The Press

World’s population to fall for first time since Black Death

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The world’s population is expected to fall for the first time since the Black Death because of plummeting birth rates, a Lancet study has found.

The decline in the number of children women are having has started to slow the growth of the global population, which stands at just over 8 billion, and could mean it starts to fall within decades.

It would be the first time that the number of people on the planet has decreased since the Black Death bubonic plague pandemic killed as many as 50 million people in the mid-1300s, including up to a third of the population in Europe.

That is the only time to date that the number of humans on Earth has fallen, with historians estimating that the global population fell from around 400 million to 350 million.

Women are required to have 2.1 children each on average to maintain population growth, known as the “total fertility rate”, and as of 2021 it stood at 2.23 worldwide.

But experts say it is on a persistent­ly downward trend, having fallen from 4.84 in 1950, and researcher­s predict that it will decrease to 1.83 in 2050 and 1.59 by 2100.

It means that in 2050, 155 of 204 countries will have birth rates lower than required to sustain the population size.

By 2100, it will be 198 countries, or 97% of the world by population, and countries in sub-Saharan Africa will account for more than one in every two babies born.

In 13 countries, including South Korea, Bosnia and Herzegovin­a, and Bhutan, women will have less than one child each on average.

The United Kingdom, like other highincome countries, has a fertility rate lower than the average, at just 1.49 in 2021. It has fallen from 2.19 in 1950, and will continue to decrease to 1.38 and 1.30 in the next 25 and 75 years, the researcher­s said.

It will mean Britain’s current population of around 67 million becomes increasing­ly unbalanced towards older generation­s before falling as the eldest people die, unless there is migration.

Britain’s falling birth rates are already playing out in real time, with recent data showing primary and secondary schools seeing fewer pupils applying for spaces that were once coveted.

And women are increasing­ly turning to egg freezing, which has recently been in the spotlight, with health leaders calling on fertility clinics to make clearer the chances of success.

Experts have said the implicatio­ns of a falling population for society will be “immense” as the old outnumber the young and increase pressure on health services and the workforce.

By 2100, just 26 countries will have birth rates that outpace the number of people dying, with “most of the world transition­ing into natural population decline”.

There could also be an increase in immigratio­n from countries where there is still a “baby boom” occurring to plug workforce shortages, which will need to be managed, the researcher­s added.

Dr Natalia Bhattachar­jee, co-author of the study and lead research scientist at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) at the University of Washington in the United States, said the declining fertility rates “will completely reconfigur­e the global economy and the internatio­nal balance of power and will necessitat­e reorganisi­ng societies”.

“Global recognitio­n of the challenges around migration and global aid networks are going to be all the more critical when there is fierce competitio­n for migrants to sustain economic growth, and as subSaharan Africa’s baby boom continues apace.”

Professor Stein Emil Vollset, senior author from IHME, said the world was “facing staggering social change through the 21st century”.

“In many ways, tumbling fertility rates are a success story, reflecting not only better, easily available contracept­ion but also many women choosing to delay or have fewer children, as well as more opportunit­ies for education and employment.”

The researcher­s used key metrics including women’s education, the use of contracept­ion, child mortality and urbanisati­on to determine changing fertility rates, but these prediction­s could be changed by local policies and world events like pandemics and wars.

Professor Melinda Mills, director at the University of Oxford’s demographi­c science unit, said: “Shrinking and ageing population­s demand preparedne­ss and reorganisa­tion of societies, from impacted food security and migration patterns to the very infrastruc­tures of countries.

“Population compositio­n affects infrastruc­ture such as schools, housing, transport, housing and health care and pensions, but also cultural and voting changes.” – Telegraph Group

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? A nurse checks the health of a newborn baby at Mata Kaushalya Hospital in Patiala, India. A decline in the number of children women are having has started to slow the growth of the global population, which could start to fall for the first time since the Black Death bubonic plague pandemic.
GETTY IMAGES A nurse checks the health of a newborn baby at Mata Kaushalya Hospital in Patiala, India. A decline in the number of children women are having has started to slow the growth of the global population, which could start to fall for the first time since the Black Death bubonic plague pandemic.

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