Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

Skip to comments.

Half a billion Americans?
From The Economist print edition ^ | August 22, 2002 | The Economist print edition

Posted on 08/22/2002 8:41:42 PM PDT by Forgiven_Sinner

WASHINGTON, DC

Demographic forces are pulling America and Europe apart. If the trend goes on, it will fundamentally alter America's position in the world

FORGET transatlantic rifts about trade, Iraq, Kyoto, or the International Criminal Court. These have been thoroughly ventilated. One area of difference has not got the attention it deserves: demography. It may prove the most important of all.

For 50 years, America and the nations of Western Europe have been lumped together as rich countries, sharing the same basic demographic features: stable populations, low and declining fertility, increasing numbers of old people. For much of that period, this was true. But in the 1980s, the two sides began to diverge. The effect was muted at first, because demographic change is slow. But it is also remorseless, and is now beginning to show up.

America's census in 2000 contained a shock. The population turned out to be rising faster than anyone had expected when the 1990 census was taken. There are disputes about exactly why this was (more on that shortly). What is not in doubt is that a gap is beginning to open with Europe. America's fertility rate is rising. Europe's is falling. America's immigration outstrips Europe's and its immigrant population is reproducing faster than native-born Americans. America's population will soon be getting younger. Europe's is ageing.

By 2040, perhaps earlier, America will overtake Europe in population

Unless things change substantially, these trends will accelerate over coming decades, driving the two sides of the Atlantic farther apart. By 2040, and possibly earlier, America will overtake Europe in population and will come to look remarkably (and, in many ways, worryingly) different from the Old World.

In 1950, Western Europe was exactly twice as populous as the United States: 304m against 152m. (This article uses the US Census Bureau's definition of “Europe”, which includes all countries that were not communist during the cold war. The 15 countries that make up the European Union are a slightly smaller sample: they had a population of 296m in 1950.) Both sides of the Atlantic saw their populations surge during the baby boom, then grow more slowly until the mid-1980s. Even now, Europe's population remains more than 100m larger than America's.

In the 1980s, however, something curious began to happen. American fertility rates—the average number of children a woman can expect to bear in her lifetime—suddenly began to reverse their decline. Between 1960 and 1985, the American fertility rate had fallen faster than Europe's, to 1.8, slightly below European levels and far below the “replacement level” of 2.1 (the rate required to keep the population steady). By the 1990s American fertility had rebounded, rising back to just below the 2.1 mark.

Nobody quite knows why. Some of the recovery was the result of higher-than-average fertility among immigrants. But not all of it: fertility rose among native-born whites and blacks as well. Perhaps the most plausible, if unprovable, explanation is that higher fertility was the product of the economic boom of the 1990s combined with what one might call “social confidence”: America was a good country to bring more children into.

America is the world's great demographic outlier

America is not unique: a few north-European countries, like Norway, have followed a similar trajectory. But it is highly unusual. Nearly every country in the world has seen its fertility rate fall recently and, by and large, the richer the country, the greater the fall. “America”, says Hania Zlotnik of the United Nations Population Division, “is the world's great demographic outlier.”

Meanwhile, Europe's fertility continues to fall. Having been just below 1.9 in the mid-1980s, the rate is now less than 1.4 and it is projected to continue declining for at least another ten years. In some countries—Spain, Italy and Greece—the fertility rate has fallen to between 1.1 and 1.3.

It is fair to say that these numbers probably exaggerate the long-term demographic difference between the two sides. Remember that between 1970 and 1985 American fertility rates were slightly lower than Europe's. What seems to have happened then was not that Americans were having fewer children overall, but that a generation of women was postponing motherhood. That depressed America's birth rate in 1970-85, shifted a surge of births by half a generation, and produced an unusually high rate in the 1990s. That same population shift is happening in parts of Europe now, especially in those Mediterranean countries with the lowest fertility rates. There too, many women are merely postponing child-bearing. Later, after about 2010, when they have their children, Europe's fertility rate will nudge back up (see chart 1).

But what is striking about the American rate is not that it rose and fell, but that it rose so much—to within a whisker of the replacement level. And what is striking about the European rate is that it fell so far, to a much lower level than America's. That is also a reason for thinking it may not recover as strongly as America's did.

The UN reckons that the differences in fertility between America and Europe will continue over the next few decades. America's high rate is expected to remain relatively stable. Europe's should recover a bit—but it will not close the gap. The result of these differences, already evident in the census of 2000, will then become starker.

