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UNFPA Report Identifies Rising Population Anxiety
New data reveals population anxieties are widespread and governments are increasingly adopting policies aimed at raising, lowering or maintaining fertility rates. But efforts to influence fertility rates are very often ineffective and can erode women's rights, according to UNFPA's State of World Population report, released today.
The landmark report "8 Billion Lives, Infinite Possibilities: the case for rights and choices" calls for a radical rethink of how population numbers are framed - urging politicians and media to abandon overblown narratives about population booms and busts. Instead of asking how fast people are reproducing, leaders should ask whether individuals, especially women, are able to freely make their own reproductive choices - a question whose answer, too often, is no.

"Women's bodies should not be held captive to population targets," says UNFPA Executive Director Dr. Natalia Kanem. "To build thriving and inclusive societies, regardless of population size, we must radically rethink how we talk about and plan for population change."
A staggering 44 per cent of partnered women and girls in 68 reporting countries do not have the right to make informed decisions about their bodies when it comes to having sex, using contraception and seeking health care; and an estimated 257 million women worldwide have an unmet need for safe, reliable contraception.
History
has
shown
that
fertility
policies
designed
to
increase
or
lower
birth
rates
are
very
often
ineffective
and
can
undermine
women's
rights.
Many
countries
have
rolled
out
programmes
to
engineer
larger
families
by
offering
financial
incentives
and
rewards
to
women
and
their
partners,
yet
they
continue
to
see
birth
rates
below
two
children
per
woman.
And
efforts
to
slow
population
growth
through
forced
sterilization
and
coercive
contraception
have
grossly
violated
human
rights.
Family planning must not be used as a tool for achieving fertility targets; it is a tool for empowering individuals. Women should be able to choose if, when and how many children they would like to have, free from the coercion of pundits and officials.
The report strongly recommends governments institute policies with gender equality and rights at their heart, such as parental leave programmes, child tax credits, policies that promote gender equality in the workplace, and universal access to sexual and reproductive health and rights. These offer a proven formula that will reap economic dividends and lead to resilient societies able to thrive no matter how populations change.
Key Facts and Figures from the 2023 State of World Population:
1.
Twenty-four
per
cent
of
partnered
women
and
girls
are
unable
to
say
no
to
sex
and
11
per
cent
are
unable
to
make
decisions
specifically
about
contraception,
according
to
data
from
68
reporting
countries.
2.
A
survey
of
eight
countries
showed
people
who
had
been
exposed
to
media
or
conversations
about
the
world's
population
were
more
likely
to
view
the
global
population
as
being
too
high.
3.
Global
demographics
are
changing
rapidly:
Two-thirds
of
people
are
living
in
low
fertility
contexts,
while
eight
countries
will
account
for
half
the
projected
growth
in
global
population
by
2050
(the
Democratic
Republic
of
the
Congo,
Egypt,
Ethiopia,
India,
Nigeria,
Pakistan,
the
Philippines
and
the
United
Republic
of
Tanzania),
dramatically
reordering
the
world's
ranking
of
most
populous
countries.
4.
Blaming
fertility
for
climate
change
will
not
hold
the
greatest
carbon
emitters
to
account.
Out
of
8
billion
people,
around
5.5
billion
do
not
make
enough
money,
about
$10
a
day
to
contribute
significantly
to
carbon
emissions.
5.
A
recent
UN
study
says
greater
gender
parity
in
the
labour
force
would
do
more
to
sustain
economies
in
ageing,
low-fertility
societies
than
setting
targets
for
women
to
have
more
children.
The
State
of
World
Population
report
is
UNFPA's
annual
flagship
publication.
Published
yearly
since
1978,
it
shines
a
light
on
emerging
issues
in
the
field
of
sexual
and
reproductive
health
and
rights,
bringing
them
into
the
mainstream
and
exploring
the
challenges
and
opportunities
they
present
for
international
development.
This
year's
report
includes
contributions
from
two
UN
partners:
the
International
Organization
for
Migration
and
the
Population
Division
of
the
Department
of
Economic
and
Social
Affairs.
As the United Nations sexual and reproductive health agency, UNFPA helps people obtain contraception and life-saving reproductive health services and information and empowers women and girls to make informed decisions about their bodies and lives.
Disclaimer: The information provided in this article is for general informational and educational purposes only and is not intended as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or a qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.



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