Demographic Transition

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The Demographic Transition

Through history, population grew very little because there were nearly as many deaths as births each year. High birth rates were often off set by wars, famines and epidemics. China and Europe lost one third of their population due to the bubonic plague during the 14th century.

Health and living conditions improved during the 17th and 18th centuries. The number of births exceeded the number of deaths and populations began to grow. Better hygiene and public sanitation reduced the incidence of disease. Expanded commerce made food supply more widely available and improved nutrition.

Life expectancy began a slow raise, while birth rates also declined as a result of later ages at marriage, urbanization, industrialization, rising aspirations and other factors. The shift from high to low mortality and fertility is known as the demographic transition. The shift occurred in Europe, North America and a number of other areas during the 19th and 20th centuries, and in developing countries during the mid 20th century.

Picture of box 1: http://www.prb.org/Template.cfm?Section=Popul ation_Bulletin1&template=/ContentManagement/ ContentDisplay.cfm&ContentID=12488 high birth rates and death rates are disrupted by a long-term decline in mortality. Mortality rates eventually stabilize at low levels. Birth rates then fall to about the same level as mortality rates. With birth and death rates at similar low levels, the equilibrium as slow population growth is regained.

Second Demographic Transition: Where fertility falls below the two-child replacement level as forces of contemporary life interfere with childbearing. such as, greater educational and job opportunities for women, the availability of effective contraception, legalization of abortion, shift away from formal marriage, acceptance of childbearing outside marriage, raise of individualism and materialism.

Total Fertility Rate


Average number of children a woman would have given prevailing birth rates.

The Reproductive Revolution


Began in the second half of the 20th century. Emergence of modern contraceptive methods, such as hormonal pills, intrauterine devices, simpler sterilization techniques, and contraceptives that can be injected or implanted under the skin made it easier and safer for women to avoid unintended pregnancies.

Increased access to such methods, along with socioeconomic changes that motivated couples to have fewer children, drove the fertility decline of the last 40 years. Contraceptive use worldwide rose from less than 10% in the 1960s, to about 60% in 2003. Due to contraception, fertility decline occurred much faster in developing countries than it had in the industrialized countries.

It took the U.S and Europe 100 to 150 years to reduce family size Yet it only took a few decades in developing countries due to the introduction to contraception among other factors. Other factors: Change in attitudes More education Began to marry later Couples want fewer children

Example: In Kenya.. During the 1970s women wanted seven or more children on average. During the 1990s they wanted fewer than four children, on average.

Family Planning Programs


Organized family planning programs brought contraceptive supplies and services to people, along with information campaigns promoting smaller families, healthier families, contributed substantially to smaller families in developing countries. Such programs were responsible for 40 to 50 percent of the fertility decline of developing countries since the 1960s.

Why women dont use contraceptives? (unmet need)


Fear to side effects of contraceptive methods. Fear to husbands disapproval or retribution Religious opposition to family planning Perceived risk of becoming pregnant Ambivalent feelings about becoming pregnant

Political and cultural barriers to family planning


Unmarried adolescents are denied access to family planning to avoid promoting promiscuity. Young married women are often encountered to give birth soon after marriage. If marry later (wait until they are in their 20s), fertility can be reduced considerably given that the delay lengthens the interval between generations and lowers average fertility.

Mortality decline
HIV / AIDS infection Has reduced life expectancy in some countries in sub-Saharan Africa Infection rates are increasingly rapidly in South and East Asia. In 2003, 98% of the 3 million HIV / AIDS deaths took place in sub-Saharan Africa and other less developed regions.

Countries with very low fertility


TFR 1.2 or less in Czech Republic, Japan, Italy, Spain, and in several other countries. TFR near or below 2.1 in Brazil, Costa Rica, Korea, and Thailand. In China, the TFR is about 1.7

High Fertility
Yemen Congo, Uganda (sub-Saharan Africa) Asia: Bangladesh, India, Indonesia, Pakistan and the Philippines. Moderate high TFRs (4.1 and 4.7 in 2003) Some Latin American countries, Bolivia, Guatemala, Haiti and Paraguay

Very High Fertility


Mali Niger Uganda Kenya (may have raised in early 2000s).

Due to lack of funds to promote family planning programs due to the HIV epidemic

Immigration and Urbanization


Migration affects population growth. Migration affects the distribution of the population by age, sex, cultural, racial, and other characteristics in the communities that send and receive immigrants.

Economic Development
Centered in Urban Areas Cities offered better.. Job opportunities Amenities Public services ..than rural areas. By 1950, more than one half of residents of developed countries lived in urban areas, from about in 1900. In 2000, 75% lived in urban areas.

Developing Word
Improved transportation and communication networks and increased population growth in rural areas helped to increase migration to urban areas in less developing countries during the 20th century. Between 1950 to 2000 residents living in urban areas rose from 18% to 40%.

International Migration
About 175 million people---3 percent of the world population are international migrants. Most migrants are from developing counties and migrate to more industrialized countries. 80 percent of the world population live in developing nations.

Why migrate?
Economic reasons Refugees or asylees, who were forced to leave their country because of political violence, or the threat of persecution. Social networks also contribute to the flows.

International migration flows


From South and Central America to North America. From North Africa and the Middle East to Europe. From Asia to North America and Australia.

International Migration Helps Population growth


.where fertility has sunk so low that annual deaths outnumber annual births

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