Population decline will likely become a global trend and benefit long-term human wellbeing

Q3 Social Sciences Vienna Yearbook of Population Research Pub Date : 2023-03-17 DOI:10.1553/p-3cp7-4e6b
W. Lutz
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Abstract

Summarising earlier publications, I draw a rather optimistic picture of the human future on this planet, if priority is given to universal education, and, in particular, to female education. The benefits of a greater focus on education range from a lower desired family size and empowerment to reach this goal, to better family health, to poverty reduction, to greater resilience, to expanded capacities to mitigate and adapt to climate change, and, ultimately, to the emergence of better institutions and social values that are less obsessed with material consumption and violent nationalism and more concerned with cooperation, care and wellbeing. I also show that extended periods of below replacement level fertility are beneficial for long-term human wellbeing, and that the human population is on the path to peaking during the second half of this century and then declining to 2–4 billion people by 2200. As this smaller population will be well-educated, they should be healthy and wealthy enough to be able to cope fairly successfully with the already unavoidable (moderate) effects of climate change.
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人口下降可能成为全球趋势,并有利于人类的长期福祉
在总结早期的出版物时,我对这个星球上的人类未来描绘了一幅相当乐观的画面,如果优先考虑普及教育,特别是女性教育。更多地关注教育的好处包括:减少理想的家庭规模,增强实现这一目标的权能,改善家庭健康,减少贫困,增强复原力,扩大减缓和适应气候变化的能力,并最终产生更好的机构和社会价值观,不那么痴迷于物质消费和暴力民族主义,而更多地关注合作、关怀和福祉。我还表明,长期低于更替水平的生育率有利于人类的长期福祉,而且人口将在本世纪下半叶达到峰值,然后在2200年下降到20 - 40亿人。由于这一小部分人口将受到良好的教育,他们应该足够健康和富有,能够相当成功地应对已经不可避免的(适度)气候变化的影响。
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来源期刊
Vienna Yearbook of Population Research
Vienna Yearbook of Population Research Social Sciences-Demography
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
11
期刊介绍: In Europe there is currently an increasing public awareness of the importance that demographic trends have in reshaping our societies. Concerns about possible negative consequences of population aging seem to be the major force behind this new interest in demographic research. Demographers have been pointing out the fundamental change in the age composition of European populations and its potentially serious implications for social security schemes for more than two decades but it is only now that the expected retirement of the baby boom generation has come close enough in time to appear on the radar screen of social security planners and political decision makers to be considered a real challenge and not just an academic exercise.
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