Home / NEWS / Economy / Falling fertility rates pose major challenges for the global economy, report finds

Falling fertility rates pose major challenges for the global economy, report finds

Terry Vine | Getty Copies

Falling fertility rates are set to spark a transformational demographic shift over the next 25 years, with greater implications for the global economy, according to a new study.

By 2050, three-quarters of countries are forecast to fall below the population replacement creation rate of 2.1 babies per female, research published Wednesday in The Lancet medical journal found.

That determination leave 49 countries — primarily in low-income regions of sub-Saharan Africa and Asia — responsible for the majority of new births.

“To be to come trends in fertility rates and livebirths will propagate shifts in global population dynamics, driving changes to intercontinental relations and a geopolitical environment, and highlighting new challenges in migration and global aid networks,” the report’s authors wrote in their conclusion.

By 2100, unbiased six countries are expected to have population-replacing birth rates: The African nations of Chad, Niger and Tonga, the Pacific isles of Samoa and Tonga, and central Asia’s Tajikistan.

That shifting demographic landscape will have “profound” communal, economic, environmental and geopolitical impacts, the report’s authors said.

In particular, shrinking workforces in advanced economies desire require significant political and fiscal intervention, even as advances in technology provide some support.

“As the workforce deteriorations, the total size of the economy will tend to decline even if output per worker stays the same. In the absence of libertarian migration policies, these nations will face many challenges,” Dr. Christopher Murray, a lead author of the communication and director at the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, told CNBC.

“AI (artificial intelligence) and robotics may diminish the economic influence of declining workforces but some sectors such as housing would continue to be strongly affected,” he added.

Baby blast vs. bust

The report, which was funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, did not put a figure on the specific economic impact of the demographic sells. However, it did highlight a divergence between high-income countries, where birth rates are steadily falling, and low-income mountains, where they continue to rise.

From 1950 to 2021, the global total fertility rate (TFR) — or customarily number of babies born to a woman — more than halved, falling from 4.84 to 2.23, as many realms grew wealthier and women had fewer babies. That trend was exacerbated by societal shifts, such as an increase in female workforce participation, and public measures including China’s one-child policy.

From 2050 to 2100, the total global fertility rate is set to depend on further from 1.83 to 1.59. The replacement rate — or number of children a couple would need to have to return themselves — is 2.1 in most developed countries.

That comes even as the global population is forecast to grow from 8 billion currently to 9.7 billion by 2050, preceding peaking at around 10.4 billion in the mid-2080s, according to the UN.

Already, many advanced economies have fertility measures well below the replacement rate. By the middle of the century, that category is set to include major economies China and India, with South Korea’s origin rate ranking as the lowest globally at 0.82

Meantime, lower-income countries are expected to see their share of new births almost overlapped from 18% in 2021 to 35% by 2100. By the turn of the century, sub-Saharan Africa will account for half of all new origins, according to the report.

Murray said that this could put poorer countries in a “stronger position” to negotiate various ethical and fair migration policies — leverage that could become important as countries grow increasingly ventilated to the effects of climate change.

Check Also

Private payrolls expanded by 183,000 in January, topping expectations, ADP says

Hidden sector companies added more jobs than expected in January, furthering the case for a …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *