descendants.
By contrast, the downward
population trends for southern and eastern Europe show little sign of reversal.
Ukraine, for example, now has a population of 46 million; if maintained, its
low fertility rate will whittle its population down by nearly 50 percent by
mid-century. The Czech Republic, Italy, and Poland face declines almost as
drastic.
In Russia, the effects of
declining fertility are amplified by a phenomenon so extreme that it has given
rise to an ominous new term—hypermortality. As a result of the rampant spread
of maladies such as HIV/AIDS and alcoholism and the deterioration of the
Russian health care system, says a 2008 report by the UN Development Program,
“mortality in Russia is 3–5 times higher for men and twice as high for women”
than in other countries at a comparable stage of development. The report—which
echoes earlier findings by demographers such as the Woodrow Wilson Center’s
Murray Feshbach—predicts that within little more than a decade the working-age
population will be shrinking by up to one million people annually. Russia is
suffering a demographic decline on a scale that is normally associated with the
effects of a major war.
The Russian future highlights in
exaggerated fashion another challenge facing the European countries. Even
absent Russia’s dire conditions, the social and political implications of an
aging population are plain and alarming. At a 2004 conference in Paris, Heikki
Oksanen of the European Commission’s Directorate-General for Economic and
Financial Affairs noted that the European social model of generous welfare
states is facing a crisis because the number of retirees is rising while the
number of working-age people is declining. “People are aware that there is a
problem, but they do not know how serious it is and [what] drastic reforms are
necessary,” he said.
Oksanen went on to describe the
dire implications for European tax systems. A pay-as-you-go pension scheme
would take “only” 27 percent of wages if Europeans had replacement-level
fertility, retired at age 60, and lived to 78. But if fertility decreased to 1.7
while longevity increased gradually to 83—close to where Europe is now—the tax
would rise to 45 percent of the wage bill. Because of its low birthrate,
Germany’s problem is particularly acute. It currently has about four people of
working age for every three dependents. Under one scenario for 2050, those four
working-age Germans would be required to support five dependents.
But these sorts of projections
don’t capture the full picture. There are at least three mitigating factors to
be considered, which suggest that the German welfare state and others in Europe
might not have to be dismantled wholesale.
The first is that the traditional
retirement age of 60 in Italy, France, and Germany is very early indeed,
especially considering that life expectancy is approaching 80 and that modern
diets and medicine allow many elderly people to continue working well into
their seventies. An increase of the retirement age to 65, which is being slowly
introduced in France and Germany, would sharply reduce the number of nonworkers
who depend on the employed for support, as would more employment for people
below the age of 20. A retirement age of 70 in Germany would virtually end the
problem, at least until life expectancy rose as high as 90 years.
Second, the work force participation
rate in Germany (and much of continental Europe) is relatively low. Not only do
Germans retire on the early side, but the generous social welfare system allows
others to withdraw from work earlier in life. An increase in employment would
boost the revenues flowing into the social security system. For example, only
67 percent of women in Germany were in the work force in 2005, compared with 76
percent in Denmark and 78 percent in Switzerland. (The average rate for the 15
“core” EU states is 64 percent; for the United States, 70 percent.)
David Coleman, a demographer at
Oxford University, has suggested that the EU’s work force could be increased by
nearly a third if both sexes were to match Denmark’s participation rates. The
EU itself has set a target participation rate of 70 percent for both sexes.
Reaching this goal would significantly alleviate the fiscal challenge of
maintaining Europe’s welfare system, which has been aptly described as “more of
a labor-market challenge than a demographic crisis.”
The third mitigating factor is
that the total dependency ratios of the 21st century are going to look
remarkably similar to those of the 1960s. In the United States, the most
onerous year for dependency was 1965, when there were 95 dependents for every 100
adults between the ages of 20 and 64. That occurred because “dependents”
includes people both younger and older than working age. By 2002, there were
only 49 dependents for every 100 working-age Americans. By 2025 there are
projected to be 80, still well below the peak of 1965. The difference is that
while most dependents in the 1960s were young, with their working and saving
and contributing lives ahead of them, most of the dependents of 2009 are older,
with more dependency still to come. But the point is clear: There is nothing
outlandish about having almost as many dependents as working adults.
