Six Adults and One Child: The Coming Baby Bust

Wendell Cox and Emma Chen tell the story of \”Six Adults and One Child\” in their chapter in
\”The New World Order,\” edited and largely written by Joel Kotkin for the Legatum Institute. Much of the report is about thinking of the world as dominated by three spheres: the Indian sphere of influence,
the Sinosphere and the Anglosphere. But Cox and Chen are focused on the demographics of the coming baby bust. Here\’s their story from China (footnotes omitted):

\”On a Saturday afternoon at The Bund, Xiao Ming (or “Little Ming”) clings tightly onto the hands of his paternal grandparents. His maternal grandparents walk slightly ahead, clearing a path for him in the midst of all the buzz and traffic. Retracing the imprints of their imaginary footsteps, Xiao Ming takes his first tentative steps as a three year old in town for the first time. Slightly behind him, the watchful eyes and
ready hands of his own parents spur him on. 


Xiao Ming’s personal parade epitomises the popular quip in Shanghai and across China, that “it takes six adults to raise one child”. These six individuals form the unspoken support structure of China’s youth: While the OECD points out that 80% of students in Shanghai attend after-school tutoring, it fails to capture the “soft factors” behind Shanghai’s top rankings in the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA). Popular Chinese dramas such as 房奴 (House Slave) depict this in meticulous detail: Grandparents spend hours brewing “brain tonics” for their grandchildren, and parents pack austere work lunchboxes to save up for their child’s tuition fees. …

Here’s the big issue down the historical road: Thirty years from now, how will Xiao Ming handle six elderly parents and grandparents, all by himself? Xiao Ming’s impending dilemma is not unique to China. Overall what author Phil Longman calls a “gray tsunami” will be sweeping the planet, with more than half of all of population growth coming from people over 60 while only six percent will be from people under 30. The battle of the future – including in the developing world – will be, in large part, how to maintain large enough workforces required for the economic growth needed to, among other things, take care of and feed the elderly. …

Already the global fertility rate, including the developing countries, has dropped in half to an estimated 2.5 today. Close to half the world’s population lives, notes demographer Nicholas Eberstadt, in countries with below replacement rate birth-rates. The world, he suggests, is experiencing a “fertility implosion”.\”

Here\’s a figure to illustrate. The \”dependency ratios\” here refer to the number of either elder people over 65 or children age 14 and under compared to every 100 members of the working-age population between ages 15-64. Thus:

  • The dark blue line shows that in regions of the world with more developed economies, there were more than 40 children for every 100 working-age people back in 1950, but that has now fallen to about 30. 
  • The light blue line shows that in those same regions of the world with  more developed economies, there were about 10 over-65 elderly for every 100 workers back in 1950, but that ratio has now reached 30 and is headed for 40 by mid-century. 
  • The orange line shows that less developed regions (leaving aside the poorest countries) had about 75 children for every 100 workers back in 1965, but that ratio has now fallen to about 40 and is headed for 30 by mid-century. 
  • The scarlet line shows that in the less developed regions (again leaving aside the poorest countries) have only about 10 elderly for every 100 workers today–not much of an increase in the last half-century–but that this ratio is about to rise sharply to about 30 by mid-century and 40 by the end of the century.

The question of how the workers of tomorrow will support the elderly of tomorrow is a global issue. Ultimately, the only answer I can see to the policy question is an expectation that most people will retire later than their current expectations.  But I also suspect that living in a society where the elderly outnumber the children will reshape all sorts of institutions of everyday life. Schools and playgrounds will become more scarce; libraries and senior centers will proliferate. Holidays like Halloween are already moving from being child-centered to being adult-centered. 

Many people will find that they are part of a tall, slender family \”tree.\” Instead of experiencing three generations of relatives–children, parents, grandparents–more and more people will be living in families where there are four or even five generations living at the same time. However, with smaller family sized these generations will not include large numbers of people. Thus, you can imagine a typical family \”tree\” of the future as consisting of two grandparents approaching age 60, who had one child, who in turn married and had one child, but who are also feeling responsible for two of their own parents who are about 80 years of age, and also also for one of their grandparents who has just turned 100. Families with fewer children will spend less of their adult lives in raising children. There will also be ever-greater numbers of adults who never become parents. For example, will we rely more on close family members, because each generational tie feels more precious? Or of necessity, will we all need to rely more on non-relatives? We do not have mental templates for how we organize or family ties and responsibilities in these tall slender family trees.

What if Country Size Was Relative to Population? A World Map

Joseph Chamie, former director of the UN Population Division and now Director of the Center for Migration Studies,is interviewed in the Third Quarter 2011 issue Southwest Economy, a publication of the Dallas Fed: 
On the Record: Shifting from World Population Explosion to Global Aging–A Conversation with Joseph Chamie.

The interview includes one of those usefully provocative maps: What would a map of the world look like if it were distorted so that the size of every country is relative to its population? The patterns are expected: In North America, Canada shrinks and Mexico grows. In the rest of the world, Russia shrinks and China and India grow. Japan looks a lot larger when weighted by population; Australia looks smaller. Africa appears notably larger than South America. For me, such maps also emphasize that U.S. economic growth over the next few decades is likely to be related to how extensively the American economy participates in the growth that is happening in the rest of the world.


Chamie also points out that the growth rate of world population is slowing dramatically. One of the next main demographic preoccupations will be population aging. Soon, the above-65 elderly in the world population will exceed the number of children for the first time in world history.

\”Two thousand years ago, world population was estimated at about 300 million. It reached the first billion mark at the beginning of the 19th century—the estimate is about 1804—when Thomas Jefferson was U.S. president. The second billion mark was reached in 1927. We had a tripling of world population from 1927 to near the end of the 20th century, when it reached 6 billion. We’re now approaching 7 billion people.

Why did that happen? It’s because we had this wonderful thing occur: a decline in mortality rates. This decrease in mortality is humanity’s greatest achievement. Every government wishes to see lower mortality and longer life. The world benefited from modern medicine and public health; antibiotics, of course; also better nutrition, better facilities, better working conditions. What lagged behind were changes in birth rates. This difference between birth rates and death rates gave rise to what is commonly called the population explosion. We reached a peak population growth rate of about 2.1 percent in the late ’60s, and we reached the peak annual increase of about 87 million people in the late ’80s. The latest United Nations projections show a world of about 10.1 billion people by the end of the 21st century. …\”

\”While the 20th century was the century of demographic growth (and this growth will continue through the 21st century—we are likely to add 2 to 3 billion people), the world’s population is aging. Very soon, we will see a reversal where the number of children, which has historically been more than the number of people above 65, will become less than the elderly. The aging of the world’s population will be pervasive; it will affect every household. It will affect the economy, social interactions, voting patterns, lifestyles.\”