How and why Asia will once again become the economic center of the world
(demographically, it always was) after some 200 years of Western domination.
Summary
1 – Civilizational splendor and
colonization
2 – After the World War II, the entry
into globalized capitalism
3
- Social and demographic characterization of Central and East Asia
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1
– Civilizational splendour and
colonization
As
we have previously mentioned, in order to approach Asian demography we have treated
separatly West Asia, more specifically that of the dominant Islamic matrix,
which is being riddled by large and long lasting conflicts in which the
so-called West has had enormous responsibilities. The remaining territory – Central
and Eastern Asia – covers the vast majority of the continent's population, that
is, about 91.5% of the total, in 2016; it undoubtedly constitutes the most
dynamic area, at a global level, from an economic point of view.
Central
and Eastern Asia present a wide diversity of cultures and, in general, each
country has a composite reality, with great ethnic, linguistic and religious
variety.
Their
histories show a past filled with high civilizational elements resulting from
the over land trade links between the Persian world and India, or from China to
Western Asia, through Turkish or Mongolian khanates, and from there to the
Mediterranean and to Europe. In turn, maritime trade in the Indian Ocean lasted
for centuries, with links between East Africa, the Mediterranean, the Islamic
world and China, in the course of which there was a strong penetration of Islam
in the Philippines and Malaysia, in Bangladesh and in Indonesia.
When
the Europeans, with the Portuguese at their head, became involved in that
trade, they did it, at first, through the control of coastal warehouses (Ormuz,
Goa, Jaffna, Malacca...) followed by territorial occupation in the 18th and
19th centuries, with a more relevant role, in
this case, played by the English and the French, with the Dutch concentrating on the islands of Sunda (future Indonesia) and the Spanish in the Philippines and some archipelagos of the Western Pacific.
this case, played by the English and the French, with the Dutch concentrating on the islands of Sunda (future Indonesia) and the Spanish in the Philippines and some archipelagos of the Western Pacific.
The
Portuguese became entrenched in Goa, Daman and Diu, not really knowing what to do
with this possession until India, in 1960, decided to end this colonial
reminiscence. Interestingly, as a demonstration of a narrow strategic vision,
Bombay (now Mumbai, the financial capital of India) – which then had 10,000
inhabitants – was ceded to the English king as the dowry of his future wife, a
Portuguese princess, in 1661; after being placed under the care of the Company
of the Indies, in 1675 it already had 60,000 inhabitants, it became the
headquarters of the Company in 1687, and today it has about 12 M inhabitants.
The
direct maritime connection (via Cape of Good Hope) between Europe, the Indian
Ocean, and the East, reduced the importance of land routes and facilitated
Russian conquests in Central Asia and Siberia, dominating the various khanates
and the Turkish or Mongolian tribes, building Tomsk in 1604, Irkutsk in 1661,
and Vladivostok in the mid-nineteenth century. England was limited in its
inward expansion from India, by the Himalayas, the Hindukush, and the
resistance of the Afghans. On the other hand, the Turkish dominance of the
eastern Mediterranean and especially the Red Sea, contributed to the
preponderance of the Cape route as a direct link between the East and Europe.
It
was only from the beginning of the nineteenth century that did the European
imperial powers embark on the occupation of Central and Eastern Asia. In India,
the English knew how to manipulate the divergences among the various Maharajas and
make themselves dominant, since they would never have the means to dominate by
the force of arms alone such a vast territory with such a large population -
255 M in 1881, including the territories which today constitute India,
Pakistan, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, against the 57 M of England that then included
Ireland[2]. France, after losing the Louisiana and
Canada – thus frustrating the building of an empire in North America – turned
to Africa and Indochina, conquering the latter in the second half of the
nineteenth century. The Dutch, for their part, ruled from the seventeenth century
until its independence what has come to be designated as Indonesia. However,
the USA, taking advantage of the Spanish frailty, seized the Philippines and
Guam in 1898; and the following year Spain sold the Caroline Islands, the
Marianas and Palau to Germany, which came to be stripped of them by Japan
during World War I. Japan, in turn, lost these islands to the US with the
defeat in World War II.
