• The Alternative, Optimistic Story of Population Decline

    From David P.@21:1/5 to All on Fri Feb 3 10:37:49 2023
    The Alternative, Optimistic Story of Population Decline
    By Wang Feng, Jan. 30, 2023, NY Times

    The shoe has dropped. The big one. China, the most populous country on the planet for centuries, this month reported its first population decline in six decades, a trend that is almost certainly irreversible. By the end of the century, China may have
    only around half of the 1.41 billion people it has now, according to U.N. projections, and may already have been overtaken by India.

    The news has been met with gloom and doom, often framed as the start of China’s inexorable decline and, more broadly, the harbinger of a demographic and economic time bomb that will strain the world’s capacity to support aging populations.

    There is no doubt that a shrinking global population — a trend expected to set in by the end of this century — poses unprecedented challenges for humanity. China is only the latest and largest major country to join a club that already includes Japan,
    South Korea, Russia, Italy and others. Germany would most likely be in decline, too, if not for immigration, and many others could begin shrinking in the years ahead. (The U.S. is expected to grow moderately in coming decades, largely because of
    immigration.) Median U.N. projections point to global population peaking in the mid-2080s at more than 10 billion, but if fertility rates continue to drop, the decline could begin decades earlier.

    But the alarmist warnings are often simplistic and premature. The glass is at least half full. Shrinking populations are usually part of a natural, inevitable process, and rather than focus excessively on concerns like labor shortages and pension support,
    we need to look at the brighter spots for our world.

    There is no need for panic; we’ve made that mistake before.

    In the 2nd half of the 20th century the world was panicking about unstoppable population growth. The number of people on the planet more than tripled in seven decades, from 2.5 billion in 1950 to around 8 billion in 2022. Turns out, that was a transitory
    phase when mortality rates fell faster than fertility rates because of improved nutrition and public health and relative peace.

    Panic can lead to hasty policy and human tragedy. This reached its fullest form with China’s extreme birth-control campaigns, which began in the late 1970s and caused immense suffering, mostly for women, through forced abortions or fines and other
    penalties for breaking rules that restricted most couples to having only one child. Until those limits were scrapped beginning in 2015, hundreds of millions of Chinese women underwent sterilization procedures or had intrauterine devices inserted.

    The population declines seen today in some countries have come about largely as a happy story of greater longevity and freedom. Fertility rates worldwide dropped from more than 5 births per woman in the early 60s to 2.3 in 2020. Credit greater investment
    in child and maternal health everywhere: A mother who successfully brings her child to term and an infant who survives to childhood lower birthrates because parents often don’t feel the need to try again. Greater availability of free or affordable
    contraception has reduced unwanted births.

    China, South Korea and Japan are now all in population decline; this is due in part to rapid increases in income, employment and education. The number of South Korean women who went on to postsecondary education rose from 6% in 1980 to over 90% by 2020;
    China and Japan also have seen big gains. Lower birthrates stem from greater personal and reproductive freedom, such as the choice to stay unmarried; higher pay; and more professional opportunities for women in these nations.

    Having more women in the work force is a recipe for even greater productivity and prosperity and could help ease labor concerns among falling populations. More women than ever are rising to leadership positions in business, media and politics.

    Compared with a half-century ago, people in many countries are richer, healthier and better educated, and women are more empowered. China’s population, for example, is shrinking and aging, but its people are more educated and have a longer life
    expectancy than at any other time in the country’s history. Expanded educational opportunities guarantee a spot in a university for almost every person born today in China, including more women than men.

    Average world life expectancy has increased from 51 years in 1960 to 73 in 2019 and even more so in China, from 51 in 1962 to 78 in 2019. Increases of that magnitude reshape lives and open up opportunities unimaginable when life spans were shorter, such
    as workers remaining productive later in life and growing markets for older consumers in areas like tourism, nutritional supplements and medical devices, among others.

    Fewer people on the planet, of course, may reduce humanity’s ecological footprint and competition for finite resources. There could even be greater peace as governments are forced to choose between spending on military equipment or on pensions. And as
    rich nations come to rely more on immigrants from poorer countries, those migrants gain greater access to the global prosperity currently concentrated in the developed world.

    This new demography brings new challenges, including the need to offer quality and affordable child care, make college education more affordable and equitable, provide guaranteed minimum income and make societies more gender equal. Governments should
    abandon the mindless pursuit of economic growth in favor of well-being for citizens.

    There is no reason the world’s population must keep growing or even remain level. And just as earlier panic led to harmful policies in China and elsewhere, efforts to raise fertility — which may prove futile — risk viewing women once again as birth
    machines.

    Global population will inevitably decline. Rather than try to reverse that, we need to embrace it and adapt.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/30/opinion/china-world-population-decline.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Y A@21:1/5 to David P. on Sun Feb 5 07:19:29 2023
    You planning to move back to USA one day, David ? ( Name indicates, You are a american )




    On Friday, February 3, 2023 at 8:37:50 PM UTC+2, David P. wrote:
    The Alternative, Optimistic Story of Population Decline
    By Wang Feng, Jan. 30, 2023, NY Times

    The shoe has dropped. The big one. China, the most populous country on the planet for centuries, this month reported its first population decline in six decades, a trend that is almost certainly irreversible. By the end of the century, China may have
    only around half of the 1.41 billion people it has now, according to U.N. projections, and may already have been overtaken by India.

