Beyond Demographics

Chief Economist Eugenio Alemán and Economist Giampiero Fuentes note that the global population is heading into a sustained decline for the first time in recorded history.

To read the full article, see the Investment Strategy Quarterly publication linked below.

The global population has surpassed 8 billion and according to the United Nations, it is projected to reach 9.7 billion in 2050.¹ However, the rate of population growth is slowing and is expected to continue to decline. Seems counterintuitive, no? Under the current demographic trajectory, the global population will likely follow a sustained decline for the first time in recorded history starting toward the end of the century.

Two factors are reinforcing this trend. Global life expectancy continues to increase and is expected to reach 77.2 years by 2050.² This is an almost five-year increase compared to today’s life expectancy, almost ten years higher compared to 1950, and more than thirty years higher compared to 1900. Second, the level of fertility at which a population replaces itself from one generation to the next, sometimes known as a country’s population replacement level or total fertility rate (TFR), has been declining steadily for decades. The current world’s TFR is ~2.3 but estimates suggest that the rate will fall below 2.1 around 2050. By 2100, 183 out of 195 countries will have fertility rates below population replacement levels.³

With improvements in public health, better living conditions, and overall environmental improvements, it is relatively easy to understand why human life expectancy has increased over the years. Additionally, the number of people living below the poverty line has declined over the last three decades from over 2 billion people to 700 million.⁴ Fewer people will go undernourished and without access to safe drinking water. These trends are expected to continue, improving the quality of life among developing economies while increasing longevity.