New United Nations World population projections.
Wilson, Tom
New United Nations World population projections have just been
released. This article describes and comments on the main features of
these projections, including those for Australia. Comparisons with
previous sets of projections are made, and the issue of projection
uncertainty is briefly addressed.
**********
INTRODUCTION
The United Nations Population Division released its latest set of
World and national population projections on 24th February. According to the medium series projections reported in World Population Prospects:
The 2004 Revision Highlights (1) the World's population will
increase from just under 6.5 billion today to 9.1 billion by 2050.
Although this represents a huge increase, roughly equivalent to the
current populations of China and India, both the World population growth
rate and absolute annual increase are declining.
This article describes and comments on the main features of these
new projections, and thus updates an earlier commentary in this journal
by Graeme Hugo on a previous set of UN projections. (2) Comparisons are
made with earlier sets of UN projections, and with recent projections
prepared by the US Census Bureau and the International Institute for
Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA). UN projections for Australia are also
reported. A few remarks on projection uncertainty are made by way of
conclusion.
PROJECTION METHOD AND ASSUMPTIONS
The UN uses the standard cohort-component model to prepare its
projections. A jump-off date of 1st July 2005 is used in the latest
revision (itself a short-term projection) and the projection horizon
extends to 1st July 2050. Six series have been prepared: medium, low,
high, constant fertility, constant mortality and zero migration.
Fertility assumptions are formulated in terms of the Total
Fertility Rate (TFR). For the medium series for all countries the TFR is
assumed to reach 1.85 in the long-run, though not necessarily by 2050.
For those countries with TFRs currently above 1.85 the UN assumes
fertility decline will follow paths observed for other countries over
the 1950 to 2000 period until 1.85 is reached. Fertility in countries
currently below a TFR of 1.85 is assumed to continue recently observed
trends for five to 10 years, after which it is set to increase by 0.07
every five years. Thus for those countries with the very highest
(lowest) fertility the fall (rise) to 1.85 is not attained until after
2050. At a global scale this translates to the TFR falling from 2.65 in
2000 to 2.05 in 2045-50. In the high and low series TFRs are set 0.5
above and below the medium assumption for most of the projection
horizon.
Mortality assumptions are prepared in terms of life expectancy at
birth for each sex, and converted into the age-sex-specific survival
probabilities required for the cohort component calculations via model
life tables. Explicit consideration of HIV-AIDS has been made in the UN
projections since the 1992 revision. At this time the effect of the
disease was incorporated into the mortality assumptions for those 16
countries which had adult prevalence rates of one per cent or more. In
the 2004 revision the pandemic has been modelled for 60 countries, 56 of
which had a prevalence rate of at least one per cent in 2003; four other
populous countries were included because, although they had low
prevalence rates, they have large numbers of people living with HIV. New
for this set of projections are slightly lower estimates of current HIV
prevalence for some countries and longer survival times for those
receiving antiretroviral therapy. The result is marginally lower
projected mortality from AIDS compared to the 2002 revision. Overall,
world life expectancy is expected to rise from the 2000 to 2005 value of
62.5 years for males and 67.0 years for females to 72.4 and 77.0 years
by 2045-50.
Migration assumptions for countries are made in terms of total net
migration, and sum to zero at the global scale. (3)
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
PROJECTION RESULTS
At the time of writing the United Nations had released a 2004
revision Highlights report (4) which includes a summary commentary and
selected tables, and a database which may be queried via the web page
http://esa.un.org/unpp/. Three more detailed reports, Comprehensive
Tables, Sex and Age Distribution of the World Population and an
Analytical Report are forthcoming, as is a CD-ROM with more detailed
data. Selected features of the world's demographic future, obtained
from the online database, are discussed in this section. Where not
explicitly stated, reference is made to the medium series projections.
The future population of the World
Figure 1 shows the estimated population of the world from 1950 to
2000 and the low, medium and high projections to 2050. By mid-century
the population is projected to have reached 9.1 billion (medium series),
7.8 billion (low series) or 10.6 billion (high series). On the medium
series trajectory the seven billion milestone is only seven years away
and the eight billion mark is due to be passed in about 2027. The years
of all the billion milestones up to nine billion are given in Table 1.
