People in the demographics business like to think of
themselves as the only futurists you can trust. They've got a point: if
you want to know how many 21-year-olds there will be in 2027, just count
the number of infants living today. Absent a catastrophe of biblical
proportions, you'll come up with a pretty good prediction.
What demographers admit they're not so good at is anticipating change.
(For example, they were terrible at projecting the impact of birth
control.) At the height of the "population explosion" hysteria four
decades ago, few believed that birthrates could fall so far and so fast
that the population of a major country like Russia would actually start
shrinking (as it did about 14 years ago). Germany's tipping point seems
to have arrived in 2002, and Japan's in 2005.
So what are we to make of the moment, projected by the U.S. Census
Bureau to arrive this month, when the population of the United States
reaches 300 million, behind only that of China and India? Demographics
is simply the arithmetic of culture and values—it only quantifies, it
doesn't explain. Is 300 million a good thing? A bad thing? Thinking
about that number provides an opportunity to talk about where we're
headed and what makes us tick.
Readers who remember November 20, 1967, when the population of the
United States passed 200 million, may recall the predictions of Paul R.
Ehrlich. In The Population Bomb, in 1968, he foretold "certain" mass
starvation by 1975 because of population growth. "The battle to feed all
of humanity is over," Ehrlich's first sentence read. "In the 1970s and
1980s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death in spite of
any crash programs," he declared. At best, North America and Europe
would have to undergo "mild" food rationing within the decade as
starvation and riots swept across Asia, Latin America, Africa and the
Arab countries; at worst, the turmoil in a foodless Third World would
set off a series of international crises leading to thermonuclear war.
Of course, things didn't quite work out that way. The problem in the
United States is obesity. Even in places like Somalia and Sudan, famines
have been intractable not because of any global lack of food, but
because the food has not gotten to the people who need it—too often
because corrupt regimes have withheld it as a means of political
control. Nonetheless, Ehrlich's misjudgment sold more than three million
copies, and the phrase "population bomb" entered the vocabulary.
That's why some people find it hard to wrap their minds around the big
news in demographic circles today. It's not catastrophic population
growth. It's catastrophic population shrinkage.
Yes, shrinkage. True, the total global population has not yet finished
increasing. But nearly half the world's population lives in countries
where the native-born are not reproducing fast enough to replace
themselves. This is true in Western Europe, Eastern Europe, Russia,
Japan, Canada and the United States. It's also true in much of East
Asia, pockets of Latin America and such Indian megacities as New Delhi,
Mumbai (Bombay), Kolkata (Calcutta) and Chennai (Madras). Even China is
reproducing at levels that fall short of replacement.
Typically, a couple has to produce about 2.1 children to replace
themselves, allowing for death among the young. Even in traditionally
Catholic countries in Europe, the birthrate has dropped to shockingly
low levels in the last two generations: 1.3 in both Italy and Spain in
2005. In metropolitan Tokyo, the rate dropped to 0.98. In Hong Kong and
Macau, it hit 0.96 and a hitherto unthinkable 0.84, respectively, the
latter the lowest on record. Few demographers ever dreamed that in the
absence of war, famine and pestilence—in fact, as a result of
urbanization, development and education—birthrates would drop so
dramatically. No one knows where the bottom is. Keep this up, and
eventually your civilization will disappear.
The United States' population is growing at the rate of almost 1 percent
per year, thanks in part to immigration and its secondary effects. Not
only does the United States accept more legal immigrants as permanent
residents than the rest of the world combined, but these recent arrivals
tend to have more children than established residents—until, as their
descendants attain affluence and education, the birthrates of these
Americans also drop below replacement levels. Overall—that is, counting
both immigrants and the native-born—the United States has a replacement
rate of 2.03.
Nearly half of the nation's children under 5 belong to a racial or
ethnic minority. The face of the future is already in our schools: our
kindergartens now prefigure the country as a whole, circa 2050—a place
where non-Hispanic whites are a slight majority. High-achieving school
systems are already adapting: in Fairfax County, Virginia, for example,
where 93 percent of all high-school graduates go on to post-secondary
education, programs that teach English as a second language accommodate
more than 100 native tongues, including more than five flavors of
Chinese.