Absolute numbers

America's population should have been 275m in 2000. At least, that is what the central projection of the 1990 census predicted. The 2000 census showed it was actually 281m, higher even than the “high series” projection from 1990. Some of this may have been caused by things other than population change: improvements in counting, for instance. But not all. The new census showed that immigration was higher than expected, and that the birth rate of native-born Americans was up too.

Those higher fertility rates will have a bigger impact as time goes on. By 2040, using the new census's “middle series” projection, America's population will overtake Europe's. This forecast has already proved too low. On the “high-series projection”, the crossing point occurs before 2030 (see chart 2). Admittedly, this projection is based on high assumptions about fertility rates—over 2.5 in 2025-50. But if this proves correct, Europe's population in 2050 would be 360m and falling, America's would be over 550m and rising. Half a billion people: in other words, America would be twice the size it is now. Europe would be smaller. Obviously, straight-line projections over 50 years need to be taken with plenty of salt. All the same, the numbers are startling.

European commissioners are fond of boasting that the European Union (EU) is the largest market in the world. They claim an equal status with the United States in trade negotiations as a result. Some also think that, because of this parity, the euro will one day become an international reserve currency to rival the dollar.

The balance of global economic power would be tilted in fundamental ways

But assume, for a minute, that Americans remain, as they are now, about one-third richer per head than Europeans. The high-series projection implies that America's economy in 2050 would still be more than twice the size of Europe's—and something like that preponderance would still be there even if you assume that by then much of Central and Eastern Europe will have joined the EU. The balance of global economic power would be tilted in fundamental ways. With 400m-550m rich consumers, the American market would surely be even more important to foreign companies than it is today. And if so, American business practices—however they emerge from the current malaise—could become yet more dominant.

And still they come

Part of the rise in the population has been driven by higher fertility. The rest comes from immigration. In the past decade, America has taken in over 11m immigrants. That compares with 6m in the 1970s and 7m in the 1980s. The real number of new immigrants may be even higher, since these figures may not account for all the estimated 8m-9m people who have slipped illegally into the country. Some may return home. Others may be thrown out. But those that remain contribute to the growing population both directly and indirectly (that is, through their children). The fertility rate for non-hispanic whites is just over 1.8, for blacks 2.1. For Latinos, it is nearly 3.0—higher than in many developing countries. From the point of view of the overall population, therefore, higher immigration counts twice over.

That is a reason why America's total population will continue to rise, though perhaps not as much as the highest estimates suggest. Many of the new migrants come from Mexico. If Mexico's own demographic pattern, with fast-falling fertility, is anything to go by, the fertility rate for American Latinos is also bound to fall, though it will still be quite high.

Europe has had an immigration boom as well, of course. Indeed, in 1985-95, there were slightly more immigrants going into Europe than into America (though since Europe's population is larger, America's rate was higher). But more recently, the European numbers have fallen—presumably reflecting increased barriers to entry—and overall, since 1950, Europe has taken in far fewer people. Most demographers forecast that immigration will be much lower in Europe than in America during the next few decades (see chart 3).

The difference in immigration not only increases America's population compared with Europe's, it also makes it look increasingly different. Compare the different shapes of chart 4, which maps the age distribution of America's whites, on the left, and other groups, on the right. Whites form a pear shape: they are preponderant among adults. This is also the shape of Europe's population. Blacks and browns form a pyramid: children account for most of the population. Even now, in the parts of America with the highest immigration, such as Los Angeles and Houston, Latinos account for half of all children under 14. This is the characteristic shape of developing countries. As the bulge of Latinos enters peak child-bearing age in a decade or two, the Latino share of America's population will soar.

That could have an impact both on economics and on geopolitics. The economic impact is clear enough. Kenneth Prewitt, the former head of the US Census Bureau, argues that “in the struggle to find workers to support growing economies, nations that are hospitable to immigrants will have an advantage.” Immigrants go where there are friends and family to welcome them and help them get jobs. Where will they find a more hospitable welcome—Europe or America?

The geopolitical impact is fuzzier, but still powerful. At the moment, America's political connections and shared values with Europe are still strong, albeit fraying. But over time, America's ties of family and culture will multiply and strengthen with the main sources of its immigration—Latin America chiefly, but also East and South Asia. As this happens, it is probable that it will also pull American attention further away from Europe.

