Type | Conference Paper - CODESRIA 11 th General Assembly |
Title | Africa’s Population: a critical global asset for development |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2005 |
City | Maputo |
Country/State | Mozambique |
URL | http://www.codesria.org/IMG/pdf/kamuzora |
Abstract | Africa’s population, particularly her growth rates, 2.5 to 3.0 percent per annum, has usually been viewed with alarm as being a cause of her underdevelopment; seemingly, for these rates, associated also with a very young population of nearly 50 percent under age 15 years, point to doubling of a population in 23 to 27.6 years, but if they prevail. However this couldn’t be far from the truth. Indeed this status of Africa’s population is, and will be, a critical global asset: this is what this paper attempts to show, on three bases. First, the negative, neo-malthusian view on development effects is disproved by scholarly evidence, notably commissioned studies by the American Academy of Sciences, the World Bank, Australian Government, and independent others; all have one verdict: little or no evidence of deleterious effects. Indeed opposing schools of thought e.g. Boserup’s and Julian Simon see positive effects, which, on theoretical and empirical basis, fit the African labour-intensive socio-economy. It is perhaps both, lessons of dire consequences of ageing of European populations _a result of fertility decline_ and, due to momentum from past high fertility, continuing growth and young age structure of Africa’s population into the foreseeable future that demonstrates clearly Africa’s population as a global asset, thus the second and third bases of this. |
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