Nigeria: UNFPA drives conversation on population, demographics as world population hits 8bn

Tue, Nov 15, 2022
By editor
2 MIN READ

General News

UNFPA is set to celebrate and drive conversations related to population, demographics, sexual and reproductive health, among others, as the world’s population hits eight billion on Tuesday.

The Media Associate of the Fund in Nigeria, Hajiya Kori Habib, made this known in a statement issued in Abuja on Monday ahead of the global population milestone day, describing the feat as “a world of infinite possibilities”.

She quoted the World Population Prospects 2022 as indicating: “Asia and Africa drove much of that growth, expected to drive the next billion in 2037, while Europe’s contribution will be negative due to declining population. 

“India, the largest contributor to the eight billion (177 million) will surpass China, the second largest contributor (73 million), while China in the next billion will be negative as the world’s most populous nation by 2023.

“Nigeria, the most populous nation in Africa, has a consistently high population growth rate.” 

Habib added that the populations of 61 countries were projected to decrease by one per cent or more between 2022 and 2050 owing to sustained low levels of fertility and in some cases, elevated rates of emigration. 

She stated that lower-middle income and low-income countries contributed the majority of the eight billion world population milestone.

In the same vein, upper-middle income and high-income countries whose population will be driven by international migration in the coming decades contributed about 250 million. 

Habib said that some countries saw reduced births due to COVID-19,  while others saw little impact as more than half of the projected increase in global population up to 2050 will be concentrated in eight countries.

They are: Democratic Republic of the Congo, Egypt, Ethiopia, India,  Nigeria,  Pakistan,  the Philippines and Tanzania. 

Habib said: “More than 400 million will be people 65 years and older,  150 million will be 15-29 and the population of children aged 14 and younger will be declining. 

“Let our challenge be to do more than exist; let us dare to thrive.” (NAN)

A.I

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