Another way of looking at this projected World population
trajectory is to focus on change. Figure 2 plots estimated and projected
growth rates and annual average population increments over each
quinquennium from 1950 to 2050. In recent years the World's
population has experienced an annual increase of about 76 million
people, roughly equivalent to adding the current population of Egypt
every year, or South Australia's population every week. By 2045-50
the growth rate is expected to have fallen to about 34 million per year.
In terms of growth rates, these figures correspond to a decline from an
annual increase of 1.2 per cent at the moment to 0.38 per cent by
2045-50.
[FIGURE 2 OMITTED]
The current 9.1 billion projected for 2050 does not represent a
major departure from earlier UN projections for mid-century, and in
fact, is roughly the average of the last few projections, as shown in
Table 2. Compared to the 2002 revision figures, the latest mid-century
projection is 157 million higher. Marginally higher trajectories for
both fertility and life expectancy have been assumed, as indicated by
the assumptions for 2045-50 shown in the table. The change to life
expectancy is partly due to the projected longer survival of AIDS
patients through the expanded provision of antiretroviral treatments.
Part of the earlier and larger difference between the 2000 and 2002
revision projections (404 millions) was also due to HIV-AIDS, in this
case a more serious assumed impact. (5) Table 2 also includes recent
2050 World projections published by the US Census Bureau (6) and the
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA). (7) As can
be seen, the differences with the latest UN projection are small,
particularly for the US Census Bureau figure.
In relation to Figures 1 and 2 it is interesting to refer to a
comment by Joel Cohen (8) that never before the end of the 20th century
had anyone lived through a tripling of the World's population (for
example, those people who lived between 1927 and 1999--see Table 1).
These projections suggest that such an experience may occur to those
born around or before 1960 if they live to their eighties and nineties,
but probably not to those born after this date because the downward
trajectory of the growth rate implies much less population increase
after mid-century. In fact, a longer term outlook produced by the UN
last year (9) has World population peaking at under 10 billion about
three quarters of the way through this century before starting to
decline.
Age structure
The long-established trend of population ageing is projected to
accelerate, with the percentage aged 65 and over increasing from the
current seven per cent to 16 per cent by 2050. The shape of the
world's population pyramid will change dramatically as larger birth
cohorts, less depleted by mortality than their predecessors,
progressively expand the middle and upper sections of the pyramid
(Figure 3). The numbers in the very elderly ages look set to increase by
the greatest amounts in percentage terms. The global 85+ population is
projected to rise from 33 million today to about 188 million by 2050.
The world's centenarians are projected to rise in number from 1/4
million to 3.7 million over the same period!
As well as being a consequence of the World's fertility and
mortality history over the last century, age structure also has
considerable influence on future population growth. When there are
relatively large numbers of people in the reproductive age groups there
exists potential for further population growth even if fertility is low.
This is termed population momentum, defined by Rowland (10) as 'the
potential for change in total population numbers, measured as the
difference in size between the present population and the future
stationary population, obtained from a projection holding mortality
constant at the present level and fertility constant at replacement
level'. In fact it has been shown that out of the three
contributors to World population growth--fertility above replacement,
declining mortality, and momentum--the majority of World population
growth over the next half century will be attributable to momentum. (11)
And as the TFR falls over time the fertility contribution to population
growth declines and momentum becomes even more important. Those
commentators who fear a global population implosion in the coming
decades due to low fertility are simply wrong. Population momentum will
ensure continued population growth for many more years.
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
Shifting geographical distribution
Nearly all the projected population growth to 2050 is expected to
take place in developing countries. As shown in Figure 4, in terms of
shifts in World population shares, Africa and Europe stand out whilst
the shares for the other global regions--Asia, North America, Oceania,
and Latin America and the Caribbean--are projected to change by
relatively small amounts. As can be seen, Africa is expected to
experience phenomenal growth, its population more than doubling from 0.9
to 1.9 billion and its global share of population rising to 21 per cent.
