Educate girls to curb growing population, says expert
December 5th, 2008 - 3:06 pm ICT by ANI - Send to a friend:London, Dec 5 (ANI): If teenage girls in the developing world are given the opportunity of completing a secondary school education, the explosive growth in the global population could be curbed significantly, says a leading expert in human numbers.
Joel Cohen, professor of populations at the Rockefeller University in New York, said that putting girls in developing countries through secondary school is one of the single most important factors that cause them to have fewer babies in later life.
That could cut the expected growth in the human population by as much as three billion by 2050.
The current global population is 6.7 billion but would rise to as much as 11.9 billion by then if current trends continue.
“Secondary education increases people’’s capacity and motivation to reduce their own fertility, improve the survival of their children and care for their own and the families” health,” the Independent quoted Professor Cohen, as telling Nature.
“Education promotes a shift from the quantity of children in favour of the quality of children. This transition reduces the future number of people using environmental resources and enhances the capacity of individuals and societies to cope with environmental change,” Cohen said.
The United Nations estimates by 2050, the world population will hit 9.1 billion and that most of this increase will be in developing countries in Africa and southeast Asia.
However, this “medium” estimate is based on fertility rates, that is the number of babies each woman has, declining from today’’s 2.55 children per woman to slightly over two children per woman by 2050.
On an average, if each woman has half a child more than the UN estimates, then by 2050 the world population could be as high as 10.8 billion.
Professor Cohen said that if each woman has half a child less, it could be as low as 7.8 billion.
“Thus a difference in fertility of a single child per woman between now and 2050 alters the 2050 estimate by three billion, a difference equal to the entire world population in 1960,” he said.
“Secondary education has the potential to influence that outcome dramatically. Although there are other factors at work, in many developing countries, women who complete secondary school average at least one child fewer per lifetime than women who complete primary school only,” he added.
The study is published in the journal Nature. (ANI)
Related Stories
- Experts call to take action on childhood environmental health risks - October 23, 2008
- Eczema continues to rise in developing countries - January 8, 2008
- World population fast approaching seven billion mark - June 20, 2008
- Mums going for fewer kids to give them the best start in life - January 23, 2008
- WHO researchers’ call for action on childhood environmental health - October 23, 2008
- Oz scientist urges curbing developing worlds population to check global warming - November 20, 2007
- Hong Kong rules out ‘baby bonus’ to encourage bigger families - April 30, 2008
- Singapore couples offered bigger perks for more babies - August 21, 2008
- World population to be 6.75 bn on New Year’s Day - December 24, 2008
- Activists from six nations to discuss child labour - May 15, 2008
- Owning a cat may trigger eczema in some babies - June 24, 2008
- Preschool learning boost kids math skills - August 31, 2008
- Brangelina keen to adopt child from South America - November 12, 2008
- Non-communicable diseases now world’s biggest killers: WHO - May 21, 2008
- Poorer countries see higher population growth: study - August 20, 2008
- National
- countries in africa
- current trends
- education increases
- environmental change
- environmental resources
- explosive growth
- fertility rates
- global population
- human numbers
- human population
- important factors
- joel cohen
- nature education
- professor cohen
- rockefeller university in new york
- secondary education
- secondary school education
- southeast asia
- teenage girls
- world population
Posted in National, |

