UN
Reduces Projections of World Population Figures
New York,
Feb. 27 2003 (VOA News) -- The United Nations' population
office, in an unprecedented move, is revising downward
its world population predictions. The new figures
reflect declining birth rates in many developing nations
and the impact of the HIV/AIDS pandemic.
Two
years ago, the U.N population division predicted that
the global population would reach 9.3 billion by 2050.
But current research indicates the figure will drop
by 400 million to a mid-century population of 8.9
billion.
Joseph
Chamie, director of the U.N. population division,
attributes half of the decrease to a worsening of
the AIDS epidemic.
"This
AIDS epidemic, this pandemic, is increasing and although
the probability of being infected by HIV is assumed
to decline significantly in the future, the long-term
impact of the epidemic remains dire," he said.
"The response to date has been like putting a
bandaid [bandage] on the epidemic. Over the current
decade, the number of excess deaths because of AIDS
among the 53 most-affected countries is estimated
at 46 million and that figure is projected to ascend
to 278 million by 2050."
The
numbers are particularly sobering in Africa where
Botswana, Lesotho, South Africa and Swaziland are
expected to experience reductions in their populations.
Annually,
the world's population is rising by about one percent,
or 77 million people. India accounts for one-fifth
of that growth. China and Pakistan follow. But by
mid-century, Mr. Chamie predicts 33 nations will have
smaller populations, including Japan, Italy, Bulgaria,
and Russia. He says the new estimates also represent
the first time his office has ever projected falling
fertility rates in parts of the developing world.
"Fertility
rates have come down faster than we were anticipating
10 years ago. As a consequence, our numbers are adjusted,"
he said. "For example, 10, 20, 30 years ago we
never expected that Brazil would have such a drop
in fertility. No one expected 25 years ago that Iran
would be approaching a fertility rate of two children.
Who would have expected in 1960 that Tunisia's fertility
would be close to two when it was about six?"
Current
projections indicate that the population of older
people will triple by mid-century, raising the world's
average age to 37.
--
Barbara Schoetzau
- Voice of America in New
York
-- Reprinted with the
permission of Voice of America
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