Population growth on a scale
comparable to that which frightened pundits and demographers a generation ago
still exists in 30 of the world’s least developed countries. Each has a
fertility rate of more than five. With a few exceptions—notably, Afghanistan and
the Palestinian territories—those countries are located in sub-Saharan Africa.
Depending on the future course of birthrates, sub-Saharan Africa’s current 800
million people are likely to become 1.7 billion by 2050 and three billion by
the end of the century.
One striking implication of this
growth is that there will be a great religious revolution, as Africa becomes
the home of monotheism. By midcentury, sub-Saharan Africa is likely to be the
demographic center of Islam, home to as many Muslims as Asia and to far more
than inhabit the Middle East. The non-Arab Muslim countries of Africa—Niger,
Mali, Burkina Faso, and Senegal—constitute the one region of the Islamic world
where birthrates remain high. In several of these countries, the average woman
will have upward of five children in her lifetime.
Christianity will also feel the
effects of Africa’s growth. By 2025, there will be as many Christians in
sub-Saharan Africa—some 640 million—as in South America. By 2050, it is almost
certain that most of the world’s Christians will live in Africa. As Kenyan
scholar John Mbiti writes, “The centers of the church’s universality [are] no
longer in Geneva, Rome, Athens, Paris, London, New York, but Kinshasa, Buenos
Aires, Addis Ababa, and Manila.”
But awareness of Africa’s
religious revolution is usually overshadowed by the fearful possibilities
raised by the continent’s rapid population growth. By 2050, the national
populations are expected to more than double in the Democratic Republic of the
Congo and Uganda, reaching 147 million and 91 million, respectively. Smaller
countries—such as Liberia, Niger, Mali, Chad, and Burundi—are expected to
experience growth of 100 to 200 percent. These are the countries with the
weakest state institutions, the least infrastructure, the feeblest economies,
and thus the poorest health and education systems. They also face daunting
problems of environmental degradation—and the lesson from Darfur and the Rwanda
genocide is that disaster can follow when population growth strains local environments
so badly that people cannot feed themselves.
The various demographic changes I
have described arrived with remarkable speed. At the turn of this century, the
conventional wisdom among demographers was that the population of Europe was in
precipitous decline, the Islamic world was in the grip of a population
explosion, and Africa’s population faced devastation by HIV/AIDS. Only a
handful of scholars questioned the idea that the Chinese would outnumber all
other groupsfor decades or even centuries to come. In fact, however, the latest
UN projections suggest that China’s population, now 1.3 billion, will increase
slowly through 2030 but may then be reduced to half that number by the end of
the century.
Because there are so many
assumptions embedded in it, this forecast of the Chinese future could well be
wrong. There is one area, however, in which demography relies on hard census
data rather than assumptions about the future, and that is in mapping the youth
cohort. All of the teenagers who will be alive in 2020 have already been born.
So a strong indication of the eventual end of China’s dominance of world
population statistics is apparent in the fact that there are now 372 million
Indians under the age of 15, but only 270 million Chinese. This gap will grow.
India seems very likely to become the world’s most populous country by 2030 or
thereabouts, but only if nothing changes—China maintains its one-child policy
and India does not launch the kind of crash program of birth control that Prime
Minister Indira Gandhi so controversially attempted in the 1970s.
There is another development that
could affect future Indian and Chinese birthrates: the use of sonograms to
ascertain the sex of a fetus. Wider availability of this technology has
permitted an increase in gender-specific abortions. The official Chinese
figures suggest that 118 boys are now being born in China for every 100 girls.
As a result, millions of Chinese males may never find a mate with whom to raise
a conventional family. The Chinese call such lonely males “bare branches.” The
social and political implications of having such a large population of
unattached men are unclear, but they are not likely to be happy.
Gender imbalances are not limited
to China. They are apparent in South Korea, Taiwan, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and
increasingly in India, particularly among the Sikhs. Valerie Hudson of Brigham
Young University and Andrea den Boer of Britain’s University of Kent at
Canterbury calculate that there 90 million “missing” women in Asia, 40 million
each in China and India, six million in Pakistan, and three million in
Bangladesh.