At
the beginning of the 20th century there were only five countries with no
colonial occupation in Central and Eastern Asia – China, Japan, Thailand, Nepal
and Bhutan.
2 – After the World War II, the entry
into globalized capitalism
We
begin here a more detailed characterization of Central and Eastern Asia with
some notes on India, China and Japan, the key pieces of the regional
geopolitics.
Despite
its high civilization level – or perhaps for that very reason – India, has
always clung to its territory, with its enormous ethnic, linguistic and
religious diversity, showing little expansionist propensity. On the other hand,
its central position in the Indian Ocean allowed for easy maritime trade links
with Africa, the Persian Gulf and the Red Sea, with the east coast of the Bay
of Bengal and further away, with the islands of Insulindia and China. The
conditions offered by the existence of large rivers such as the Indus, the Ganges
and the Brahmaputra, afforded numerous populations and the assimilation of any
invader – Alexander, Persian or Mongolian – accepted, by norm, as ruling
castes. This natural wealth has led to the flourishing of philosophy and the
emergence of various religions – Buddhism, Hinduism, Jainism, Sikhism – whose
configurations incorporate great religious tolerance, including atheism; this contrasts
with the current monotheisms.
When
independence broke out in 1947, the split between Muslims and non-Muslims – which
had been living together for many centuries – spawned the creation of Pakistan
(whose name, by the way, has no historical roots) from a political origin fed by the
British and which led to massacres, the displacement of millions of people, and
several wars between India and Pakistan. The British-inspired aberration even
went so far as to unify under the acronym Pakistan peoples as distinct as
Punjabis, Baluques or Pashtuns from the Indus Valley, and Bengalis, people of
the delta that unites the waters of the Ganges and the Brahmaputra, which are separated
by thousands of kilometers, because they are all Muslim confessions. Of course,
this artificiality lasted only 24 years, until the separation of the Bangladesh
from the tutelage of Rawalpindi.
India
realized early (1991), faced with the economic decline observed in the West in
comparison with the dynamism of East Asia, that it should proceed with a
strategic inflection – " Look East "; on the other hand, the
interventions of the United States and its European sergeants in the Middle
East provided a not very reassuring image to the neighborhood. This justifies
it having moved from being an observer status to a full member of the SCO -
Shanghai Cooperation Organization in 2017, just as happened with Pakistan.
India,
China and Russia are SCO’s central pieces as the Euro-Asian bloc opposed to the
Western world, especially the US suzerainty, which intention of dominating or
conditioning the planet through the dollar, the imbecile statements from Trump
and its military power, through the string of bases with which the US envelops
the Eurasian continent. It should be noted that in the SCO there are four
nuclear powers, about half of humanity, enormous energy resources, a rapid
economic evolution, although regimes of dubious democratic credentials
predominate, even if by democracy we mean the Western regimes, also oligarchic
and creators of exclusion. These countries will tend to be linked by transport
infrastructures, generating a greater flow
of trade that will incorporate Europe, as a true Asian peninsula, in
geographical and demographic terms.
For
a long time – since the fourteenth century – China had been looking to isolate
itself from the outside, conceding only limited trade with the Europeans when
they approached in the sixteenth century; to the south and to the north they
surrounded themselves with vassal states and the Great Wall, while their ports
remained closed to the commerce with the outside. In this context, in 1557, they
assigned Macao to the Portuguese as a commercial trading post and, therefore,
had never considered the territory as a colony; in fact, with the establishment
of the People's Republic, the de facto
power in Macau was from China, although there was a Portuguese governor. During
the Cultural Revolution, Maoist action and propaganda were present in Macao,
although the governor was appointed by a fascist and colonialist Portuguese regime.
It was only in 1999 that sovereignty over Macao passed entirely to China as a
special administrative region, as had happened with Hong Kong two years
earlier.
In
an age of ferocious imperialism such as the nineteenth century, the influence
of the great European colonial powers could not leave China outside its
business or its preying, whether or not the Chinese agreed to open themselves
to the global "market". Thus, the British decided to extend the said
market, which had been circunscribed to selling Indian opium to China for the
payment of silk, tea and Chinese porcelain, in the only authorized port for
Sino-British transactions, Canton.