    The news has been met with gloom and doom, often framed as the start of China’s inexorable decline and, more broadly, the harbinger of a demographic and economic time bomb that will strain the world’s capacity to support aging populations.

    There is no doubt that a shrinking global population — a trend expected to set in by the end of this century — poses unprecedented challenges for humanity. China is only the latest and largest major country to join a club that already includes
    Japan, South Korea, Russia, Italy and others. Germany would most likely be in decline, too, if not for immigration, and many others could begin shrinking in the years ahead. (The U.S. is expected to grow moderately in coming decades, largely because of
    immigration.) Median U.N. projections point to global population peaking in the mid-2080s at more than 10 billion, but if fertility rates continue to drop, the decline could begin decades earlier.

    But the alarmist warnings are often simplistic and premature. The glass is at least half full. Shrinking populations are usually part of a natural, inevitable process, and rather than focus excessively on concerns like labor shortages and pension
    support, we need to look at the brighter spots for our world.

    There is no need for panic; we’ve made that mistake before.

    In the 2nd half of the 20th century the world was panicking about unstoppable population growth. The number of people on the planet more than tripled in seven decades, from 2.5 billion in 1950 to around 8 billion in 2022. Turns out, that was a
    transitory phase when mortality rates fell faster than fertility rates because of improved nutrition and public health and relative peace.

    Panic can lead to hasty policy and human tragedy. This reached its fullest form with China’s extreme birth-control campaigns, which began in the late 1970s and caused immense suffering, mostly for women, through forced abortions or fines and other
    penalties for breaking rules that restricted most couples to having only one child. Until those limits were scrapped beginning in 2015, hundreds of millions of Chinese women underwent sterilization procedures or had intrauterine devices inserted.

    The population declines seen today in some countries have come about largely as a happy story of greater longevity and freedom. Fertility rates worldwide dropped from more than 5 births per woman in the early 60s to 2.3 in 2020. Credit greater
    investment in child and maternal health everywhere: A mother who successfully brings her child to term and an infant who survives to childhood lower birthrates because parents often don’t feel the need to try again. Greater availability of free or
    affordable contraception has reduced unwanted births.

    China, South Korea and Japan are now all in population decline; this is due in part to rapid increases in income, employment and education. The number of South Korean women who went on to postsecondary education rose from 6% in 1980 to over 90% by 2020;
    China and Japan also have seen big gains. Lower birthrates stem from greater personal and reproductive freedom, such as the choice to stay unmarried; higher pay; and more professional opportunities for women in these nations.

    Having more women in the work force is a recipe for even greater productivity and prosperity and could help ease labor concerns among falling populations. More women than ever are rising to leadership positions in business, media and politics.

    Compared with a half-century ago, people in many countries are richer, healthier and better educated, and women are more empowered. China’s population, for example, is shrinking and aging, but its people are more educated and have a longer life
    expectancy than at any other time in the country’s history. Expanded educational opportunities guarantee a spot in a university for almost every person born today in China, including more women than men.

    Average world life expectancy has increased from 51 years in 1960 to 73 in 2019 and even more so in China, from 51 in 1962 to 78 in 2019. Increases of that magnitude reshape lives and open up opportunities unimaginable when life spans were shorter,
    such as workers remaining productive later in life and growing markets for older consumers in areas like tourism, nutritional supplements and medical devices, among others.

    Fewer people on the planet, of course, may reduce humanity’s ecological footprint and competition for finite resources. There could even be greater peace as governments are forced to choose between spending on military equipment or on pensions. And
    as rich nations come to rely more on immigrants from poorer countries, those migrants gain greater access to the global prosperity currently concentrated in the developed world.

    This new demography brings new challenges, including the need to offer quality and affordable child care, make college education more affordable and equitable, provide guaranteed minimum income and make societies more gender equal. Governments should
    abandon the mindless pursuit of economic growth in favor of well-being for citizens.

    There is no reason the world’s population must keep growing or even remain level. And just as earlier panic led to harmful policies in China and elsewhere, efforts to raise fertility — which may prove futile — risk viewing women once again as
    birth machines.

    Global population will inevitably decline. Rather than try to reverse that, we need to embrace it and adapt.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/30/opinion/china-world-population-decline.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From David P.@21:1/5 to Y A on Sun Feb 5 12:01:57 2023
    Y A wrote:
    You planning to move back to USA one day, David ? ( Name indicates, You are a american )
    -----------------------
    Who's the funny man?

    David P. wrote:
    The Alternative, Optimistic Story of Population Decline
    By Wang Feng, Jan. 30, 2023, NY Times
    [...]
    Global population will inevitably decline. Rather than try to reverse that, we need to embrace it and adapt.

    https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/30/opinion/china-world-population-decline.html

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)