‘Afflicted’
with Fertility?
|
What’s the biggest threat to the world’s prosperity and
stability over the medium haul — say, between 2020 and 2050?
The proliferation of nuclear, chemical and biological
weapons of mass destruction? A continuing economic
recession? Jihadism running amok? The Detroit Lions ushering
in the Apocalypse by winning an NFL championship?
(Just kidding.)
Guess again.
According to Neil Howe and Richard Jackson, two researchers
at Washington’s Center for Strategic and International
Studies, the primary destabilizer of world affairs in the
mid-decades of the 21st century will be demographics —
meaning, primarily, too few people throughout too much of
the developed and developing world.
Some numbers-crunching helps make the case: In the
1980s, the median age was 34 in Western Europe and 35 in
Japan. Absent an unanticipated and dramatic change in birth
rates, the median age in Western Europe in 2020 will be 47,
and in Japan, 52.
In the 2020s, half the adult populations of Italy, Spain and
Japan will be above the official retirement age. By
2030, thanks to several generations of cratering birth rates
and the resulting demand for immigrant labor to fill
low-wage jobs, the number of Muslims will double in France
and triple in Germany. Amsterdam, Birmingham, Cologne and
Marseilles will likely be majority-Muslim cities, 20 year
from now. China, the fair-haired boy of establishment
international affairs analysts, is heading for serious
trouble, thanks to its draconian one-child policy and
communism’s destruction of traditional Chinese culture. By
2030, China will be an older country than the U.S. As Howe
and Jackson write, “Imagine (Chinese) workforce growth
slowing to zero while tens of millions of elders sink into
indigence without pensions, without health care, and without
children to support them. China could careen toward social
collapse — or, in reaction, toward an authoritarian
clampdown.”
Vladimir Putin’s plans for a new Russian imperium may run
aground, because Russia will almost certainly be in
demographic free fall by 2050, if not sooner. With what
demographers call “lowest- low” birth rates, and confronting
colossal public health problems related to alcohol abuse and
environmental degradation, Russia is a mess. Today, the
average Russian man’s life expectancy is 59, which is
16 years less than his American counterpart (and somewhat
less than the life expectancy of those in his grandfather’s
generation who survived Stalin and Hitler). Forty years out,
Russia will have fallen in the world population tables from
fourth place (in 1950) to 20th place.
And while all this is going on, Western Europe will be in
continuing social, economic and political crisis, thanks to
too few tax-paying workers trying to support the
womb-to-tomb Euro-welfare state — which has already
displaced private-sector health care and pension options
while suppressing the habits necessary to sustain them.
Ever since the 1968 publication of Paul Ehrlich’s
intellectually fraudulent bestseller, “The Population Bomb,”
enlightened opinion has held that “overpopulation” is the
problem. It isn’t, and it never was. Now, thanks in part to
the triumph of a contraceptive mentality in societies that
have lost any religious sense of obligation toward the
future, the grim truth is revealing itself: the problem is
too few people. Of course, there was always something
instinctively counterintuitive about the anti-natalist cast
of mind, which thinks of a newborn calf as a “resource” or
an “asset” and a newborn child as a “burden” or “problem.”
Now that implausibility turns out to have, not only the
gravest moral consequences, but the most severe economic,
social, and political results.
Yet the mythology of overpopulation is so deeply embedded in
American elite opinion that even realistic observers like
Howe and Jackson, after looking into the demographic abyss,
can still write that contemporary sub-Saharan Africa is
“afflicted” with “the world’s highest fertility rates.” No,
sub-Saharan Africa is “afflicted”
with vast governmental corruption and ineptitude, ethnic and
tribal madnesses, jihadism and diseases ancient and modern.
But it is not “afflicted” with people.
GEORGE WEIGEL, THE CATHOLIC DIFFERENCE
George Weigel is a senior fellow of the Ethics and Public
Policy
Center in Washington, D.C.
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