Because
opium consumption in China was causing obvious damage to the population, the
Chinese government decided to prohibit it. The English reacted with an easily
won war (1839/42) that led to the Treaty of Nanking, in which China was forced
to accept opium, open four more ports to its trade, as well as to give the
English the island of Hong Kong. After a second war (1857/60) China, in face of
the damage caused by the Anglo-French, opened another eleven ports to opium and
had to accept Western delegations and freedom for Western traders and
missionaries. As René Dumont used to say, colonialism was imposed by means of
"le militaire, le missionaire, le marchant.”
These
(amongst others) so-called unequal treaties divided areas of influence amongst
the imperial powers – England, France, Germany, Russia, Japan, and the United
States – a humiliation for a China that regarded itself as the civilizational
standard against foreign "barbarians"; on the other hand, because of
its geographical, populational, and political dimensions – as it was not composed
of a wide range of lords such as India – a typical colonial occupation would be
unbearable... as the Japanese felt later.
To
the north of China, Manchuria fell under the influence of Russia and, after a
first war with Japan (1894/95) China cedes Taiwan to it and accepts the
provisional independence of Korea, which will become a Japanese colony in 1910.
To the south, traditional vassals of the Chinese emperor (Burma, Thailand,
Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia) fall into the British or French orbits, while the
German presence is observed in Shandong.
Decay
and humiliation elevated nationalist reaction through the Boxers' revolt in
1900, crushed by the Western armies that took advantage of the situation to
increase their economic claims. The Kuomintang’s appearance in 1905 gave
political expression to nationalism and repudiation of the imperial regime,
opening the way for the Republic in 1912.
The
Republic, divided by the influence of warlords, remained under the pressure of
Japan, whose intervention in the north of China is accompanied by great
violence, corresponding to the racist chauvinism of the Japanese against
Chinese and Koreans; it is curious to note that the Japanese have their
ancestral origin in Korea but refuse this origin, despise the Koreans and
consider that the emperor is the latest descendant of a son of the... Sun.
The
Republic was able to occupy Manchuria but not to build a regime that was stable
and able to stand up to the Japanese, hence giving rise to Mao Tse-tung's CCP
revolt in 1927. In 1931 Japan invaded Manchuria and in 1937 a total war between
the two states started, leading to the Japanese occupation of almost the entire
Chinese coast, with great violence over the population, in a war that would
only end with the surrender of the Japanese to the United States in 1945.
The
civil war between Chiang Kai-shek's nationalists and Mao's guerrillas would last
another four years until the defeat of the former, who took refuge in Taiwan
with all the support of the United States which, ridiculously, installed Chiang
Kai-shek’s regime as a member of the UN Security Council, a situation that
lasted until 1971 when they finally recognized the current PRC.
Japan
had Nagasaki as the only open port to trade with Westerners, in the context of
an isolationist inclination similar to that of China. As part of the second
presence of a US war fleet in 1854, Japan signed the Kanagawa Convention,
whereby it opened its ports to the trade with the United States; this later followed
by similar arrangements with the European powers.
Drawing
lessons from Western procedures in China, Japan modernized its economy very quickly,
created powerful military forces and decided to accompany Westerners on
imperialist ways. After a first attempt to conquer Taiwan from a weakened
China, Japan in 1872 occupies the Ryu-Kyu islands, where the well-known island
of Okinawa stands out, and where, since the end of World War II, a strategic
military base has been established for the US to monitor the Chinese Sea.
In
a first war with China (1894/95), Japan seized Taiwan and removed Korea from
the Chinese orbit. In 1905, after winning the war with Russia, it temporarily
stayed away from having influence in Manchuria and Korea – rich in strategic
minerals – which was occupied by Japan in 1910, until the end of World War II.
With the defeat in this last war, Japan lost to the USSR the southern half of
the Sakhalin island (conquered in 1905 by Japan), as well as the southernmost Kuril
islands; and was forced to maintain limited military forces as well as to
accept US military protection. The discovery of oil reserves in the territorial
waters of the Senkaku (jap) / Diaoyu (chi) islets, west of the Ryu-Kyu islands,
has been fueling Sino-Japanese litigation over its sovereignty.