In a recent paper Hudson and den
Boer asked, “Will it matter to India and China that by the year 2020, 12 to 15
percent of their young adult males will not be able to ‘settle down’ because
the girls that would have grown up to be their wives were disposed of by their
societies instead?” They answered, “The rate of criminal behavior of unmarried
men is many times higher than that of married men; marriage is a reliable predictor
of a downturn in reckless, antisocial, illegal, and violent behavior by young
adult males.” Resulting cross-border “bridal raids,” rising crime rates, and
widespread prostitution may come to define what could be called the geopolitics
of sexual frustration.
The state’s response to crime and
social unrest could prove to be a defining factor for China’s political future.
The U.S. Central Intelligence Agency asked Hudson to discuss her dramatic
suggestion that “in 2020 it may seem to China that it would be worth it to have
a very bloody battle in which a lot of their young men could die in some
glorious cause.” Other specialists are not as alarmed. Military observers point
out that China is moving from a conscript army to a leaner, more professional
force. And other scholars contend that China’s population is now aging so fast
that the growing numbers of elderly people may well balance the surge of
frustrated young males to produce a calmer and more peaceful nation.
China is also a key site of
another striking demographic change: the rapid growth
of the global middle class, perhaps the fastest-growing discrete segment of the world’s population. While the planet’s population is expected to grow by about one billion people by 2020, the global middle class will swell by as many as 1.8 billion, with a third of this number residing in China. The global economic recession will retard but not halt the expansion of the middle class—nobody expected growth without interruption.
of the global middle class, perhaps the fastest-growing discrete segment of the world’s population. While the planet’s population is expected to grow by about one billion people by 2020, the global middle class will swell by as many as 1.8 billion, with a third of this number residing in China. The global economic recession will retard but not halt the expansion of the middle class—nobody expected growth without interruption.
The lower the birthrate, the
greater the likelihood that a given society is developing—investing in
education, accumulating disposable income and savings, and starting to consume
at levels comparable to those of the middle classes in developed societies.
Absent a shock factor such as war or famine, a society with a falling birthrate
tends to be aspirational: Its members seek decent housing, education for their
children, provision for health care and retirement and vacations, running water
and flush toilets, electricity and appliances such as refrigerators and
televisions and computers. As societies clamber up the prosperity chain, they
also climb the mobility ladder, seeking bicycles, motor scooters, and
eventually cars; they also climb the protein ladder, seeking better, more
varied foods and more meat.
This pattern is apparent in China,
India, and the Middle East. China’s new middle class, defined as those in
households with incomes above about $10,000 a year, is now estimated to number
between 100 million and 150 million people. Some put the figure in India as
high as 200 million. But it is apparent from the urban landscape across the
developing world—whether in Mumbai or Shanghai, São Paulo or Moscow, Dubai or
Istanbul—that a growing proportion of consumers seek to emulate a
Western-international lifestyle, which includes an air-conditioned house with a
car in the garage, a private garden, satellite TV, and Internet access, along
with the chance to raise a limited number of children, all of whom will have
the opportunity to go to college. Whether the biosphere can adapt to such
increases in consumption remains a critical question.
Perhaps the most striking fact
about the demographic transformation now unfolding is that it is going to make
the world look a lot more like Europe. The world is aging in an unprecedented
way. A milepost in this process came in 1998, when for the first time the
number of people in the developed world over the age of 60 outnumbered those
below the age of 15. By 2047, the world as a whole will reach the same point.
The world’s median age is 28
today, and it is expected to reach 38 by the middle of the century. In the
United States, the median age at that point will be a youngish 41, while it
will be over 50 in Japan and 47 in Europe. The United States will be the only
Western country to have been in the top 10 largest countries in terms of
population size in both 1950 and 2050. Russia, Japan, Germany, Britain, and
Italy were all demographic titans in the middle of the 20th century. Today,
only Russia and Japan still (barely) make the top 10. They will not stay there
long. The world has changed. There is
more and faster change to come.
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