The young world and the old Higher fertility rates and immigration produce not only a larger population but a society that is younger, more mixed ethnically and, on balance, more dynamic. The simplest expression of this is median age (by definition, half of the population is older than the median age, and half younger). According to Bill Frey, a demographer at the University of Michigan, the median age in America in 2050 will be 36.2. In Europe it will be 52.7. That is a stunning difference, accounted for almost entirely by the dramatic ageing of the European population. At the moment, the median age is 35.5 in America and 37.7 in Europe. In other words, the difference in the median age is likely to rise from two to 17 years by 2050.

Behind this change lie demographic patterns with big policy implications. The percentage of children in the population is falling as populations age. But in America it is falling more slowly than elsewhere. In 1985, America and Europe had more or less the same proportion of the population under 14 years of age: around 20%. By 2020, the proportion of children in Europe will have slumped to 13.7%. In America it will still be 18.6%—not only higher than in Europe but higher than in China and Japan, as well.

From a fiscal point of view, more children are not necessarily a blessing: their education is a burden on the public finances. Because America has relatively more children than Europe, its “dependency ratio”, or the number of children and elderly people for each working-age person, does not stay low. It is slightly higher than in Europe now—51% against 47%—and will stay just above European levels as the ratio rises in both places until about 2035 (see top panel of chart 5). But note the difference: a higher proportion of Europe's “dependency costs” comes from the old. The number of people over 65 will be equivalent to 60% of the working-age population in Europe in 2050, compared with only 40% in America. There, most of the overall burden will come from the cost of educating children (chart 5, bottom panel).

You see the significance after 2035. In America, the dependency ratio will start to fall as the bulge of children turns into a bulge of adults. But in Europe there will be no such change, and the ratio will continue to rise. This is where the implications for public policy become large.

Both Europe and America face fiscal problems in providing pensions and health care as their baby-boomers retire. On some estimates, by 2050, government debt could be equivalent to almost 100% of national income in America, 150% in the EU as a whole, and over 250% in Germany and France. So while the burden is growing on both sides of the Atlantic, it is much heavier in Europe.

That is a problem in its own right, and a source of another long-term difficulty in the transatlantic relationship. Since the end of the cold war, Europe and America have made different calculations about where to spend public money. America has put more into defence; Europe has spent more on social programmes.

The long-term logic of demography seems likely to entrench America's power and to widen existing transatlantic rifts

The result is a familiar military imbalance. America spends about twice as much on defence as the entire European Union ($295 billion in 2000, or 3% of GDP, compared with the EU's $153 billion), thus maintaining its preponderant military might. Europeans intermittently promise to spend more in order to narrow the military gap, recognising the dangers to the NATO alliance if they fail to pull their weight, but population trends will sap their determination.

If Europeans are unwilling to spend what is needed to be full military partners of America now, when 65-year-olds amount to 30% of the working-age population, they will be even less likely to do more in 2050, when the proportion of old people will have doubled. In short, the long-term logic of demography seems likely to entrench America's power and to widen existing transatlantic rifts.

Perhaps none of this is altogether surprising. The contrast between youthful, exuberant, multi-coloured America and ageing, decrepit, inward-looking Europe goes back almost to the foundation of the United States. But demography is making this picture even more true, with long-term consequences for America's economic and military might and quite possibly for the focus of its foreign policy.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Extended News; Foreign Affairs; Germany; Government; United Kingdom
KEYWORDS: demographics; economy; europe; us
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-39 next last
Interesting article. I am generally positive and optimistic about population growth and immigration. I oppose illegal immigration and want our government to stop it. The article demonstrates the value of a young, growing population.

For what it's worth, the management guru Peter Drucker said that the changing demographics of the world are one of the ten most significant forces that will change it in the next fifty years. I think he's right.

1 posted on 08/22/2002 8:41:42 PM PDT by Forgiven_Sinner
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | View Replies]

To: Forgiven_Sinner
If the trend goes on, it will fundamentally alter America's position in the world

This article places way too much emphasis on population. The United States has already been the most powerful nation in the world dating back to when it had just 150,000,000 people during WW2. If population meant anything with respect to power or position in the world, then China and India would be far ahead of the U.S.

2 posted on 08/22/2002 8:57:29 PM PDT by SamAdams76
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Forgiven_Sinner
Well, we have to do it, otherwise the Social Security Ponzi scheme will collapse.