Few Americans quarrel with the idea of legal immigration. Not only is it
part of the national narrative, but we're especially delighted when
these immigrants help create companies such as Intel, eBay and Google.
Of course large numbers of people showing up without paperwork stirs
passions, as attested to this year by the rise of the Minuteman Project
of civilians patrolling the border with Mexico, the deployment of
National Guard troops to do the same, the protracted debate over
immigration bills in Congress and the stark demonstrations related to
the legislation.
However that debate is resolved, it's probably worth noting a few
historical assimilation practices in the United States. First, this
country has a long and distinguished record of taking illiterate
peasants from every desert, tundra and bog and turning them into overfed
suburbanites in three generations or less. Second, new immigrants
usually do not marry outside their ethnic group; their adult children
do, with some controversy, and their adult grandchildren can't remember
what the fuss was all about. Finally, the traditional deal America has
offered immigrants is: work, pay taxes, learn English, send your kids to
school and stay out of trouble with the law, and we'll pretty much leave
you alone.
One fortuitous result of the enormous wave of immigrants coming to the
United States is that the median age here is only a little over 35, one
of the lowest among the world's more developed countries. This country
also has the most productive population per person of any country on the
planet—no matter how you measure it, and especially compared with Japan
and the members of the European Union.
This is crucial to everyone who plans to retire, because once you do,
you'll want a bunch of young, hardworking, tax-paying people supporting
you, whether directly, through family contributions, or indirectly,
through Social Security or pension programs. Unless you're rich enough
to live off your investments, there is no alternative. As it happens,
retirement is on the minds of many, and not just in the United States.
Today, virtually every developed country's population is older,
typically, than that of just about every human society before 1950.
Much has been written about how hard it's going to be for European
countries and Japan to support their aging populations at the generous
level of social services to which previous generations have become
accustomed. But global graying offers an even more formidable challenge
to less wealthy countries.
By 2025, according to the United Nations and the U.S. Census Bureau,
China will account for less than a fifth of the world's population, but
almost a fourth of the world's people over 65, many of them in China's
poorest areas. That means that in less than 20 years, large parts of
China will have to support very aged populations on very low average
incomes.
This is a problem Americans should be grateful they don't have, for all
sorts of reasons.
First, China's version of Social Security is a colossal mess, even by
the standards of the American and European systems. It covers only about
a sixth of all workers. Its unfunded liabilities appear to exceed the
country's total gross national product—maybe by a lot.
Second, the ages-old Chinese practice of adult children supporting their
parents is coming undone. Traditionally, that obligation has passed
through males; daughters are supposed to help support their husbands'
parents before seeing to their own. But there's a problem here: because
of Chinese population control, a woman turning 60 in 2025 will likely
have had fewer than two children in her lifetime, and the odds are about
one in three that she will not have borne a son.
If you're old and poor and you can't rely on either your government or
your grown children for support, you have to keep working. In China,
this does not mean greeting customers at Wal-Mart, much less answering
the technical support line at Dell. Many of China's elderly barely have
a primary school education, live in rural areas and haven't had the food
and health care that would allow them to be vigorous in their old age.
Nonetheless, the only work available to them is farming, which without
mechanized tools is a tough row to hoe.
It's not a pretty future. Even if China's economy continues to grow by 8
percent per year, every year, for two decades—a scenario that is
difficult to construct—the older generation is in big trouble. "China's
outlook for population aging," political economist Nicholas Eberstadt
writes, is "a slow-motion humanitarian tragedy already underway."
But not even China is as bad off as Russia. Americans talk about age 40
being the new 30 and 80 being the new 60, but in Russia, 30 is the new
40. Since the 1960s, just about each new generation of Russians has
become more fragile than the one that preceded it. Every year, 700,000
more Russians die than are born.