Europe's demographic presence in the world looks set to decline in
both relative and absolute terms. Negative momentum will play an
important role in this decline. As Lutz and colleagues recently noted,
sustained low fertility in Europe has resulted in an age structure with
relatively small childbearing age populations, and this has just started
generating negative momentum. (12)
Within the global regions there is considerable diversity in
projected population change. We look now at selected countries at both
ends of the growth spectrum, starting with the high growth nations.
[FIGURE 4 OMITTED]
Substantial population growth in some countries
India, Pakistan, Nigeria, the Democratic Republic of the Congo,
Bangladesh, Uganda, the USA, Ethiopia and China will account for half of
the World's population increase to 2050. India is projected to
increase from its current 1.1 billion to 1.6 billion by mid-century,
overtaking China around 2030 to become the World's most populous
country. And although growing at a much lower rate, China's
population is still expected to be 1.4 billion by 2050. This huge
expansion in human resources in Asia, coupled with economic development,
clearly has enormous implications for shifts in global economic power,
amongst many other consequences. A recent Goldman Sachs study (13)
predicts that China's economy will overtake America's sometime
in the first half of this century, so that by 2050 the largest economies
will be China, the US and India.
Nigeria looks set to cement its position as Africa's
demographic giant, increasing from 132 to 258 million between 2005 and
2050. In Latin America and the Caribbean this position will be taken by
Brazil as its numbers rise from 186 to 253 million. Other demographic
heavyweights include: the USA (increasing from 298 to 395 million over
the 2005-50 period), Pakistan (158 to 305 million), Indonesia (223 to
285 million), and Bangladesh (142 to 243 million).
Rapid population growth measured as a percentage is arguably more
important as it raises questions about countries' abilities to cope
in terms of infrastructure and employment provision. Some commentators
have raised issues of security about growing numbers, particularly of
young men, in politically unstable and poverty-stricken nations. (14)
For example, the Democratic Republic of the Congo is projected to grow
by just over 200 per cent to a 2050 population of 177 million; Uganda is
expected to undergo an incredible expansion from 29 to 127 million by
mid-century--a 340 per cent increase in less than two generations. This
is not to make the simplistic assertion that population growth equals
problems, of course. RAND researchers have described how as countries
move through the demographic transition their age structures become
particularly favourable for economic development. 'If most of a
nation's population falls within the working ages, the added
productivity of this group can produce a 'demographic
dividend' of economic growth'. (15) For a while these
countries have relatively few people in the dependent age groups and
this allows resources to be concentrated on development. As these
researchers stress, this dividend is far from automatic; rather it
provides a window of opportunity for economic growth which may or may
not be realised.
Population decline in some countries
Whilst much of the attention in population projections tends to be
on growth, and the challenges this potentially creates, the fact that
many countries are expected to shrink in population can sometimes be
overlooked. Indeed, the populations of 51 countries or territories are
projected to be smaller in 2050 than they were in 2005. Population
decline itself may be no bad thing, but rapid decline caused by low
fertility generates top-heavy age structures which provide serious
challenges for public finances, amongst other things. Russia, Ukraine,
Japan, Italy and Poland are projected to decline, respectively, by 31.4,
19.6, 15.9, 7.2 and 6.6 million to 2050, with Ukraine undergoing the
severest decline in percentage terms (-43 per cent). Russia, Ukraine and
Poland were already declining in population over the 2000 to 2005
period, with Russia alone declining by about 2/3 million each year.
Another country set to decline in population over the 2005 to 2050
period is Germany, the most populous in the European Union. This
position may be relinquished to Turkey if the latter is successful in
joining the Union. Germany's current population of 82.7 million is
expected to have fallen to 78.8 million by mid-century. Turkey's is
expected to equal Germany's at around 2015 and reach 101 million by
2050.
Whilst population decline is most commonly associated with Europe
and the states of the former USSR and their sustained low fertility, a
number of small populations in other continents will have fewer people
in 2050 than in 2005 due to net emigration exceeding natural increase,
such as Tonga, Samoa and the Federated States of Micronesia. In
addition, a few countries are expected to decline in population from
excess mortality caused by AIDS.