3 posted on 08/22/2002 9:00:25 PM PDT by Tony in Hawaii
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Forgiven_Sinner
This means getting someone to cut your lawn is going to be a snap.
4 posted on 08/22/2002 9:31:57 PM PDT by struwwelpeter
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SamAdams76
So true Sam. The higher population doesn't take into account all the immigrants who come here to ride in the wagon rather than pull it.
5 posted on 08/22/2002 9:32:32 PM PDT by Sgt_Schultze
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Forgiven_Sinner
"The 1965 Immigration Act"
6 posted on 08/22/2002 9:40:16 PM PDT by bok
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Forgiven_Sinner
"The 1965 Immigration Act" "The 1965 destruction of america Immigration Act"
7 posted on 08/22/2002 9:43:09 PM PDT by bok
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SamAdams76; 4Freedom
Good point, Sam.

This business of we must have more children because "they" are having more children is weird--it reminds me of the mineshaft gap in the closing scenes of Dr. Strangelove.

Size is not the main attribute of the winning side--being the best organized is the main attribute of the winning side.

Small, well organized populations usually triumph over much larger but less well organized foes: the defeat of Russia by Japan in the Russo-Japanese War and the English plunder of France during the Hundred Years War are just two of many such examples.

If having large numbers were the sign of success, then humans are complete failures compared to ants.

And I would rather live free than live like an ant.
8 posted on 08/22/2002 9:57:11 PM PDT by Age of Reason
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: SamAdams76; 4Freedom
. The United States has already been the most powerful nation in the world dating back to when it had just 150,000,000 people during WW2

And in the 1950's when the population was still about half of the current population, the best things in life were much more affordable: houses, food, health care, energy, low crime rates, freedom and manhood, education, good music, and feminine women--all were more affordable.

And it was rare for someone having something to offer to be unemployed for very long.

I'd trade that kind of prosperity for the kind of prosperity an extra 150 million people have since brought us.

9 posted on 08/22/2002 10:07:37 PM PDT by Age of Reason
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Age of Reason
"And in the 1950's when the population was still about half of the current population, the best things in life were much more affordable: houses, food, health care, energy, low crime rates, freedom and manhood, education, good music, and feminine women--all were more affordable. And it was rare for someone having something to offer to be unemployed for very long. I'd trade that kind of prosperity for the kind of prosperity an extra 150 million people have since brought us."

I wouldn't. The quality of life was wonderful back then. And everyone who worked could afford a fair lifestyle. Today only the few are rich, rich, rich. The rest are struggling, and underemployed at an unlivable wage thanks in large part to immigration. NO WAY! We were safe, we were happy and we were productive.

10 posted on 08/22/2002 11:34:52 PM PDT by brat
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: Forgiven_Sinner
Camp of the Saints.
11 posted on 08/23/2002 12:16:11 AM PDT by Pelham
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: Age of Reason
How old were you in the 1950's ? If you were alive back then, how good is your memory; really ? I'm not saying that more people have made things better; I'm saying that you aren't stating things all that accurately.

In the 1950's , a tenured teacher's salary, was around $3,000 in N.Y.C. and a ride on a subway or bus cost a dime. Cigarettes were a quarter a pack, and most candy cost a dime. Few people had air conditioners, few had a T.V., let alone two or three ( even fewer had ones that were bad color ones ! ), most houses had only one bathroom, and only the upper middle / upper classes could afford to fly in a plane. Kids got measles, mumps, chicken pox, polio, and Cancer was a death sentence.

In 1950, out of a population of 149,188,000 there were 3,288,000 unemployed. There were 4,843 strikes ( when was the last time there were even 20 strikes, in the USA ?) , and the average salary was $2,992.00 ! That year, there were 328,000 Bachelor degrees handed out to males and 103,000 earned by females.

I suggest that you remove your rose colored glasses. Some things were better, life was NOT ; however , easier.

12 posted on 08/23/2002 1:05:44 AM PDT by nopardons
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 9 | View Replies]

To: nopardons; Age of Reason; brat; All
That year, American Men Earned 328,000 Bachelor degrees and 103,000 similar pieces of paper were handed out to females.

Thanks to the feral gummint's most insidiously Evil form of taxation; that corrupt and evil institution's deliberate debasing of the currency by way of inflation; [Couterfeiting by any other name] the 1950 US Dollar bears about as much relationship to the 2002 "dollar" as the Swiss Franc does to the Uganda Shilling -- and it costs two workers per family eighteen months and ninety skwillion 2002 "dollars" to buy the equivilent of a 1950s [Actually EDUCATED!]New York school teacher's more than adequate salary!

