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  • Every two years one million Japanese  disappear.

  • China's population will halve by the end of the century,

  • the median age in Italy has reached 48.

  • All around the world birth rates are crashingIs humanity  dying out? What is going on and how bad is it?

  • For hundreds of thousands of years the human  population barely grew at all, haunted by disease,  

  • famine and war until the industrial revolution –  exponential progress led to exponential growth,  

  • pushing our numbers to 6 billion in the  year 1999 and 8 billion just 24 years later.  

  • And our numbers will continue to rise  for at least another 60 years

  • but this growth obscures somethingPeople kinda stopped having babies.

  • For a stable population, every couple needs to  have two children on average.

  • If the number is higher it grows, if lower, it shrinks. If it's well below, it shrinks a lot, and quickly:

  • Like in South Korea, one of the hottest exporters of pop culture.

  • Its fertility rate lay at 0.8 children per woman in 2022, the lowest in the world.

  • This means 100 South Koreans of childbearing age today will have 40 kids.

  • Who then will have 16 kids, who then will have 6.  

  • If nothing changes then within 100 years there will be 94% fewer young people

  • and South Korea will seepopulation implosion. That is if things stay the same

  • we have yet to see if there is a bottom to fertility rates.

  • Although looking at the bigger picture and absolute numbers, this population will not shrink that much

  • it simply returns to the level it once was. In 1950 there were 20 million South Koreans,  

  • in 2023 there are 52 million. And by 2100 there  will be 24 million again.

  • But the issue is not that there will be fewer South Koreans,

  • the issue is the composition of the population.

  • In 1950 the median age was 18. In 2023 it is 45.  In 2100 it will be 59. A country of seniors.

  • And South Korea is far from alone.

  • China may be seeing the steepest population  reversal in history, unstoppable at this point.

  • Rapid industrialization, urbanisation and  rising incomes meant that the Chinese started to  

  • prefer smaller families. That, plus the  introduction of the One Child Policy,  

  • which aimed to slow population growth, means that  China has had a low fertility rate for decades.

  • With a fertility rate of 1.16 births per woman,  

  • within four generations 100 young Chinese will turn into 20.  

  • China's fertility rates are now one of the  lowest in East Asia, lower than even Japan's.

  • In comparison Europe's depopulation  is much slower despite low fertility,  

  • since unlike Asia most states have had a steady  flow of immigrants. The impact is complex,  

  • as a good chunk of immigrants come  from other low fertility rate areas,  

  • the number of immigrant women who do have a lot of  children is not yet high enough to make a big dent  

  • and fertility rates of immigrants tend to adjust  to the native population within 2-3 generations.

  • In Eastern Europe, the decline has sped up even  more because many young people have emigrated to  

  • stronger economies, like Germanywhose median  age is one of the highest in the world at 46.

  • Latin America fell below  replacement in 2015. In the US,  

  • immigration is the only thing keeping  the population growing substantially.

  • There are still places where fertility  rates have not fallen below replacement yet:  

  • In much of the Middle East, North and Sub  Saharan Africa fertility is still high,  

  • which creates the same concerns  about overpopulation as when  

  • Asia grew very quickly in the 1950s,  but that turned out to be unfounded.

  • But recently the UN has reduced its forecast  for Africa's population drastically. For Nigeria  

  • estimates were lowered from 733 million  to 546 million by 2100. Similar trends are  

  • being noted across the continent. As Africa  develops, fertility rates are shrinking much  

  • faster than anticipated. It is becoming  more likely that East Asia's story will  

  • repeat itselfby the end of the century most  places in Africa may be below replacement too.

  • So declining fertility rates  and ageing populations have  

  • become a general trend, all over the world.

  • Why is all of this a big deal?

  • Demographics & Poverty

  • For a functioning society you need enough  people in the prime of their lives.

  • Young and middle aged people do most of  the work. In any economic system,  

  • working age people create a society's wealth.

  • In retirement you stop contributing as  much to the economy. But the majority of  

  • healthcare costs are generated by  seniors. The way the world worked  

  • in the past was that a lot of younger  people took care of a few older people.

  • Imagine a society where most people are  older than 60. The financial burden for  

  • the young will be immense, unsustainable  even for the richest countries.

  • Even in the best case this will mean  people having to work way longer,  

  • exploding health care costs and poverty, while  states with shrinking income struggle to keep up  

  • with rising costs. Technology might soften  the blow, but can't compensate entirely.

  • We can see this happening already – 11 out of  31 provinces in China are running deficits for  

  • their pension funds. They got old before  they got rich and now they can't really  

  • catch up anymore. China's working age  population is predicted to fall by 20%,  

  • or 200 million people by 2050 – as much as  today's entire working age population of the US.

  • Infrastructure collapse is an almost  universal constant of population decline

  • Because infrastructure works at scale and  doesn't get cheaper to operate if it is used  

  • by fewer people. If a population declinesbe it because of urbanisation or the loss  

  • of industry and employmentonce people and  their income disappear, the resources necessary  

  • to sustain infrastructure disappear too. You can see it in many depopulated towns  

  • and cities in East Germany that suffered  sharp population decline after German  

  • reunification. Or look at Japan. You can  tour the countryside to see dying towns.

  • Waitif there are fewer people, won't life get  cheaper and better and there'll be more resources  

  • to go around? Well nopopulation decline  doesn't lead to prosperity. It's people's  

  • ideas and work that create our prosperitynot the mere availability of resources.

  • Another danger for ageing societies is that  elected governments could decide to mostly  

  • represent the interests and fears of their  elderly populationspotentially leading  

  • to short term thinking and a preference  for conserving wealth over innovation.  

  • That's not a society that can handle  issues like climate change, which need  

  • massive investment and fresh ideassomething  the world is already having a hard time with.

  • Many people think that having fewer humans on earth is  actually a good thing because our societies are  

  • too unsustainable, we are using up too many  resources and because of climate change.

  • The problem is, that even if you want fewer humans, this process is very likely too slow  

  • to have a positive impact on the environmentthe  world population is going to grow for at least 60  

  • more years before it may shrink againby then we  have to solve climate change. Likewise, any other  

  • upsides a lower population might have will most  likely not materialise themselves this century.

  • So Just Like Import People?

  • The easiest solution seems to be immigrationbut the fertility of immigrants adjusts to local  

  • levels within three generations. So you need  a constant influx of new migrantswhich is  

  • not sustainable long term as birth rates are  dropping everywhere. The only way would be  

  • to keep poor countries poor, so that the young  and motivated migrate to developed countries,  

  • looking for opportunity and a better lifeKind of an immoral thing to wish for.

  • By the end of the century Africa will have  the highest number of young people in the  

  • world and so African migrants might become  the world's most sought after immigrants,  

  • with elderly nations fighting hard for  every person willing to make the move.

  • Immigration also can create societal or cultural  tensions, which is a universal phenomenon in all  

  • culturesespecially when cultures with very  different sets of values meetoften leading  

  • to a backlash that slows immigration down  again. It's easy to be frustrated at this,  

  • but ignoring this will only divide societiesempower demagogues and increase xenophobia.

  • Economically, immigration is  largely beneficial for societies,  

  • even if this seems counterintuitive to many  people. Especially countries like the US,  

  • an immigrant nation built on the idea of personal  freedom and opportunity through hard work,  

  • will benefit the most. Countries like this  will have a clear advantage this century,  

  • especially if they can attract the  world's brightest and most ambitious.

  • Conclusion & Our Opinion

  • This topic is way too big, affects  societies as diverse as literally  

  • all of humanity. So please take this  part with a gigantic grain of salt,  

  • obviously we are looking at this from  our central European perspective.

  • One way to look at falling birthrates is  as a side effect of the world being less  

  • bad than it was. Especially women are freer, more educated and wealthier than in the past.  

  • But it turns out that if societies are better  off, individuals often decide to have fewer kids

  • Interestingly, there is a gap between how many  kids people want and how many they are having:

  • The mean number of kids women in Europe want is around 2.3, much more than they are actually having.

  • While we gained a lot of freedoms in the last  century, across continents and economic systems,  

  • that came at a cost: The tight knit  communities and family structures  

  • that were part of our nature, where  kids could be brought up by a village.

  • Today young parents have to deal with  different challenges and societal expectations.

  • Women are kind of ground down between the wish  and expectation to have a family and a career,  

  • being pressured to do both but not  compromise either. Men are sharing  

  • parental duties more equally than they used tobut are often still expected to be the provider.

  • And it is sadly true that usually, at least one  parent's career is held back. In many developed  

  • countries the gender pay gap is chieflypay gap between mothers and everyone else.

  • But it is not just outside pressure: Our  culture of individualism probably plays a  

  • role too. We have only one life to explore, be  free, travel, have fun, accomplish something

  • and try to be happy. So people commit  to partners later in life and often  

  • decide against big families or any at all. And  that's fair, nobody owes their country babies.

  • So far no country has successfully managed  to increase birth rates significantly,  

  • so as of now we don't really know what works. But  here are a few options to at least make the lives  

  • of parents much easier: free and abundant access  to childcare, financial benefits for parents,  

  • more and cheaper housing. Parenthood has to stop  being a career obstacle. And our culture needs  

  • to become more positive towards familiesAnd that is something we can all work on.  

  • The next time you sit next to a crying baby  – don't be a jerk about it. Kids are hard.

  • In the end, humanity will not die out because we're having fewer babies. The age and composition of our  

  • societies changes quickly and we need to deal with  that sooner rather than later. But in the end,  

  • of all the incredibly hard challenges we faced  before, why would this be the one we can't solve

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Every two years one million Japanese  disappear.

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