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Copyright © 2002 Earth Policy Institute
Population Growing by 80 Million Annually
Janet Larsen
World population climbed to 6.2 billion in 2002,
up almost 80 million or 1.3 percent from 2001. Population growth
rates soared following World War II as health care improved and
death rates fell. After peaking at 2.1 percent around 1970, annual
world population growth fell to 1.3 percent by 1999. But even while
global growth is slowing, there is a large disparity among the growth
rates of individual nations, and human numbers overall continue
to climb.

For at least 25 years, 20 European countries and
Japan have had below replacement-level fertility rates (2.1 children
per woman). By now a total of 44 countries have fertility levels
that low. Without the projected gain of 2 million immigrants a year
from developing countries, many industrial nations would shortly
experience population declines.
In much of the developing world, howeverhome
to nearly 5 billion peoplepopulations
are still growing rapidly. Even with anticipated declines in fertility
rates, the developing world is projected to have 8.2 billion people
by 2050. Six countries account for half of the world's annual addition:
India (16 million), China (9 million), Pakistan (4 million), Nigeria
(4 million), Bangladesh (3 million), and Indonesia (2 million).
The 48 countries classified as least developed have even more rapid
population growth. If current trends continue, the combined populations
of these nations will almost triple by mid-centuryfrom
658 million to 1.8 billion. Among the 16 countries with extremely
high fertility rates (seven children or more per woman) are Afghanistan,
Angola, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Somalia, Uganda,
and Yemen.
Fertility rates in countries at the intermediate level, where women
have between 2.1 and 5 children on average, are expected to drop
below replacement level by 2050. This group includes India, Pakistan,
South Korea, and Egypt, which were among the first to realize that
rapid population growth makes it difficult to reach socioeconomic
goals. With high population densities in their most fertile land
areas, these countries recognized that fast-growing populations
test the limits of both social services and nature's services.
Although the availability of effective contraception is a key to
slowing population growth, some 350 million women worldwide still
lack access to family planning. Filling the unmet need for family
planning could reduce population growth by as much as a third, given
the estimated number of unintended pregnancies in the developing
world.
Fertility inversely correlates with levels of female education and
employment. The more schooling women have, the fewer children they
bear. Educating women and men about family planning services and
making such services readily and discreetly available could profoundly
reduce future world population size and poverty. Government-supported
family planning programs increase access to reproductive and general
health care. High per capita incomes, low child mortality, urbanization,
and industrialization also can play a role in lowering fertility.
At the International Conference on Population and Development held
in Cairo in 1994, parties agreed to fund a 20-year population and
reproductive health program, with developing countries covering
two thirds of the bill and donor countries paying the rest. The
total yearly spending was expected to be $17 billion until 2000,
and then climb to $22 billion by 2015. While developing countries
have largely honored their commitment, donor countries have contributed
only one third of their allotted share. The results of this shortfall
are that training and services have not expanded as promised, which
researchers calculate meant that between 1994 and 2000 some 122
million women became pregnant unintentionally. One third of them
had abortions. In addition, an estimated 65,000 unintentionally
pregnant women died in childbirth and 844,000 suffered chronic or
permanent injury as a result of their pregnancies.
Epidemics like HIV/AIDS reduce population projections by increasing
morbidity and mortality and also by lowering fertility. AIDS is
altering the demographics of many countries, especially in Africa.
In Botswana, 36 percent of the adult population is HIV-positive.
There, life expectancy has fallen precipitously from 70 years to
36, and Botswana's total population in 2015 is projected to be 28
percent smaller than it would be in the absence of AIDS. In Zimbabwe,
life expectancy has dropped to 43 years, and in South Africa, to
47.
Today nearly half the world's people live in cities, where concentrated
populations facilitate disease transmission. Fortunately, high population
densities also enable potentially efficient provision of services
such as health care and education, if there is the political and
community will.
Urban areas are expected to absorb almost all of the population
growth of the next 30 years. After centuries of rural-to-urban migration,
three fourths of people in the industrial world live in cities.
Developing countries are following this same pattern. In 1950, 18
percent of people in the developing world were urban dwellers. This
more than doubled to 40 percent in 2000, and is projected to reach
56 percent by 2030, when 60 percent of the world will live in cities.
Almost one third of the world today is under the age of 14. History's
largest generation of young people is reaching or will soon reach
reproductive age, intensifying population momentum. As medical advances
allow people to live longer than ever before, the global population
is also aging. Today more than 606 million people are older than
60a number due to reach 2 billion
by 2050.
The gap between the U.N. high-growth projections for 2050 of 10.9
billion and the low-end scenario of 7.9 billion is equal to about
half the world's current population. (See table
and graph.)
With water and land in limited supply worldwide, whether the world
moves to the higher or lower number may have more influence on environmental
and social sustainability than any other variable.
Copyright
© 2002
Earth Policy Institute
ADDITIONAL DATA
Figure
1: World Population and Annual Increase, 1950-2000
Figure
2: World Population, 1950-2000, with Projections to 2050
Figure
3: 20 Most Populous Countries Worldwide, 2000
Figure
4: Countries at or Below Replacement Level Fertility, 2000
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DATA
Figure
1: World Population and Annual Increase, 1950-2000
Figure
2 : World Population,
1950-2000, with Projections to 2050
Figure
3 : 20 Most Populous
Countries Worldwide, 2000
Figure
4 : Countries
at or Below Replacement Level Fertility, 2000

OTHER POPULATION INFORMATION
FROM EARTH POLICY INSTITUTE
ECO-ECONOMY
UPDATES:
Iran's Birth Rate Plummeting
at Record Pace
HIV
Epidemic Restructuring Africas Population
Africa
Is Dying It Needs Help
Population
Growth Sentencing Millions to Hydrological Poverty
BOOKS
Lester R. Brown, Janet Larsen, and Bernie Fischlowitz-Roberts,
The Earth Policy Reader
(New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2002).
Lester R. Brown, Chapter 10: "Stabilizing Population
by Reducing Fertility," in Eco-Economy:
Building an Economy for the Earth (W.W. Norton & Company,
2001).

LINKS
The Alan Guttmacher Institute
http://www.agi-usa.org
PlanetWire.org
http://www.planetwire.org
Population Action International
http://www.populationaction.org
Population Connection
http://www.populationconnection.org
Population Council
http://www.popcouncil.org
Population Reference Bureau
http://www.prb.org
United Nations Population Division
http://www.un.org/esa/
population/unpop.htm
United Nations Population Fund
http://www.unfpa.org
United Nations Population Information Network
http://www.un.org/popin
U.S. Census Bureau International Population Database
http://www.census.gov/ipc/
www/idbnew.html

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