Source: The Conversation (Au and NZ)
Birth rates have been declining worldwide since the peak of the post-second world war baby boom. Birth rates have now reached below replacement in most of the world, including Australia. Put simply, populations on average aren’t replacing themselves.
Everyone from Elon Musk to Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, to the pope have opinions on declining total fertility (or birth) rates – the average number of births per woman. Overpopulation has dominated popular discourse since the 1960s.
While fears of overpopulation remain, especially tied to immigration, concerns have shifted to depopulation and the related economic and national security issues. Overpopulation fears to depopulation woes In his 1968 book The Population Bomb, Paul Ehrlich warned the 1970s would bring “people, people, people, people” and an overpopulation “cancer” resulting in famine and war.
Human extinction was imminent, we were warned. Overpopulation-associated human extinction has not come to be. The global total fertility rate has more than halved since 1950. Average birth rates for OECD countries now sit at 1.46 births per woman, well below the 2.1 required for generational replacement.
World population decline is projected by the mid-2080s. China is now in its fourth year of population decline. South Korea has been declining since 2019 with its near-global record low birth rates. Germany has seen deaths outnumber births since 1972.
Japan, Greece, Italy, Cuba and Thailand are also among those in the depopulation club. Without immigration, the United Kingdom would also see population decline, with deaths outnumbering births. Australia is about a generation away from the same fate.
Immigration controls have seen depopulation in Canada. Birth rates a solution to the ageing ‘problem’ Enormous advancements since the 1950s, mostly in health and medical technologies like immunisation, mean humans are living longer. We’re also having fewer children, and as a result populations are ageing.
An ageing population is a mark of success and human ingenuity, but economic systems tend to view ageing societies as problematic. Workers and working-aged people are essential to maintain a healthy economy. Individual income taxpayers are the top source of federal government revenue in Australia.
Too few people of working age replacing those retiring can seriously undermine economic wellbeing, forcing governments to do more service provision with less financial resources. Below-replacement fertility and its implications for government bottom lines have resulted in Australian politicians calling on Australians to have more babies.
“Have one for mum, one for dad, and one for the country”, treasurer Peter Costello famously said in 2004. In 2020, former prime minister Tony Abbott suggested the wrong kind of women were having children, calling on “middle class” women to have more.
Talking the budget, treasurer Jim Chalmers in 2024 said it would be “better if birth rates were higher”. Human catastrophe of low birth rates People are increasingly saying the choice to have children is constrained by external factors.
Worldwide, around one-in-five surveyed by the United Nations said fears about the future would or has resulted in them having fewer children than they wanted. Housing affordability, economic stability, gender inequality and climate change present insurmountable barriers for having a much-wanted family.
The lack of choice to have children in below-replacement regions, I’d argue is indeed a human catastrophe. How is it that we’ve allowed society to become so hostile that children are out of the question for so many who want them?
The intergenerational bargain is well and truly corrupted. We are confronted with the tough question of who will care for us with the children gone. Can a human catastrophe be avoided? The burden of having a family falls on working-aged people, especially women.
A baby bonus or one-off payment is unlikely to change people’s minds and increase the total fertility rate; such payments merely change timing. Instead, increasing total fertility rates requires a comprehensive suite of measures from a policy perspective.
Tackling the big four big domains of housing, the economy, gender and climate encompass issues such as secure, affordable and appropriate housing employment and income security accessible childcare social and workplace gender equality climate change action.
People of childbearing age aren’t being hedonistic when making family and fertility decisions. They’re not thinking about themselves, they’re actually thinking about the future world and weighing what that might look like for prospective children.
Loss of hope among people of childbearing age, including fears of being left behind, contribute to overall concerns about an insecure future. Not only is the human catastrophe of low births rates reflecting more widespread concerns, such as insecurity, it could also be undermining social cohesion.
Rather than an exploding bomb of overpopulation, the world faces an economic and social implosion due to lacking substantive supports necessary to help raise much-wanted children.
Surely it’s beyond time we ask people what they actually need – and give it to them.
Liz Allen receives funding from the Australian Research Council for a Discovery Project on the history of grandparenting in Australia (DP250100728).
Original source: https://analysis1.mil-osi.com/2026/06/01/birth-rates-are-declining-in-most-of-the-world-including-australia-heres-why-that-really-matters/