Japan,
defeated in 1945 under the effect of the terror provoked by the atomic attacks
perpetrated by the USA, that occupied the country and maintain there about 135
military installations, including the presence of atomic weapons, has become an
American military stronghold, vital to its control of East Asia, especially in
the face of the Chinese "threat”. On the other hand, the country developed as a true economic power,
developed management techniques such as toyotism and kanban, taking advantage
of the sentimental connection of the workers to the companies where they work
and the acceptance of long and intensive professional careers; in this context,
it has generated powerful global companies with high technological capabilities
such as Mitsubishi, Nissan, Sony and others. It is important to mention the
important role of the Japanese State in this process, through its ministry of
industry and planning, MITI.
The
Japanese example has come to be replicated in other Asian countries such as
South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia and Hong Kong; in the latter case,
before or after its incorporation into China as a special region within the
"one country, two systems" policy established by Deng Xiao-Ping. In
these territories, governments were anchored in dictatorships or muscular
regimes, promoters of strong state investment articulated with the use of
foreign capital, with high technological capacities; for this end, a determined
commitment was made to quality education, the study and development of imported
technologies, the sending of students to European and North American
universities and the search for a relatively balanced distribution of income.
Shipbuilding has developed extensively in South Korea and Singapore; in the
latter’s case, around the maintenance of the American fleet serving in Vietnam,
during the war. On the other hand, the European shipbuilding industry suffered
a great reduction; one only needs to recall what happened in Portugal with
Setenave and Lisnave. Other industries relocated to the East were textiles
(meanwhile redirected to Bangladesh and Vietnam) or those dealing with electrical
and electronic materials.
Labour,
subjected to a great discipline and comparatively cheap, starred in the first
steps, in the 1970s, of relocation by multinationals, whose consequences went
far beyond the formation of high profits, and labor and political disarmament
of workers' organizations in the United States and in Europe. The dominant
culture in these more dynamic Asian countries is Confucianism, inducing
discipline, effort and a collectivist spirit, elements that were integrated in
the production of high levels of capitalist development; which are more evident
when compared with the stagnation that has been plaguing Westerners since the
Great Recession started in 2008.
More
recently, China continues to reproduce the model mentioned above, albeit
without imitating the market democracies ruling in the countries mentioned
above; it prefers to carry out the social and political control of its immense
population, with a very centralized power in the enormous CCP, which is present
in all economic, social and political structures and from which all decisions,
including the new births policy, emanate or are validated. It should be noted
that China does not reproduce the Soviet model of state capitalism, allowing
the development of typical private enterprises, along with a multi-pronged
state apparatus that controls, without starring in it, the economic activity, leaving
it open to innovation, to initiative. One of the Chinese peculiarities was the
creation, after the arrival of Deng Xiao-Ping, of "special economic
zones" for the establishment of foreign capital and technologies,
attracted especially by the low labor prices (although superior to those in the
remainder of the country), tax exemptions and rigid discipline instituted by
the CCP; and which today differ from the special administrative regions of Hong
Kong and Macao.
It
should also be noted that, with the exception of South Korea, where the Chinese
influence is millenarian, in the other countries referred to the population is
either Chinese (Taiwan) or, wherever there is a significant presence of population
of Chinese cultural origin, it is relatively wealthy and maintained cohesively as
a diaspora.
The
countries of Central and East Asia are building advanced and solid industrial
bases, thriving financial systems, high consumption domestic markets, and a
goods and investment export potential, in a kind of capitalism with strong
state intervention but without it being state capitalism. This process
comprises several stages of evolution; South Korea, China and Vietnam or Bangladesh,
are examples of these different levels. The relocations initiated by Western-based
multinationals have accelerated and intensified historical globalization, have
been taken advantage of by the major Central and East Asian countries that have
built their own productive structures, comprising national, western, mixed or
transnational capital enterprises that have recently been creating investment
flows to the reverse direction, as can be seen with the purchase of the Piraeus
by China, of Terminal XXI in Sines[3] by Singapore or the
control of EDP[4]
by China’s Three Gorges.
The
relocations carried out by multinationals or Western capitalists have, in
general, been putting a strain on the United States and Europe, which are facing
depressed regions, aging populations, stagnation of consumption (the basis for
the existence of the consecrated GDP growth) which foretell the creation of
fascist movements on the ruins of a nonexistent or fossilized left.
The
demand for cheap labor tends to reverse geographically, with average
wages in Portugal or Greece becoming comparable to those in China,
which was unimaginable a decade ago.
Currently,
US banks spend less than 20% on loans for productive activities and 80% for
speculative ones, and real estate bubbles are the result of investments seeking
profitability rather than meeting the needs of populations whose wages do not
match the purchase/hire prices which demand high profitability in view of the
relative stagnation of wages.
Capitalism tends to render people superfluous. In the
USA, in 1948/73, productivity increased by 96.7% and real wages by 91.3%; and
in 1973/2015, as a result of relocation, productivity rose 73.4% and wages
11.1%. In 1965 an executive director in the US earned 20 times more than a
worker and in 2013... 296 times more! More
specifically, the brilliant Blair couple accumulated, in 20 years, a wealth of
$75 M; however, no one is more brilliant than the said couple than Trump,
who wants an "America great again" by sowing sanctions and armaments
around the planet, causing Xi Jinping to smile, he who is the great architect
of the Silk Road that will tend to connect three continents – Asia, Europe, and
Africa – under the Chinese hegemony.
3
- Social and demographic characterization of Central and Eastern Asia
From
an ethnic point of view, the variety of peoples and cultures in Central and
Eastern Asia is enormous, even within each nation-state. The most homogeneous
are Japan, Korea and China; here, despite the vast majority of the Han ethnic
group, there are 56 ethnic groups, although these account for only 9% of the total
population.
From
a religious point of view, the Islamic tradition is evident in the former
Soviet republics of Central Asia, Pakistan, Malaysia, Brunei, Bangladesh,
Maldives and Indonesia, as well as a large minority in India or the minority
ouighur in western China.
Buddhism
is a major force in Thailand, Bhutan, Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos, Singapore, Sri
Lanka or in Mongolia; in the latter, alongside a large irreligious population.
The Philippines and East-Timor are the only cases of a Christian (Catholic)
majority, due to the long periods of Spanish and Portuguese colonization,
respectively, which began in the sixteenth century; and in South Korea,
Christians (Protestants and Catholics) are also numerous. The Hindus are the
majority in Nepal, Mauritius and India, and the huge population of the latter
country should be taken into account.
In
Vietnam, local creeds comprehend nearly half the population, with more than 25%
of the people without religious creeds. Finally, non-religious, atheists or
agnostics make for 2/3 of North Koreans, half of South Koreans and 42% of
Chinese. In Japan only 30% of the population consider themselves as having a
religious confession, the cases of syncretism being numerous amongst Buddhists,
Shintoists, Taoists, and even various versions of Christianity.
Western,
or market-type, democracies with political parties competing for elections can
be found in India, Pakistan, Japan, Thailand, Malaysia, and Sri Lanka. There
are monarchies in Thailand, Cambodia, Bhutan and Brunei. Malaysia is a sui
generis monarchy because the king changes every five years, in a rotation
between the kings of the nine federal states.
Those
regimes where the party-state predominance is patent are observed in China,
Vietnam – where historical distrust of China does not prevent it from copying
the privatization and foreign capital attraction model – or in North Korea. In
Singapore, despite having a parliamentary regime, the Popular Action Party
(PAP) has won all elections since 1959... Myanmar also has elections but the
control of political and economic life rests with the armed forces, with the
presidency of the republic handed over to a Nobel Peace Prize laureate who
submits to the military, as has been seen in the persecution cases the Rohingya
and other ethnic minorities. This does not bother in the least the large Indian
and Chinese companies that invest in the country, namely in the construction of...
a link between South China and the Bay of Bengal – where there are oil and gas
reserves (along the coast where the Rohingya live...). This route will allow
China to have a connection to the Indian Ocean, shortening by several days the navigation
through the Malacca Strait, or the Sunda or Lombok straits. This new
infrastructure, however, will not benefit the link between the Indian Ocean and
Japan or South Korea.
