The world reached 8 billion people in November 2022. That number is expected to increase to 10.4 billion by the mid-2080s before stabilizing and beginning to decline. Population growth in Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMIC) will account for all this growth and Africa alone will see an increase of 2.5 billion people between 2022 and 2100. While continuing rapid population growth in some LMIC regions remains a concern, especially in the face of the current climate crisis, many other LMIC regions are beginning to experience population decline. However, most current attention to population decline focus on High Income Countries (HIC), and on aging, care for the elderly, and pension systems; population decline in LMICs is assumed to follow the experiences of HICs. But there are reasons to expect that the experiences of LMICs with declining population will be vastly different from those of HICs. Not only will population decline faster in LMICs because their fertility has also declined much faster than in HICs, they will not be able to attract immigrants from poorer countries as rich countries do, and they will continue to experience the emigration of their youth in search of better opportunities in richer countries. This work will examine new forms of population change in LMICs and what they mean for these countries.
Related to The Future of Population in LMICs
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The Future of Population in Non-Western Societies - STIAS Public lecture by Alex Ezeh
Register here before 13 May 2025 (in-person & online) Abstract: Since Thomas Malthus published his An Essay on the Principles of Population, as it affects the Future Improvement of Society in 1798, concern about rates of population growth has been a constant feature in global development discourses.
Article
We need to rethink the future of population in Non-Western societies - STIAS Public lecture by Alez Ezeh
In this presentation, I make certain observations grounded in global data.