The World of 8 Billion: Six Things to Know

8-billion-people
Protesters, including Indigenous activists, demonstrate over climate justice, loss and damage, fossil fuels, human rights, exploitation by rich countries of poor countries and other climate-related issues during the UNFCCC COP27 climate conference on Nov. 12, 2022, in Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt. (Sean Gallup / Getty Images)

Global population is about to reach 8 billion, a mere 11 years after it reached 7 billion. The official Day of 8 Billion will be observed by the U.N. on Nov. 15, 2022, though the actual milestone could be reached any day now. In fact, we may already be there.  

With hashtags like #8billionstrong, the discourse around adding another billion people to the world’s population since 2011 seems heavy on positive spin. Some economists and pundits argue population growth (or “superabundance,” as one new book frames it) is a good thing for the economy and innovation. U.N. Secretary General António Guterres called it “an occasion to celebrate diversity and advancement.” U.N. Population Fund (UNFPA) executive director Dr. Natalia Kanem said, “People are the solution, not the problem. … A resilient world of 8 billion … offers infinite possibilities.”

But it’s complicated. While reaching 8 billion doesn’t mean we are fated to keep adding a billion people to the population every decade—U.N. projections indicate population growth will level off later in this century—continued population growth is not without its challenges. Optimistic media takes on the 8 billion milestone tend to gloss over how continued growth could adversely affect people and the planet, including the climate and environment, food security, water, health, civil conflict, refugees, displacement and widening global inequity.

For a more complete picture of how this might play out, it’s important keep six fundamental points in mind:

1. Global population growth will continue, but it’s slowing down.

We’re currently adding about 70 million people to the population annually (about 0.9 percent). According to its medium growth scenario, the U.N. projects we’ll reach 9.7 billion by 2050. By that time annual growth is expected to have slowed to around 40 million per year (less than 0.5 percent). 

By the 2080s it’s expected to level off, with the population reaching 10.4 billion, then staying stable through 2100.

2. No, COVID is not a big factor.

According to the U.N. projections, it doesn’t appear likely that the COVID-19 pandemic will have much impact on global population trends this century. While many people died from COVID earlier than they would have otherwise, that effect is a blip on the screen—it won’t significantly change long-term global mortality and life expectancy. And despite talk of a COVID baby boom last year, U.N. demographers found this year that COVID’s impact on longer term fertility rates (the number of births per women of reproductive age) are mixed and highly uncertain.

3. Growth won’t be uniform; some places will experience much more than others

Demographically speaking, the world is becoming increasingly polarized.  In some countries, especially wealthier ones, population growth rates are already low and will fall fast. For example, according to U.N. projections, over 30 countries in Europe and parts of Asia will reach a median age of 46 or older by 2040. That would lead to further declines in birth rates.

Future population growth will be more and more concentrated in other countries with higher fertility rates and more youthful age structures. The U.N. projects sub-Saharan Africa and parts of Asia will retain their young demographics in 2040, with more than half of their populations under the age of 25. That will drive higher population growth in certain areas, for example in the Sahel region of Africa, the Philippines, and among marginalized communities across the globe.

This is a deep equity issue. Younger age structures, higher fertility rates, and more population growth profoundly impact societies, economies and governments, and limits their capacity to meet people’s needs.

4. Early childbearing raises fertility rates.

Averrage family size is shrinking globally, but in parts of sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East and southern Asia, lifetime fertility rates have stalled or are declining very slowly, portending larger families. In many places, this is a function of early child-bearing. For example, in Niger where the average lifetime fertility rate is about seven births per woman, more than three quarters of girls are married before age 18. Across Sub-Saharan Africa, each year more than 10 percent of adolescent females bear a child. 

5. Youthful age structures will drive growth in the first half of this century.

A “youth bulge” or large proportion of young people in a national population today creates momentum which all but guarantees the number people of reproductive age will grow through 2050. U.N. demographers project that this will drive about two-thirds of global population growth over the next two decades. 

6. Projections are not predictions.

None of this is set in stone. U.N. projections do not account for many variables that could affect the population growth curve, from wealth to warfare. What governments and the international donor community choose to invest in may change variables that could profoundly influence outcomes.

Suppose they focus on countries and regions with high population growth, and invest in programs which help girls stay in school, ensure greater access to family planning services, and help women exercise their rights and reproductive autonomy. Not only are these important objectives in their own right, we also know from experience they encourage delayed childbirth, smaller families and lower fertility rates, which would drive population growth down. 

By itself, population growth won’t determine whether we can achieve a sustainable future. But it will be a significant factor, and it’s one we can influence positively. In that sense, the population passing 8 billion is an opportunity.  

It’s a chance to finish the work of upholding rights and reproductive autonomy for women and girls, and reduce the stresses higher growth would place on our climate, environment, health, food, water and security. It illustrates the need to shift disproportionate impacts of high growth on poor countries toward greater equity, helping stabilize some of the world’s most precarious places, which in turn strengthens global stability. If we determine to do these things now, then the Day of 8 Billion could be cause for celebration.

This article was originally published by Inter Press Service.

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Kathleen Mogelgaard is president and CEO of the Population Institute.