The UN said on Wednesday that in order to strengthen “demographic resilience,” the globe should focus on women’s reproductive rights rather than the effects of the planet’s rapidly growing population.
The world’s population is predicted to peak at about 10.4 billion people in the 2080s, according to the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), the organisation responsible for sexual and reproductive health issues.
The UNFPA, however, insisted that the emphasis should be on allowing women more autonomy over the timing and mode of childbearing.
“Can everyone exercise their fundamental human right to decide how many children they want to have, and how far apart they should be spaced? Regrettably, the response is a flat out no “said Natalia Kanem, the head of UNFPA.
She said that “44 percent, almost half of women, are unable to exercise bodily autonomy. Unable to make choices about contraception, healthcare and whether or with whom to have sex. And globally, nearly half of all pregnancies are unintended.”
She said countries with the highest fertility rates contribute the least to global warming and suffer the most from its impact.
In its flagship annual “State of World Population” report, the UNFPA found the most commonly-held view is that the world’s population is too big.
But it said that passing the eight billion mark “should be a reason to celebrate. It is a milestone representing historic advances for humanity in medicine, science, health, agriculture and education”.
“It is time to put aside fear, to turn away from population targets and towards demographic resilience — an ability to adapt to fluctuations in population growth and fertility rate,” it said.
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“The world population is rapidly reordering itself,” Kanem told a press conference.
While the population is now the largest ever seen, “the global average fertility rate is the lowest in living memory”.
Kanem said the ranking of the world’s most populous countries would change significantly over the next 25 years, with India currently overtaking China at the top.
Eight countries will account for half the projected growth in global population by 2050: the Democratic Republic of Congo, Egypt, Ethiopia, India, Nigeria, Pakistan, the Philippines and Tanzania.
The report said two-thirds of people were living in countries with low fertility.
“This is the first time in human history where not every country is getting bigger,” said Kanem.
The countries with the highest fertility rates were all in Africa: Niger (6.7), Chad (6.1), DR Congo (6.1) Somalia (6.1) and Mali and the Central African Republic (5.8).
The territories with the lowest birth rates were Hong Kong (0.8), South Korea (0.9), Singapore (1.0), Macau and San Marino (1.1) and Aruba and China (1.2).
Europe is the only region projected to experience an overall population decline between now and 2050.
The report said the world fertility rate per woman was currently 2.3. Life expectancy is 71 for men and 76 for women.
“All populations are ageing largely because we’re living longer lives. Since 1990, the average life expectancy has increased by about a decade,” said Kanem.
Twenty-five percent of the world’s population is aged 14 or under; 65 percent are aged 15-64 and 10 percent are aged 65 and over.
The report found anxious governments were increasingly adopting policies aimed at raising, lowering or maintaining fertility rates. However, such efforts are very often ineffective.
“Half a million births every year take place among girls aged 10-14… girls too young to consent to sex, girls married off, abused, or both,” Kanem added.