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Questions & Answers
- Why is population an important topic?
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The human race has an enormous impact on this planet! We control and modify
the Earth more than any other species. How do we meet the needs of human beings
and also preserve Earth's finite resources, biodiversity, and natural beauty?
This is the fundamental question of our time, and the challenge is becoming
more problematic as we add more people. Meanwhile, in every locality,
it's important to know how fast population is growing, so that we can build
sufficient sewers, roads, power plants, and schools.
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Do we know exactly how many people there are in the world today?
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No. There are so many people on this planet that counting them up, exactly,
is impossible. However, experts believe there are more than 6.5 billion
people in the world today. This is a fairly reliable estimate. World population
in 2000 was 2 times greater than it was in 1960, 4 times greater than 1900,
and 10 times greater than 1700. After growing very slowly for tens of thousands
of years, world population has grown very rapidly in the last few centuries
and continues to do so.
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How fast is the world's population growing?
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In terms of net gain (births minus deaths), we are adding over 200,000 people
to this planet every day, or 140 EVERY MINUTE.
That equates to 70 million more people every
year, about the same as the combined population of California, Texas, and
New York. Although we have made encouraging progress in slowing the growth
rate, any rate of growth is
unsustainable in the long term, so we must stabilize population soon
for the good of future generations.
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Are there any parts of the world where population is not growing?
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Yes. Roughly speaking, populations are holding stable (zero population growth)
in Australia, Japan, and Western Europe. Populations are decreasing
somewhat in Russia and some Eastern European countries. Growth in several
southern African countries has slowed due to higher death rates because of
AIDS. But population is growing either rapidly or very rapidly in every
other part of the world right now, including India, Pakistan, Nigeria,
the Democratic Republic of Congo, Bangladesh, Uganda, the United States of
America, Ethiopia and China. In other words, population has stabilized
where about 1.2 billion people live and is still increasing very rapidly where
4 billion people live -- those who can least afford it. Result: the annual net gain of over 70 million people!
Click here to see where the world's population is
concentrated.
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I've heard some say the world population crisis is over and that it's not
a problem anymore. Is this true?
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No, absolutely not. First of all, 6.5 billion people may well be too many
already. Cornell University professor David Pimentel's research shows
that about 2 billion people is the number the planet can sustainably support,
if everyone consumes the same amount of resources as the average European
(which is less than the average American).
Secondly, U.N. experts predict that world population will increase for at least the
next 50 years, with a "most likely" prediction of 9 billion
people by the year 2050. There probably will be additional growth beyond that.
There's no doubt that the worldwide average number of children per woman has
come down over the last 50 years -- from more than 5 to less than 3 -- but: (1) the
current average is still well above replacement level, which would be 2.1
children per woman, and (2) the number of women having children is about TWICE
what it was in 1960. There is also huge "demographic momentum,"
since half the world's population is age 24 or younger -- either having
children now, or poised to have them in the next 10 to 15 years -- so that
any changes we make today may not have a visible effect until a generation
has passed!
Finally, people are living longer all over the world and will continue
to do so, with a resultant slowdown in death rates. Thus, there's a big imbalance
in the birth to death ratio: currently about 5 births for every 2 deaths
worldwide.
- So much of the world is still empty space -- can't people just move to less crowded places?
- A lot of that space isn't empty: vast tracts of farmland are necessary to feed
the people who live in cities and towns, and forests are necessary to produce wood and oxygen.
Much of the land that hasn't been settled by people simply isn't habitable: it's too dry,
too cold, or too rocky. Besides, the people who are most overcrowded are struggling to
exist on less than a dollar a day... they don't have the money to move!
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The United States and other countries with low birth rates let in millions
of immigrants each year. Doesn't this act as a "safety valve" to relieve
the population pressure of the faster-growing countries?
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Not really. Think of it this way. Each year the U.S. currently allows
about a million people to immigrate legally (And another 500,000 to a
million come in illegally.) But each year most countries of the developing
world add almost 70 million more people to their numbers, net gain! The
one to two million coming into the U.S. hardly make a dent to relieve the
crushing problems created by the almost 70 million more people into these
resource stressed countries -- each year!
If we continue letting in as many immigrants for
the next 50 years as we have for the past 25, we will absorb only about 4 percent
of the population growth from the less-developed countries! Although migration
can greatly improve the lives of the immigrants themselves, it is not an effective
way to relieve the population growth of the countries they come from.
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I've heard that as population growth slows, countries like the U.S. are going to
have to support increasing numbers of dependent elderly people. Don't we need to
have more kids and increase immigration so that we'll have enough workers to support
all these retired people?
- No. First of all, people are dependent in their retirement years for only
a fraction of the time they're dependent in their childhood. The graph at right
shows that right now retirement lasts only half as long as the dependent period
before a young person enters the workforce. If trends continue, it may decrease
to a third or even a quarter of that youthful dependency. So children are far
more expensive to the economy than the elderly! Secondly, population growth has
to stop sooner or later, so bringing in more people is not a long-term solution.
The long-term solution is to restructure our system so that we don't need a
constant influx of more people. The sooner we stop the increase in numbers,
the more intact we leave our resource base for our children of the future.
- What do you mean by "humane" population stabilization?
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Population continues increasing because the death rate worldwide dropped
much farther than the birth rate. Of course no one wants to see death rates rise.
That would be an unthinkably inhumane way to stop population growth!
The humane way is for birth rates to drop and balance with today's lower death rates.
Repeated studies in countries all around the world show that the longer
children stay in school, the fewer children they will have. Smaller
families can provide more resources for each child, and entire nations benefit
when they have fewer children to drain their limited, declining resources.
So education is the key to humane population stabilization.
Another highly successful educational approach involves the use of specially-created
soap operas, both on TV and radio, that communicate -- even to illiterate people --
the benefits of having fewer children. These special soaps are currently running
on every continent (except Antarctica) and are having an incredible impact to
help reduce people's expectations about their "desired family size."
Our mission at World Population Balance is education because education is the key!
Many of the statistics on this page come from the
Executive Summary of
World Population Prospects, 2004 Revision.
Continue to Less Frequently Asked Questions
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