A reassessment of world population trends.
Popul Bull UN
; (14): 1-16, 1982.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-12264845
This reassessment is limited to observations concerning trends in mortality and fertility and concerning longrun prospects for population growth. Recorded changes in mortality are compared with 3 projections made many years ago. Projections of European mortality made in 1941-42 understated by a wide margin the actual increase in expectation of life because of unforeseen technological changes in the prevention and cure of fatal disease. On the other hand, a projection made in 1955 for India, foreseeing a rapid rise in the 1950s and slower progress later on because of the exhaustion of the easier gains, appears to have been accurate and also to depict the prospects in other populations of relatively high mortality and low income. A different projection of life expectancy in Mexico was also quite close to actual changes in Mexican mortality; it was based on a universal curve constructed to represent how life expectancy rises, increasing ever more slowly as it approaches an upper limit. This curve (1 for each sex), constructed for projection of Mexican mortality, is employed as a standard of comparison for mortality changes in many countries. A number have followed the standard for females very closely for more than 3 decades; in developed countries, male life expectancy has generally fallen short of the standard. The almost universal low fertility in developed countries contrasts with the great diversity of levels and trends of fertility in developing countries, some of which retain undiminished high fertility and others of which have recently attained rates of childbearing as low as in the developed areas. Instances of surprisingly little change and surprisingly rapid change in fertility are described. In the future, growth of populations of developed countries will probably be slight; the future rate of increase in the developing areas depends on the unpredictable timing and pace of childbearing reduction in populations where fertility remains high. In the long run, world population growth may resume its typical pattern of moderate growth interrupted by catastrophic setbacks.
Palavras-chave
Australia; Birth Rate; Bulgaria; Canada; China; Colombia; Contraception; Contraceptive Usage; Costa Rica; Cuba; Czechoslovakia; Demographic Factors; Denmark; Economic Factors; Egypt; England; Estimation Technics; Family Planning; Family Planning, Behavioral Methods; Fertility; Fertility Measurements; Fertility Rate--changes; Finland; France; Germany, Federal Republic Of; Hungary; India; Italy; Japan; Life Expectancy; Marital Status; Marriage; Marriage Age; Marriage Patterns; Mexico; Mortality; Netherlands; Norway; Nuptiality; Poland; Population; Population Dynamics; Population Growth; Population Projection; Portugal; Puerto Rico; Research Methodology; Romania; Scotland; Sexual Abstinence; Socioeconomic Factors; Sri Lanka; Sweden; Switzerland; Taiwan; Turkey; United States; Ussr; Wales
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Coleções:
01-internacional
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
População
/
Abstinência Sexual
/
Fatores Socioeconômicos
/
Casamento
/
Dinâmica Populacional
/
Coeficiente de Natalidade
/
Mortalidade
/
Crescimento Demográfico
/
Estado Civil
/
Comportamento Contraceptivo
Tipo de estudo:
Health_economic_evaluation
/
Prognostic_studies
/
Risk_factors_studies
Aspecto:
Determinantes_sociais_saude
/
Equity_inequality
/
Patient_preference
País/Região como assunto:
Africa
/
America central
/
America do sul
/
Asia
/
Caribe
/
Colombia
/
Costa rica
/
Cuba
/
Europa
/
Mexico
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Popul Bull UN
Ano de publicação:
1982
Tipo de documento:
Article
País de publicação:
Estados Unidos