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Thursday, February 24, 20051109254500
Prospering Democracy
"India’s population ‘to outstrip China by 2030’," by Mark Turner, Financial Times, http://news.ft.com/cms/s/360608e0-868d-11d9-8075-00000e2511c8.html, 24 February 2005 (from Roth Report).
China may be peacefully rising, but its population lead will soon be overtaken by our friend Hindoostan
According to the UN's latest World Population Prospects, released on Thursday in New York, there will be 1,395m people in India in 2025 and 1,593m in 2050. In China the population will grow to 1,441m by 2025, before dropping to 1,392m in 2050. Cheryl Sawyer, a UN demographer, said: “We've been saying for a while that India would cross over China before 2050. But the crossover has been getting earlier and earlier and we now say it will happen before 2030 (not including Hong Kong). This is five years earlier than we said two years ago.
“Based on analysis of the newest censuses, we're estimating lower fertility for China, while India's is slightly higher than we estimated in the past.”
There is real danger of China sharing Japan's depopulating sadness soon
The UN's population division said it did not doubt that India and China would exchange places, mainly because of differences in fertility. The only question was exactly when. China now has a fertility rate of 1.7 children per woman (though rising to 1.85), while India's is just above three.
The useful if evil United Nations has a neat euphemism for the one child policy
Thomas Buettner, the chief of the UN division's estimates and projection section, said China's changing population was due to “modernisation and uprooting people from traditional lifestyles into the modern economy”, where “people have other opportunities that compete with having large families, like consumerism, travel and education”.
He said it was also due to a rigid population policy, although Chinese officials had started thinking about relaxing that policy because of concern about rapid ageing of the population. Europe's population, which recently underwent a reversal in growth, is also on a downward trend. According to a medium variant, it will drop from 728m now to 653m in 2050. That figure (which incorporates Russia but not Turkey) includes falls in Italy and Germany, although France and the UK will grow.
Lastly, while I mostly agree with Tom Barnett, India's connectivity machine is and will be a more important ally than China -- or even Europe or Japan.
Japan's population declines from 128m to 112m, according to the same variant. “The population of developed countries as a whole is expected to remain virtually unchanged between 2005 and 2050, at about 1.2bn,” the report says. “In contrast, the population of the 50 least-developed countries is projected to more than double.”
The population of India will overtake that of China before 2030, five years earlier than expected, a United Nations population report predicts.
08:15 Posted by Dan tdaxp (Webmaster) in Abortion, Greater East Asia, South Asia, Women | Permalink | Comments (2) | Email this | Tags: india
Trackbacks
Putting the Geostrategy back into Geogreen
"The 500-Mile-Per-Gallon Solution," by Max Boot, Los Angeles Times, 24 March 2005, http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-max24mar24,0,114126.column?coll=la-news-comment-opinions (from South Dakota Politics).
Max Boot joins Tom Fried...
Trackback by: tdaxp | Saturday, March 26, 2005
India: Best Ally, Ever
"F-18s never sold to any other countryAdd to Clippings," by Indrani Bagchi, Times of India, 27 March 2005, http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/articleshow/1063658.cms (from Free Republic).
At least, that appears to be America's offer
Boeing, Lo...
Trackback by: tdaxp | Tuesday, March 29, 2005
India: Friend, Doctor, Whore?
"Outsourcing phone sex from call centers in India!," by Preeti Chaube, India Daily, 29 January 2005, http://www.indiadaily.com/editorial/01-29b-05.asp (from Free Republic).
"After its success in IT outsourcing and biotechnology fields, India plan...
Trackback by: tdaxp | Wednesday, March 30, 2005
Comments
It is good that India and US are coming together and former a strategic partnership.
Posted by: Ashish Hanwadikar | Sunday, April 10, 2005
Ashish,
I agree completely. China is important, but she is not the be-all, end-all. Asia has a number of large and rising states, and it is important for democratic states to support each other. Rising democracies such as India are natural allies for established democracies such as America and Japan. And of course, this also implies a natural defensiveness toward smaller democracies such as Taiwan, and a natural auspiciousness of military dictatorships such as Pakistan.
Chicago Boyz has an interesting comparison between India and China [1]
http://www.chicagoboyz.net/archives/004457.html
Posted by: Dan tdaxp | Wednesday, October 04, 2006
