REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Census Update: What the world will look like in 2050

POSTED BY: NIKI2
UPDATED: Friday, July 1, 2011 15:13
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Friday, July 1, 2011 12:05 PM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


Interesting to consider. I won't be around then, but some of you will see whether the forecast holds or not:
Quote:

Here is the world in 2050, as imagined by the U.S. Census Bureau: India will be the most populous nation, surpassing China sometime around 2025. The U.S. will remain exactly where it is now: in third place, with a population of 423 million (up from 308 million in 2010). And declining birth rates in two of the world's most economically and politically influential countries, Japan and Russia, will cause them to fall from their current positions as the 9th and 10th most populous nations, respectively, to 16th and 17th.

The findings are the result of population estimates and projections of 228 countries compiled by the Census Bureau's International Data Base (IDB). They offer a revealing look into the future. "One of the biggest changes we've seen has been the decline in fertility in some developed countries, such as China," says Loraine West, an IDB project manager, "while others are experiencing a slight increase." In other words, China's population boom is finally slowing down, while Western Europe's long-declining birth rate is — in some places, at least — once again rising. Spain and Italy are "on an uptick," says West, "but how high will [the birth rate] rise? Or will it simply fluctuate up and down on some long-term level? We'll have to see." According to Italy's National Institute of Statistics, the country's recent population increase can be largely attributed to its immigrant population.

The two countries on track to make the biggest population gains are Nigeria and Ethiopia. Nigeria currently boasts 166 million people, but by 2050 its population is expected to jump to 402 million. Ethiopia's population will likely triple, from 91 million to 278 million, making the East African nation one of the top 10 most populous countries in the world for the first time. In fact, according to the U.N. Population Division, although only 18% of the world's population lives in so-called high-fertility countries (places where women have more than 1.5 daughters on average), most of those countries are in Africa; the continent is expected to experience significant population growth in the coming decades, which could compound the already-dire food-supply issues in some African nations.

While the U.S. appears relatively stable — it's the only country in the top 10 whose ranking is not expected to change in the next 40 years — previous reports have highlighted dramatic demographic shifts within the country's borders. Last week, the Census Bureau announced that more than half of children under age 2 in the U.S. are ethnic minorities. Add to that the non-Hispanic white population's increasing age (in California, for example, the median age for non-Hispanic whites is almost 10 years older than that of the state as a whole) and the U.S. in 2050 will look a lot different than the one we know today.

Perhaps the most unfortunate change is the one happening in Russia. The cold, vast country has been undergoing steady depopulation since 1992, and the U.S. Census Bureau expects it to decline further, from 139 million people to 109 million by 2050. That's a 21% drop, even more than what the country suffered during World War II. Like many countries, Russia is experiencing declining birth rates, but it's also suffering from a relatively low life expectancy. According to the World Health Organization, Russian men have a life expectancy of just 62 years, a fact that is often attributed to the country's high rate of alcoholism and poor diet. (By comparison, Japan is also struggling with depopulation, but the World Health Organization puts its life expectancy at 80 for men and 86 for women).

So what does all this mean? The U.S. is not yet experiencing the kind of population decline that Europe experienced in the 1990s and 2000s, although immigration and differing birth rates among races means that the country's ethnic composition is changing. Something similar will be going on in the rest of the world as well: the booms of Africa and India, the decline of Russia and the expected plateau of China (holding steady at about 1.3 billion people between now and 2050) will all change the makeup of the estimated 9.4 billion people who will call Earth home in 2050. The future, it seems, is not as distant as we think.

http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2080404,00.html#ixzz1Qt
TFmTLy


Gee, wouldn't it be nice if minorities outnumbered Caucasians in America and had to be recognized and treated the same? I'm not holding my breath...

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Friday, July 1, 2011 2:41 PM

FREMDFIRMA



Well, so far as I have heard, Japan is actually conerned about their declining birth rate, something which is likely to become even more of an issue as fears of radiation exposure cause even more of their population to forgo parenthood.

There's other social issues involved, but I lack the time at the moment to go into it - but I felt it worth a mention on the topic.

-F

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Friday, July 1, 2011 2:42 PM

DREAMTROVE


Such strudies omit the fact that people migrate. There will be 400 million nigerians, not 400 million people in nigeria. Likely, they will migrate to other parts of africa. I've posited the concept of a nigerian empire springing up due to their successful economy and high growth rafe.

Many countries which appear stable are collapsing populations, when immigration and age distribution are taken into account. As PN already posted, it's speicific countries. In the UK, the birth rate is much higher than in the czech republkc. The population of Botswanans are falling, and they will likely be displaced by nigerians.

What does all of this say? Probably that some nations have healthy policies which promote a healthy economy and a healthy populatjon, and nigeria is probably a model to emulate, rather than, as the globalist elite would have you believe "a threat." Africa can provide food for 7 billion people.

Policy and economics make the environment conducive to human survival, polution does not. What just happened in New York is a bad policy for humans. What yiu were just complaining about in Kansas makes for good policy: Improved health standards for medical clinics. I'm in favor of improved health standards. If abortionist clinics cannot meet those, they *should* hand that procedure over to hospitals.

This is what right to life is about. If you don't look after your own, you will become extinct, and with you, everything you believe.

Do you really think the Nigerian Empire, when it starts outsourcing jobs to the USA is going to give a damn about American liberal progressive ideas? (Last time I checked, abortion was still illegal in Nigeria)

But hey, screw the hypothetical: Do you think Communist China when it starts colonizing Idaho next year is going to give a damn about American liberal progressive ideas?

Or, perhaps, do you see that America through its pre-emptive interest based global imperial and genocidal foreign policy is currently discrediting all of our social ideas in the eyes of the entire World right now?


Of course we are. And nothing accomplished in america in terms of social progress means a god damn thing if there are no americans, or if 21st century America becomes historically synonymous with Nazi Germany.


Just gnaw on that. These countries that will replace us will be writing the social agenda, and you should read their social agenda and gulp. Then rethink our own policies towards them, and towards ourselves. Perhaps they are doing something right, and we're doing something wrong, but whatever the reason we think we are right for will soon be made irrelevant by the fact that evolution says we are wrong.


That's what a ship is, you know - it's not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails, that's what a ship needs.

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Friday, July 1, 2011 2:45 PM

DREAMTROVE


Quote:

Originally posted by Fremdfirma:

Well, so far as I have heard, Japan is actually conerned about their declining birth rate, something which is likely to become even more of an issue as fears of radiation exposure cause even more of their population to forgo parenthood.

There's other social issues involved, but I lack the time at the moment to go into it - but I felt it worth a mention on the topic.

-F


Frem

A long term failed policy, and the failure to secure their empire ;) but most of the world is in this situation. Our social model has failed. I am surrounded right now by colonies of people speaking 15th century German (the Amish) because they have a better social moddel than we do, and our society is about to drill two new fracking wells on their land (chemical warfare) and another nine on our own.




That's what a ship is, you know - it's not just a keel and a hull and a deck and sails, that's what a ship needs.

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Friday, July 1, 2011 3:13 PM

RIONAEIRE

Beir bua agus beannacht


Again DT I'm sorry and scared for you guys over there with all that crapola going into the water, is there anything that people outside of your state could do to help you guys keep fighting it?

I think that the expression "low fertility" in regard to China is a piece of luh suh, they should be saying "Since China won't let their people have kids in the manner they wish" China's population will plateau.

"A completely coherant River means writers don't deliver" KatTaya

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