Among
the five ex-Soviet republics the rule is that of authoritarian regimes, with
presidents invested for many years. Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan depend on the
exploitation of hydrocarbons; Uzbekistan, from the production of cotton with
the use of compulsory labor; Tajikistan from emigrant’s remittances and the
production of aluminum and Kyrgyzstan from emigrant’s remittances and gold
production.
The economic and demographic potential centered in the
Far East and South Asia tends to create there the most dynamic region on the
planet, ending the scarce period of some 200 years in which the political and
economic dominance centered on the two shores of the North Atlantic; which, in
demographic terms, has always been a minority. As seen above, the world's population is increasingly Asiatic or African.
Primary source: UNCTAD/CNUCED
As
we have done for Europe and Africa, we have allocated the countries of Central
and Eastern Asia to three areas[5] – Indian,
East and Southeast. In the first case, roughly, we placed those countries facing
that ocean, almost all having been part of the British Empire of the Indies.
The second group – East – includes the countries bordering the East China Sea,
and those from the interior, mostly ethnic Turkish or Mongolian, which were
included in the USSR until its breakup. The third – Southeast – those countries
surrounding the South China Sea, its area is largely insular.
The
evolution of the population of Central and Eastern Asia sees it doubling in the
1970/2016 period, within a context of great regularity, with a more contained
increase for the period ending in 2050 – 0.45% per year – with all caveats
about any possible political, ecological, technological and economic change
that may occur, unpredictable or more predictable, although, among the latter,
with random impacts.
As
is well shown in the chart below, this regularity and that population increase rate
are mainly due to the Indian and Southeast regions, the same ones where CNUCED
/ UNCTAD forecasts show more growth. On the other hand, in the East, population
growth has been much more modest in 1970/2016 – even so, with growth far above
that of Europe (6% in 1970/2016 and with a demographic setback expected in
2050). For the East, the forecasts point to a slight population regression of
around 30 M people.
The
population distribution amongst the three large country aggregates reveals
(chart below) that until 2010 the most populous aggregate was the East one and
that it ceased to be so in 2016, in addition to having a strong reduction outlook
for 2050. The other two aggregates increase their relative weight during the
period considered, making the Indian the largest population in absolute terms;
and this is despite the statistical reinforcement that the East received in
2000 with the integration of the five ex-Soviet republics which, in that year,
had 55.6 M people, 69.8 M in 2016 and are expected to reach 94.4 M in 2050.
Population
distribution in Central and East Asia
The
situations of the two most populous countries of the Eastern aggregate are
certain contributors to this result. Japan has had a stagnant population since
1990 and is considered to be an agged country, with a low birth rate and,
moreover, not very prone to the arrival of immigrants. China, as will be seen
below, has a very low demographic dynamism, certainly linked to the one-child
policy that has since been abandoned; it probabily will call into question the
UN's forecast for 2050.
Indian
The Indian aggregate
countries as a whole multiplied their population by about 2.5 times in the
1970/2016 period; is the Central and Eastern Asia group with the highest
population growth. Its annual population growth rate exceeded 2.6% in the 1980s
and 1990s, then gradually declined to 0.8% in the 2010/16 period, an annual
growth rate that is also forecast for the next 34 years, until 2050.
It should be
noted that India accounted for 76% of the total population of the Indian region
in 1970 and 74.2% in 2016, while Pakistan – which has the second largest population
– went in the same period from 8% to 10.8% of the total. This means that over
the whole period the two countries slightly increased their overall representativeness,
although there is a slight change in the relationship between them in favor of
Pakistan. In predictions for 2050, the weight of Pakistan (13.4%) is higher, to
the detriment of India (72.5%), which does not alter the large disproportion
between the demographic weight of the two countries.
Population
growth rates decline quite regularly until 2016, especially in Mauritius and
Sri Lanka since the 1990s. As for population growth, Bhutan stands out in the
1980s and 1990s, the Maldives during the 21st century, and Pakistan
during almost all of the period in case.
As for the
2050 outlooks, they are conservative for the majority of countries, with the
projected population regression for Mauritius and the high annual population
growth expected for Pakistan in 2016/50 (1.73%). For the Indian region as a
whole, population growth projected until 2050 is 0.83% per year.