"Pronounced long-term deterioration of public health in an
industrialized society during peacetime is a highly anomalous, indeed
counterintuitive proposition for the modern sensibility," Eberstadt
writes. "Nevertheless, over the four decades between 1961-62 and 2003,
life expectancy at birth in Russia fell by nearly five years for males."
What's more, he notes, this increased mortality was concentrated among
working-age men: "Between 1970-71 and 2003, for example, every female
cohort between the ages of 25 and 59 suffered at least a 40 percent
increase in death rates; for men between the ages of 30 and 64, the
corresponding figures uniformly exceeded 50 percent, and some cases
exceeded 80 percent."
Demographers and public health specialists are at a loss to explain
these awful numbers, though such obvious factors as diet, smoking,
drinking and sedentary lifestyles certainly enter in. One mystery in the
"ongoing Russian health disaster," Eberstadt adds, "is that the problem
looks to be worse than the sum of its parts: that is to say, death rates
are significantly higher than one would predict on the basis of observed
risk factors alone."
Whatever the answer, the future is grim: a Russian man has barely a
fifty-fifty chance of making it to age 65 while, in the developed world,
the over-80s make up the fastest-growing portion of the population.
Are you feeling any more comfortable with America’s healthier, younger
300 million by now? Wait, there's more.
At the rate ethnic Germans are not reproducing, they will probably lose
the equivalent of the entire population of the former East Germany by
mid-century. Who will fill up the rest of the country? Immigrants from
Muslim countries is the odds-on bet. But as last year's riots in France
and subway bombings in England demonstrate, Europe is not having a lot
of luck assimilating its immigrants. In the Netherlands, for example,
where nationality is based on ancient ties to family or land, concepts
that seem unremarkable in North America—such as "Moroccan-Americans" or
"Moroccan-Canadians"—simply have no meaning. The Dutch language offers
two words: autochtonen ("us") and allochtonen ("them"); the Dutch people
are still working to find ways to incorporate the latter into the
former.
And yet: just about the time you start feeling comparatively good about
living in a nice, young, healthy, assimilationist United States, you get
smacked upside the head by the mind-boggling and peculiarly American
problems this country's growth creates.
One is that to accommodate our growth of almost 1 percent a year—about
2.8 million new Americans annually—we have to build the equivalent of
one Chicago per year. That's not impossible. Lord knows we have enough
developers eager to do the job. What's more, if you fly across this
country and look down, you will see that it includes a lot of emptiness.
If you are among those people stuck in endless traffic jams from Boston
to Richmond and from San Diego to Santa Barbara, you may find this hard
to believe, but only 4 percent of all the land in the contiguous United
States is urbanized, and only 5.5 percent is developed.
The problem is that we want to build these new Chicagos in nice
places—the Mediterranean climes of California, or the deserts of Phoenix
and Las Vegas, or near the oceans or the Gulf of Mexico. (More than half
the American population already lives within coastal counties of the
Atlantic, Pacific, Gulf of Mexico or Great Lakes.) The mountains will
also do, which is why you see explosive growth near Virginia's Blue
Ridge, the Gold Country of the California Sierra and even the Big Sky
Country of Montana.
Unfortunately, in our search for new utopias we don't merely pave over
paradise; we massively annoy the planet. Natural disasters are getting
more expensive not only because the weather is getting worse but also
because we keep putting our new Chicagos in harm's way.
What are the morals of these recitations?
Two leap to mind.
The first is, whenever you start thinking that this country is screwed
up beyond redemption, it pays to travel beyond our borders. It's amazing
how often the not-so-wonderful realities that we think of as terrible
problems constitute other people's dreams.
The second is, demographics may not be destiny. But the numerical study
of who we are and how we got that way does have a refreshing habit of
focusing our attention on what's important, long-term, about our culture
and values—where we're headed, and what makes us tick.
Joel Garreau has written three books on culture and values and served as
a senior fellow at George Mason University and the University of
California at Berkeley.
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