World population 'up by 40% in 2050'

The world’s population will increase by 40% to 9.1 billion in 2050, but virtually all the growth will be in the developing world, especially in the 50 poorest countries, the United Nations Population Division said.

The world’s population will increase by 40% to 9.1 billion in 2050, but virtually all the growth will be in the developing world, especially in the 50 poorest countries, the United Nations Population Division said.

The division’s revision of earlier estimates said the population in less developed countries was expected to swell from 5.3 billion today to 7.8 billion in 2050. By contrast, the population of richer developed countries will remain mostly unchanged, at 1.2 billion.

“It is going to be a strain on the world,” Hania Zlotnik, the division’s new director, said. She said the expected growth had “important and serious implications” because it would be concentrated in countries that already had problems providing adequate shelter, health care and education.

Between 2005 and 2050, eight countries – India, Pakistan, Nigeria, Congo, Bangladesh, Uganda, the United States, Ethiopia and China – are likely to contribute half of the world’s population increase, the report says.

The population is projected to at least triple in Afghanistan, Burkina Faso, Burundi, Chad, Congo, the Republic of Congo, East Timor, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Niger and Uganda, it said.

Average fertility is expected to decline from 2.6 children per woman today to slightly over two in 2050. If fertility were to remain about half a child above that level, world population would reach 10.6 billion by 2050, while fertility half a child below the average would lead to a population of 7.7 billion by mid-century, it said.

“Future population growth is highly dependent on the path that future fertility takes,” the report said.

In 2000-2005, fertility levels remained above five children per woman in 35 of the 148 developing countries, including 30 of the poorest nations. The pace of decline in several countries in sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia was slower than anticipated.

Twenty-five years into the HIV/Aids epidemic, 60 countries are highly affected by the epidemic and the impact of the disease is evident in increased deaths and slower population growth, the report says.

In southern Africa, the region with the highest Aids prevalence, life expectancy has fallen from 62 years in 1995 to 48 years in 2000-2005, and is projected to decrease further to 43 years over the next decade before a slow recovery starts, it says.

Thoraya Obaid, executive director of the UN Population Fund, said the new projections should spur more urgent action to stop the spread of HIV/Aids and help couples freely determine the size of their families.

“We must take more urgent action to promote access to reproductive health, including family planning, and fight HIV/Aids to save millions of lives from Aids and maternal death, as well as to reduce poverty in developing countries,” she said in a statement.

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