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Fewer : how the new demography of depopulation will shape our future / Ben J. Wattenberg.

By: Publication details: Chicago : Ivan R. Dee, 2004.Description: 241 p. : ill. ; 24 cmISBN:
  • 156663606X (alk. paper)
Other title:
  • Demography of depopulation will shape our future
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 304.6/2 22
LOC classification:
  • HB871 .W35 2004
Contents:
PART ONE. WHAT HAPPENED AND WHY? : 1. The Story of This Book -- 2. And Then There Were Many Fewer -- 3. Less Developed, Less Fertility -- 4. America the Exceptional: The Baby Makers -- 5. America the Exceptional: Immigrant Takers -- 6. The Culture of Alarmism -- 7. Why? PART TWO. WHAT CAN HAPPEN : 8. The Graybe Boom -- 9. Business -- 10. The Environment -- 11. Geopolitics -- 12. Is There an Immigration Solution? PART THREE. PROBLEMS, PRIDE, PERPLEXITY : 13. Numbers Matter.
Summary: Publisher description: Fewer tells a monumental human story, largely ignored, but which promises to starkly change the human condition in the years to come. Never before have birth and fertility rates fallen so far, so fast, so low, for so long, in so many places, so surprisingly. In Fewer, Ben Wattenberg shows how and why this has occurred, and explains what it means for the future. The demographic plunge, he notes, is starkly apparent in the developed nations of Europe and Japan, which will lose about 150 million people in the next half century. Starting from higher levels, but moving with geometric speed, the demographic decline is also apparent in the Less Developed Nations of Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Only the United States (so far) has been exempt from the birth dearth, leaving America as more than "the sole super-power." Perhaps it should be called the global "omni-power." These stark demographic changes will affect commerce, the environment, public financing, and geo-politics. Here Wattenberg lists likely winners and losers. In Wattenberg's world of "The New Demography" readers get a look at a topic often chattered about, but rarely understood.
Holdings
Item type Current library Shelving location Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book Book NMC Library Stacks HB871 .W35 2004 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 33039000751379

Includes bibliographical references and index.

PART ONE. WHAT HAPPENED AND WHY? : 1. The Story of This Book -- 2. And Then There Were Many Fewer -- 3. Less Developed, Less Fertility -- 4. America the Exceptional: The Baby Makers -- 5. America the Exceptional: Immigrant Takers -- 6. The Culture of Alarmism -- 7. Why? PART TWO. WHAT CAN HAPPEN : 8. The Graybe Boom -- 9. Business -- 10. The Environment -- 11. Geopolitics -- 12. Is There an Immigration Solution? PART THREE. PROBLEMS, PRIDE, PERPLEXITY : 13. Numbers Matter.

Publisher description: Fewer tells a monumental human story, largely ignored, but which promises to starkly change the human condition in the years to come. Never before have birth and fertility rates fallen so far, so fast, so low, for so long, in so many places, so surprisingly. In Fewer, Ben Wattenberg shows how and why this has occurred, and explains what it means for the future. The demographic plunge, he notes, is starkly apparent in the developed nations of Europe and Japan, which will lose about 150 million people in the next half century. Starting from higher levels, but moving with geometric speed, the demographic decline is also apparent in the Less Developed Nations of Asia, Africa, and Latin America. Only the United States (so far) has been exempt from the birth dearth, leaving America as more than "the sole super-power." Perhaps it should be called the global "omni-power." These stark demographic changes will affect commerce, the environment, public financing, and geo-politics. Here Wattenberg lists likely winners and losers. In Wattenberg's world of "The New Demography" readers get a look at a topic often chattered about, but rarely understood.

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