13 posted on 08/23/2002 1:48:30 AM PDT by Brian Allen
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 12 | View Replies]

To: Brian Allen
Brian, when did you become such a repugnant mysoginist ?

In 1916, the average man earned $15.00 per week and that was in N.Y.C., where salaries were far higher ( so were costs ! ) than in the rest of the country. Because of safetynets and a lot of other things, wages and prices haven't fallen , since the Great Depression. OTOH, if you measure what 2002 dollars buy, as opposed to what 1950 dollars buy, we have actually progressed ... not degressed; your blinkered biases notwithstanding. LOL

14 posted on 08/23/2002 1:54:53 AM PDT by nopardons
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]

To: Forgiven_Sinner

 

 

out·li·er   Pronunciation Key  (outaltlaltaltaltr)
n.
  1. One whose domicile lies at an appreciable distance from his or her place of business.
  2. A value far from most others in a set of data: “Outliers make statistical analyses difficult” (Harvey Motulsky).
  3. Geology. A portion of stratified rock separated from a main formation by erosion.

15 posted on 08/23/2002 1:56:46 AM PDT by dennisw
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

KEEP MOVING!!

16 posted on 08/23/2002 2:03:46 AM PDT by KneelBeforeZod
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 15 | View Replies]

To: nopardons; Age of Reason; brat; All
<< Brian, when did you become such a repugnant mysoginist? >>

1. Someone die; make you G-d -- and give you license to savagely and gratuitously personally attack?

2. And here I was, all this while, thinking that Psychopathological Projection Syndrome

[Ref: QUOTE: ..... there were 328,000 Bachelor degrees handed out to males and 103,000 "earned" by females ..... END QUOTE >> ]

was a symptom of the libbburrrrul disease!

17 posted on 08/23/2002 2:35:48 AM PDT by Brian Allen
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 14 | View Replies]

To: Forgiven_Sinner
I brought this point up a few months back with someone. Europe will never be able to assume any sort of "mantle" of leadership on the world stage. They might be a significant economic factor, but at the end of the day- you must have a credible military if you wish to have at least some real say in foreign policy and the affairs of the world at large. They will never be able to afford a credible military. If they are unable to do so now- they will be even less able to do so when most of their population starts getting their pensions.

This demographic alone will cause a major shift in strategic alliances in coming decades (if not sooner). We are already seeing the beginnings of this now with our fresh relationship with Russia. NATO will gradually cease to be in its present form. It will become solely political- sort of a sub-group of the UN, like the Senate Intelligence Committee in the Congress. The real alliances that count though will be whoever aligns themselves militarily with the US in the future. This will be where the future history of the world is written. The two big strategic threats/problems we face (the way I see it) are China and the Middle East. The emerging alliance will be dedicated to ultimately countering these two threats. A US/Russia/India menage makes sense in this respect. That will be the alliance of power in the future.

The Europeans will gradually drop in influence to little more than Africa- not because they don't have a lot of paying customers (which they surely will) but because when push comes to shove, they will no longer be able to at least "take part" in a military situation even symbolically. They already start to see this as we no longer "really need" them to go off to war somewhere. In the future they will be bypassed with ever greater frequency. Also, Europe will begin to "look" much different and have a different voice because of this. To fund those pensions, they will have to have even more immigration. Those immigrants will eventually get to vote. When they do, the immigrant voice will eventually reach the parliamentary level. Europe, if they do not tread very carefully, could wind up being the first western culture to adopt Sharia throught constitutional ammendment.

18 posted on 08/23/2002 2:51:23 AM PDT by Prodigal Son
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 1 | View Replies]

To: SamAdams76
Well, economists always leave out huge assumptions in their economic predictions.... that is why we invest in Red China... I predict America will get nuked and its population reduced by 200 millions since we have no shelters.
19 posted on 08/23/2002 10:35:45 AM PDT by lavaroise
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 2 | View Replies]

To: Brian Allen
Thanks to the feral gummint's most insidiously Evil form of taxation; that corrupt and evil institution's deliberate debasing of the currency by way of inflation;

Your knowledge of economics is laughable. Inflation is necessary for sustained economic growth. Too often, in the past, we've had supplies of money that were far too tight, and too closely linked to the fluctuating supply of gold. That made the economy far more volatile than it is today.

20 posted on 08/23/2002 10:43:00 AM PDT by andy_card
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 13 | View Replies]


Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-2021-39 next last

Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson