Thought for the day

Europe’s Population Predicament


 
Last updated: 20 November 2024
 
Fertility rates have fallen and stagnated across Europe. By 1980, most countries in Europe had already fallen below the replacement threshold. Now every single European nation is below the threshold. Various reasons have been proposed for this vast decline in fertility, such as the availability of contraception and the increase of women in the workplace. However, the fact that sperm levels have more than halved over a recent 40-year period may be central to this sudden decline.

Fertility Rates in European Countries 1970-2023
Data is ranked on lowest population fertility rates by 2023
Europe’s Population Predicament



Countries such as Spain have seen their fertility rate more than halve from 1970 to 2023. One projection sees Spain’s population decline by a staggering 50% or more by the end of this century. For countries such as the UK, only mass immigration into the health and care industries has kept its population stable. One estimate argues that to sustain this policy, nearly half of the UK population will be foreign-born by the end of the century.

These falling fertility rates will lead to the depopulation of native demographics through the following decades. One projection sees a 49-million-person shrinkage in the working-age population of the EU. This will create a top-heavy generational pyramid which will naturally put great strain on health care and old age support systems. Hungary – whose rate has fallen by a quarter from 1970 to 2023 – is expected to spend as much as 5% of its GDP on pro-natal policies in the future to reserve such trends. However, government initiatives attempting to increase fertility rates, such as subsidised childcare, will be largely ineffective in the future according to the latest research.
 See more Europe Data...



More perspectives using World Economics data