But it’s important for the weird people more obsessed with demography than climate to keep hammering away, because whatever the true balance of risk between the two, the relative balance is changing. Over the last 15 years, some of the worst-case scenarios for climate change have become less likely than before. At the same time, various forces, the Covid crisis especially, have pushed birthrates lower faster, bringing the old-age era forward rapidly.
The latest evidence is the news from China this week that its population declined for the first time since the Great Leap Forward, over 60 years ago. A tip into decline was long anticipated, but until recently it wasn’t expected to arrive until the 2030s — yet here it is early, with the Chinese birthrate hitting an all-time recorded low in 2022.
This means that just as China emerges as an almost-superpower, it’s staring into a darkened future where it grows old and stagnant before it finishes growing rich. Meanwhile, variations on that shadow lie over most rich and many middle-income nations now — threatening general sclerosis, a loss of dynamism and innovation, and a zero-sum struggle between a swollen retired population and the overburdened young. (The week’s mass protests in France over Emmanuel Macron’s plan to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64 were a preview of this future.)
Rule No. 1: Innovation isn’t enough; the challenge will be implementation and adoption.
If you want growth in an aging world you need technological breakthroughs. But as the economist Eli Dourado noted in a recent piece about the effects of the new A.I. technology, the big bottlenecks aren’t always in invention itself: they’re in testing, infrastructure, deployment, regulatory hurdles. And since aging, set-in-their-ways societies may be more inclined to leave new inventions on the shelf, clearing those bottlenecks may become the central innovator’s challenge.
Rule No. 2: Ground warfare will run up against population limits.
Rule No. 3: In the kingdom of the aged, a little extra youth and vitality will go a long way.
Rule No. 5: The traditions that keep societies poor by not pursuing the lifestyle of other people (the Amish, the Africans in Africa) allow those societies to survive.
The rich and middle-income people are dying out, and leaving the Earth for the poor.The fact that living creatures without descendants die out is the basis of Darwin's theory of evolution, an indisputable fact. Humans are living creatures, so the same order applies to them.
Komentarų nėra:
Rašyti komentarą