Development and
Cooperation

Population trends

Demographic transition

The simplified model of the demographic transition describes the shift from a pre-industrial society, in which the fertility and death rates are high, to a society in which fertility rates are low, but people grow relatively old thanks to lower mortality rates.
Nepal is one of the countries in which the birth rate is below the replacement level. picture-alliance/imageBROKER
Nepal is one of the countries in which the birth rate is below the replacement level.

Death rates always fall before fertility rates do. Therefore, populations initially increase fast. Later, fertility rates begin to fall – provided that prosperity increases, education improves and people have more individual options in their lives. Population growth slows down accordingly, until it stops altogether. Because of the low fertility rate and a high life expectancy, the societies concerned become older and older.

The frontrunners of the demographic transition are the prosperous nations of the global North. They are now in the final phase of this transformation. Their current birth rates tend to be far below the so-called replacement level of 2.1 children per woman, at which a population size is stable in the long run without needing immigrants. In some countries, populations have actually begun to shrink.

In some developing countries and emerging markets fertility rates have fallen below replacement level too. They include Brazil, Chile, Malaysia and Nepal. About half of the world population now lives in countries in which women bear fewer than 2.1 children on average in their lifetime.

Link
DSW data report 2019:
https://www.dsw.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/DSW-Datenreport-2019.pdf

Latest Articles

Climate engineering aims to simulate the natural cooling effect of sulphate from volcanic eruptions on the atmosphere. Cotopaxi volcano, Ecuador.

Climate engineering

Buying time

Shadow of small airplane flying over South Sudan.

Rural regions

No alternative

Increasingly controversial: President Patrice Talon speaking in Cotonou this year.
Food security is particularly at risk in East Africa’s mountainous regions – women in Kenya’s Machakos region are affected.

Land degradation

Highland challenges

Most viewed articles