The impact of HIV-AIDS
The projected impact of HIV-AIDS has been measured by running
projections for the 60 selected countries using no-AIDS mortality
assumptions. The difference in population by 2015 for these countries
totals 115 million; by 2050 it is 344 million. For the most infected
countries the expected demographic impact is enormous. Botswana, where
the adult HIV prevalence rate in 2003 was estimated to be the highest in
the world at 36 per cent, will experience population decline for most of
the 2005 to 2050 projection horizon. Life expectancy at birth (for both
sexes combined) has dropped from 64 years in 1990 to 1995 to an
estimated 37 years for 2000 to 2005. Swaziland and Lesotho are the other
two countries expected to decline in population as a result of the
disease.
In terms of age structure, AIDS is creating in the most affected
countries what the US Census Bureau has described as 'the
population chimney'. (16) These pyramids are fairly wide from
infant ages up to age 30 or so, but then dramatically contract in the
40s due to AIDS deaths, and continue up to the elderly ages with almost
vertical sides (the chimney). The childhood age populations are also
smaller than would be the case without AIDS because of deaths to those
who would otherwise have (more) children.
UN PROJECTIONS FOR AUSTRALIA
We now turn to the question 'What is the UN's view of
Australia's demographic future?' It is assumed that the
current TFR of 1.75 will gradually rise to 1.85 (because, as mentioned
earlier, 1.85 is assumed to be the long-run level of fertility for all
countries). This seems to be an optimistic, but entirely plausible,
assumption. Life expectancy at birth will reach 82.7 years for males and
87.4 years for females by 2045-50, a rather pessimistic assumption in
view of Australian life expectancy gains in recent decades. Annual net
immigration has been set at 100,000. These assumptions result in the
current population of just over 20 million rising to 24.3 million by
2025 and 27.9 million by mid-century.
How do these compare to other projections? In its series B
projections ABS projects 24.0 million for 2025 and 26.4 million for
2050. (17) Fertility is assumed to be 1.6 in the long run whilst life
expectancy at birth is assumed to be around 83.9 years for males in
2045-50 and 87.5 for females. Long term net immigration is set to
100,000 per year. Probabilistic projections prepared by Wilson and Bell
(18) give median figures of 24.2 million for 2025 and 27.9 million for
2050. Although these total populations are very similar to the UN's
they are achieved with differing assumptions for fertility and
mortality. The long-run TFR is set a little lower at 1.7 and life
expectancy at birth is higher (averaging 87.1 years for males and 91.5
years for females over the 2045-50 period). The net immigration
assumption is the same.
UNCERTAINTY
It is all too easy to be given the false impression that because
the UN projections appear in official-looking reports they will all turn
out to be fairly accurate, at least to the number of significant figures
presented. Past studies have certainly shown that out to a decade from
the jump-off year, and to a lesser extent 20 years ahead, World
projections have proved reasonable reliable, (19) but out to 2050 there
is quite a lot of uncertainty. But just how much uncertainty? A number
of researchers have attempted to answer this question. They have
employed a variety of methods, including seeing how much error there has
been in past projections, or by creating probabilistic simulations which
use statistical models to project the TFR and life expectancy. (20) A
few years ago the US National Research Council developed models based on
errors of previous UN population projections. They used these to
generate 95 per cent confidence intervals that could be applied to
population projections of the total population. (21) This enables the
user to say that 'based on past projection errors we assume that
there is a 95 per cent chance the actual population will turn out to lie
somewhere within this range'. For a projection over a 45 year
horizon the 95 per cent interval ranges from 0.920 to 1.116 of the point
projection. (22) Applying these factors to the 2050 medium series
projection gives a 95 per cent predictive interval ranging from about
8.3 to 10.1 billion.
Notwithstanding this uncertainty, several features of the
World's demographic future are pretty much guaranteed: substantial
population growth will continue over the next few decades, most of this
will take place in developing countries, and the World's population
will age considerably as it moves to complete its demographic transition
to low rates of fertility and mortality.
Table 1: World population billion milestones
Estimates
1 billion in 1804
2 billion in 1927 (123 years later)
3 billion in 1960 (33 years later)
4 billion in 1974 (24 years later)
5 billion in 1987 (13 years later)
6 billion in 1999 (12 years later)
Medium series projections
7 billion in 2012 (13 years later)
8 billion in 2027 (15 years later)
9 billion in 2048 (21 years later)
Source: United Nations
Table 2: Selected World population projections for 2050
2045-50 [e.sub.0] for
Jump-off Billions 2045-50 persons
Projection series year TFR (years)
UN, 2004 revision 2005 9.076 2.05 74.7
UN, 2002 revision 2000 8.919 2.02 74.3
UN, 2000 revision 2000 9.323 2.15 76.0
UN, 1998 revision 1995 8.909 2.0 76.3
UN, 1996 revision 1995 9.367 2.1 76.6
USCB (a) 2002 9.079 2.0 (b) 77.0 (b)
IIASA (c) 2000 8.979 n/a n/a
(a) United States Census Bureau
(b) 2050
(c) International Institute for Applied System Analysis projections,
reported by Lutz et al. (7)
Source: United Nations
References
(1) United Nations Population Division, World Population Prospects:
the 2004 Revision Highlights, United Nations, New York, 2005.
(2) G. Hugo, 'Six billion and counting: global population
trends at the turn of the century', People and Place, vol. 7, no.
2, 1999, pp. 11-18.
(3) More details on the assumptions are provided at
http://esa.un.org/unpp/index.asp?panel=4.
(4) United Nations Population Division, op. cit., 2005.
(5) United Nations Population Division, World Population Prospects:
the 2002 Revision Highlights, United Nations, New York, 2003.
(6) US Census Bureau, Global Population Profile: 2002, US
Government Printing Office, Washington DC, 2004.
(7) W. Lutz, W. Sanderson and S. Scherbov, 'The end of World
population growth', Nature, vol. 412, 2001, pp. 543-545.
(8) J.E. Cohen, 'Human population: the next half
century', Science, vol. 302, 2003, pp. 1172-1175.
(9) United Nations Population Division, World Population in 2300,
United Nations, New York, 2004.
(10) See D. Rowland, Demographic Methods and Concepts, Oxford
University Press, Oxford, 2003, p. 327
(11) See Figure 7 on p. 19 of US Census Bureau, 2004, op. cit.; see
also J. Bongaarts and R.A. Bulatao, 'Completing the demographic
transition', Population and Development Review, vol. 25, no. 3,
1999, pp. 515-529.
(12) W. Lutz, B.C. O'Neill and S. Scherbov,
'Europe's population at a turning point', Science, vol.
299, 2003, pp. 1991-1992.
(13) D. Wilson and R. Purushothaman, 'Dreaming with BRICs: the
path to 2050', Goldman Sachs Global Economic Paper no. 99, 2003,
http://www.gs.com/insight/research/reports/99.pdf.
(14) See the publications listed at
http://www.rand.org/labor/popmatters/security.html
(15) D.E. Bloom, D. Canning and J. Sevilla, The Demographic
Dividend, RAND, Santa Monica, 2002, p. ix.
(16) US Census Bureau, 2004, op. cit. For an example of age
structure see, United Nations Population Division, op. cit., 2005,
Figure 9, p. 29.
(17) Australian Bureau Statistics (ABS), Population Projections
Australia 2002-2101, ABS, Canberra, 2003.
(18) T. Wilson and M. Bell, 'Australia's uncertain
demographic future', Demographic Research, vol. 11, article 8,
2004, http://www.demographic-research.org.
(19) N. Keilman, 'How accurate are the United Nations World
population projections?', in W. Lutz, J.W. Vaupel and D.A. Ahlburg
(eds), Frontiers of Population Forecasting, Population Council, New
York, 1999, pp. 15-41. Supplement to Population and Development Review
vol. 24.
(20) N. Keilman, D.Q. Pham and A. Hetland, 'Norway's
Uncertain Demographic Future', Social and Economic Studies, no.
105, Statistics Norway, Oslo, 2001.
(21) National Research Council, Beyond Six Billion: Forecasting the
World's Population, National Academy Press, Washington DC, 2000.
(22) Estimated by interpolating values in Table F-7 in Appendix F
of National Research Council, (panel on population projections), Beyond
Six Billion: Forecasting the World's Population, National Academy
Press, Washington DC, 2000.