Demographic Dynamics and Development. Yves Charbit

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Demographic Dynamics and Development - Yves Charbit


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a percentage per year.

      Another aspect of demographic dynamics that is directly related to changes in flows must be mentioned. Their very accumulation determines population stocks. Thus, the rural exodus leads to changes in the distribution between urban and rural areas, which is the process of urbanization. As for the evolution of mortality and birth rates, this is translated by the population’s age–sex distribution, conventionally represented by a pyramid. After the Second World War, developing countries experienced a large annual number of births but, due to high mortality, very few people reached adulthood. This was reflected by broad-based pyramids. In these populations, although there certainly were adults, very few were elderly people. With the gradual decline in the fertility of couples, annual birth rates decreased and the proportions of children and adults rebalanced. The population became older and demographers spoke of “aging from the bottom”. In developed countries, on the other hand, where annual birth rates are lower, the age pyramid has more adults. Over the years, these fall into the category of the third age and we speak of “top-down aging”.

      These relative proportions of children, adults and the elderly led to several indicators being established, which address the issue of development. It is common to draw a distinction between consumers and producers or, more precisely, to differentiate the inactive from the active. We thus calculate a dependency ratio, where the numerator includes 0–19 year olds (young people) and those aged 60 and above (the elderly), and the denominator is the working population (20–69 year olds). Globally, the dependency ratio – equal to 75 inactive people dependent on 100 working people in 1970 – decreased to 56 in 2000 and to 53 in 2020. Another analysis was recently developed. Due to the decline in fertility, the cohorts now under the age of 15 will be replaced by smaller cohorts. But, above all, they will access the economically active ages and the relationship between consumers and producers – hitherto unfavorable due to spending on health and education weighing on national budgets – will become favorable. So far, we have provided data on world population, but is this concept actually useful?

       (source: UN DESA 2019)

Population %
Worldwide 7,794 1.09
Developed countries 1,273 0.26
Developed countries 6,521 1.26
Per region:
Africa 1,340 2.51
Latin America 653 0.94
Asia 4,641 0.92

      Annual growth rates reveal that it is necessary not only to contrast the virtual stagnation of developed countries (0.26%) against the demographic dynamism of developing countries (1.26%), but also to differentiate the rapid growth in Africa from the now more moderate growth observed in Asia and Latin America.

       (sources: Charbit (design); Opurez, IRD-Ceped (realization)). For a color version of this figure, see www.iste.co.uk/charbit/demographic.zip

      Similarly, in Central and Southern Asia, India (1,380 billion with a growth rate of 1.04% per year), Pakistan (220 million and 2.05%) and Bangladesh (164 million and 1.05%) largely determine the sub-regional rate (1.20%), since these three countries on their own account for 90.9% of the sub-region’s total population. Finally, Western Asia, which includes countries with high growth rates (Iraq 2.46%, Palestine 2.38%, Yemen 2.37%), contrasts with other Asian sub-regions: 1.64% against 0.40% in East Asia, for example. This low rate is explained by China’s slow growth (0.46%), a demographic giant of 1,344 billion inhabitants, which represents 80.3% of the population in this sub-region.


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