Demographic Transition
Type: Systems & Dynamics
Local HTML: demographic_transition.html
Definition
The shift from high birth rates and high death rates to low birth rates and low death rates as a country develops economically.
Four stages: Pre-industrial (high/high) → Transitional (high/low) → Industrial (low/low) → Post-industrial (very low/low).
Why It Matters
Economics: Labor shortages in developed countries, youth bulges in developing ones. Politics: Aging populations vote differently, strain pension systems. Migration: Young workers move from high-birthrate to low-birthrate countries. Future: Most of world now in stage 3-4. Global population may peak this century.
The Four Stages
| Stage | Birth Rate | Death Rate | Population | Example |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | High | High | Stable | Pre-industrial societies |
| 2 | High | Falling | Growing fast | Developing countries |
| 3 | Falling | Low | Slowing growth | Emerging economies |
| 4 | Very low | Low | Declining | Japan, Italy, Germany |
Implications
Stage 2 countries: Youth bulges can drive economic growth or political instability. Stage 4 countries: Aging populations, labor shortages, pension crises. The “second demographic transition”: Some countries (South Korea, Spain) have fertility below 1.0 — population halves each generation.
Related Concepts
- [[Lindy Effect** — Long-lasting populations may last longer
- [[Value Drift** — Changing values across generations
- [[Path Dependence** — Demographic paths constrain options
Audio
Podcast episode: Demographic Transition
Part of the Cognitive Bias Reference