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Demographic 'Bomb' May Only Go 'Pop!'

August 29, 2004
 By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr. 



 

REMEMBER the population bomb, the fertility explosion set
to devour the world's food and suck up or pollute all its
air and water? Its fuse has by no means been plucked. But
over the last three decades, much of its Malthusian
detonation power has leaked out. 

Birthrates in developed countries from Italy to Korea have
sunk below the levels needed for their populations to
replace themselves; the typical age of marriage and
pregnancy has risen, and the use of birth control has
soared beyond the dreams of Margaret Sanger and the
nightmares of the Vatican. 

The threat is now more regional than global, explosive only
in places like India and Pakistan. Ever since 1968, when
the United Nations Population Division predicted that the
world population, now 6.3 billion, would grow to at least
12 billion by 2050, the agency has regularly revised its
estimates downward. Now it expects population to plateau at
nine billion. 

Where did those billions go? Millions of babies have died,
a fraction of them from AIDS, far more from malaria,
diarrhea, pneumonia, even measles. More millions have been
aborted, either to avoid birth or, as in China and India,
to avoid giving birth to a girl. (Cheap ultrasound
technology has in the last decade made it easy to determine
a child's sex.) 

But even AIDS and abortion are drops in the demographic
bucket. The real missing billions are the babies who were
simply never conceived. They weren't conceived because
their would-be elder brothers and sisters survived, or
because women's lives improved. In the rich West, Mom went
to college and decided that putting three children through
graduate school would be unaffordable. In the poor Eastern
or Southern parts of the globe, Mom found a sweatshop job
and didn't need a fourth or fifth child to fetch firewood. 

"On a farm, children help with the pigs or chickens,"
explained Joseph Chamie, director of the United Nations
population division. Nearly half the world's people live in
cities now, he said, "and when you move to a city, children
are not as helpful." 

Beyond that, simple public health measures like dams for
clean water, vitamins for pregnant women, hand-washing for
midwives, oral rehydration salts for babies, vaccines for
youngsters and antibiotics for all helped double world life
expectancy in the 20th century, to 60 years from 30. 

More surviving children means less incentive to give birth
as often. As late as 1970, the world's median fertility
level was 5.4 births per woman; in 2000, it was 2.9.
Barring war, famine, epidemic or disaster, a country needs
a birthrate of 2.1 children per woman to hold steady. 

The best-known example of shrinkage is Italy, whose women
were once symbols of fecundity partly because of the
country's peasant traditions and partly because of its
Roman Catholicism, which rejects birth control. By 2000,
Italy's fertility rate was Western Europe's lowest, at 1.2
births per woman. Its population is expected to drop 20
percent by midcentury. 

Italy plummeted right past wealthy, liberal, Protestant
Denmark, where women got birth control early. Denmark was
below population replacement level in 1970, at 2.0 births
per woman, and slid to 1.7 by 2001. In Europe's poorest
country, Albania, where rural people still live in armed
clan compounds, the 1970 rate of 5.1 births per woman fell
to 2.1 in 1999. 

Even in North Africa, regarded as the great exception to
the shrinking population trend, birthrates have dropped
somewhat. Egypt's, for example, went from 5.4 births per
woman in 1970 to 3.6 in 1999. Mr. Chamie, of the United
Nations, says the numbers refute what he calls the "myth of
Muslim fertility," an unfair characterization, he says,
that will disappear as the lives of Muslim women ease.
Jordanians, for example, he said, had eight children per
woman in the 1960's; now the rate is 3.5. (Across the
river, Israel's numbers went from four in the 1950's to 2.7
today.) In Tunisia and Iran, the number may be close to two
children, he said. 

Old notions of Asian fertility are similarly false. China
has pushed its fertility rate below that of France; Japan's
population is withering with age; and after five decades of
industrialization, South Korea, a mostly rural country with
six births per woman during its civil war in the 1950's,
now has 1.17 births per woman. 

Alarmed by the trends, many countries are paying citizens
to get pregnant. Estonia pays for a year's maternity leave.
The treasurer of Australia, Peter Costello, introduced
$2,000-per-baby subsidies in that country's 2004 budget. He
told his fellow citizens to "go home and do your patriotic
duty tonight." 

Japanese prefectures, tackling the problem at an earlier
stage, arrange singles' cruises. Unique among developed
countries, the United States has little need to finance
romance because its birthrate has held steady at 2.13 per
woman. Its growth, about three million people a year, is
mostly fueled by immigration, as it has been since the
Mayflower. 

Half the world's population growth is in six countries:
India, Pakistan, Nigeria, Indonesia, Bangladesh and China
(despite its slowed birthrate). That makes doom-saying
trickier than it was in 1968, when Paul R. Ehrlich
frightened everyone with his book "The Population Bomb."
Fertility shifts in individual countries are notoriously
unpredictable, said Nicholas Eberstadt, a population expert
at the American Enterprise Institute, so one might just as
well use a Ouija board to predict the fallout. 

Local changes can be even harder to anticipate. Calcutta,
for example, once the epitome of overcrowding, is starting
to shrink, Mr. Eberstadt said. 

The father of the population bomb, Dr. Ehrlich, a professor
of population studies and biology at Stanford, says he was
"pleasantly surprised" by global changes that have
undermined the book's gloomiest projections. They include
China's one-child policy and the rapid adoption of better
seeds and fertilizers by Third World farmers, meaning that
more mouths can be fed, even if just with corn porridge and
rice. (He notes, however, quoting United Nations figures,
that about 600 million people go to bed hungry each night.)
But Dr. Ehrlich still argues that the earth's "optimal
population size" is two billion. That's different from the
maximum supportable size, which depends on the consumption
of resources. 

"I have severe doubts that we can support even two billion
if they all live like citizens of the U.S.," he said. "The
world can support a lot more vegetarian saints than
Hummer-driving idiots." 

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/08/29/weekinreview/29mcne.html?ex=1094896934&ei=1&en=2aa3f8e04982ebd0


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