«We're still talking about
much slower population growth than we just came through,» he says.
Not exact matches
Yi Fuxian, a researcher at the University of Wisconsin - Madison, believes China's
population is
much smaller than official statistics, owing to years of
slower population growth under the one - child policy.
«He's right that there are headwinds like
slowing population growth but the tech revolution is still very
much happening.»
By 2050, the world will host nine billion people — and that's if
population growth slows in
much of the developing world.
Of course,
slowing or reversing the rise of chronic conditions would be beneficial for the health and well - being of the U.S.
population, but by itself it won't put
much of a dent in health care spending
growth.»
In fact the historic increase in CO2 emissions has been
much slower than the increase in GDP (and
slower than the
population growth rate, as well, as pointed out above).
• global emissions from fossil fuels are reduce by 50 % in 50 years • Due in part to lower cost energy, the world will be
much richer than current projections suggest; as a result,
population growth rate
slows to the low end of projections.
A less coercive policy would probably have
slowed China's
population growth just as
much, if not more — as it did that of other countries in Asia.
In the OECD regions, GDP grows at a
much slower rate of 1.7 % / year between 2015 and 2040, at least in part, because of
slow or declining
population growth in those regions.
But while America's total
population has increased annually at a rate of around 0.75 % (equal to about 2.5 million new residents each year) since at least 1900, Manhattan's
population growth is
much slower.