East
As mentioned
above, this is the set of countries with less population dynamism in the period
1970/2016; that is, its population presents "only" an increase of
70%. Its annual rate of population growth declined gradually over the whole
period considered, relatively to 1970, starting at 2% annually in the decade
ending in 1980, reaching 0.32% in 2010/16 and an annual decline of 0.05% being
forecast for 2050.
China’s large population (not including the
administrative regions of Macao and Hong Kong) endows the country with a huge
representation in this group – always above 80% of the total – followed by
Japan but with a decreasing representation – 10.5% in 1970 against 7.5% in 2016
and with a predicted decline to 6.5% in 2050.
The most robust population increases were noted in
Mongolia, in the 1970s and 1980s, but later became more modest. Macao has high
population growth rates in the regional context since the 1980s, along with
Tajikistan, in this case after the 2000/10 decade, no data being available for
prior periods.
In terms of population regression, Japan stands out starting
in the 1980s, with Taiwan and South Korea joining in the 2010/16 period. These
three countries, as well as China, are subject to population reduction
prospects in the period after 2016.
The population growth rates foreseen for 2016/50 are higher in the
countries of Central Asia and also in Macao.
Southeast
For the period 1970/2016 the population of the group
of countries that we included as Southeast Asia grew 2.3 times, a value close
to that observed in the Indian region, as noted above. Annual rates of
population growth gradually decline from 2.7% in the 1970s to 1.9% in the late
twentieth century continuing to 0.8% in the 6-year period ended in 2016; a
trend that is close to that estimated until 2050 (0.73% per year).
In the group of the most populous countries of the
region, the Southeast does not have an overwhelming domination by one country,
as is the case with China in the East and India in the Indian Ocean. The most
prominent country in Southeast Asia is Indonesia with 45.4% of the total
population in 1970, down to 44.3% in 2016 and a slight loss expected in 2050
(43.7%). Vietnam ranks second with 17.1 per cent in 1970 and, while never
reducing its population, gives up that relative position to the Philippines,
with 14.1 per cent of the total in 1970 but 17.5 per cent of the total in 2016,
with a forecast of 20.6% in 2050.
Brunei, despite having a small population (423
thousand in 2016) is the country with the largest population growth, taking
1970 as base (3.3 times in this period of 46 years). Malaysia and the
Philippines rank second in population dynamics (2.8 times population increase
in 1970/16). The lowest population growth is observed in Thailand, whose
population increased by 1.9 times over the period considered. A very special
case is that of Cambodia which has a demographic setback of 4.3 per cent in the
1970s, as a result of bloody internal disputes, a massive flight to Thailand, in
addition to the war resulting from the Vietnamese invasion and the prevalence
of a political regime ruled by demented people; however, it rapidly recovered
in the following decades (2.3 times throughout the 1970/2016 period).
Predictions for 2050 place the strongest population
growth in East-Timor (2.7% per year), followed by the Philippines, Cambodia and
Laos, with indicators above the annual rate of 1%. Thailand is the only case of
predictable population regression in the region, while the lowest population
growth points to rich Singapore (0.5% per year).
Expected
population growth for Central and Eastern Asia in 2050 compared to 2016 (% per
annum)
This and other texts in:
http://grazia-tanta.blogspot.com/
https://pt.scribd.com/uploads
http://www.slideshare.net/durgarrai/documents
https://pt.scribd.com/uploads
http://www.slideshare.net/durgarrai/documents
[1] Part I at: https://grazia-tanta.blogspot.com/2018/09/evolution-of-world-population-19502050.html
[2] Today (2016) this disproportion is much greater; 1700 M for the above
mentioned territory against 64 M for Great Britain.
[4] EDP (Electricidade de Portugal) owns the electricity
generation and distribution grid in Portugal (TN).
East - Guam, Kazakhstan,
North Korea, South Korea, China (including Hong Kong, Macao), Japan, Mongolia,
Palau, Kyrgyzstan, Taiwan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan
Southeast - Brunei Durassalam,
Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Thailand, East-Timor, Vietnam
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