Population projections
Demographic change is inherently a long-term phenomenon. Unlike populations of insects, human populations have rarely been subject to “explosion” or “collapse” in numbers. Moreover, the powerful long-term momentum that is built into the human age structure means that the effects of fertility changes become apparent only in the far future. For these and other reasons, it is by now conventional practice to employ the technology of population projection as a means of better understanding the implications of trends.
Population projections represent simply the playing out into the future of a set of assumptions about future fertility, mortality, and migration rates. It cannot be stated too strongly that such projections are not predictions, though they are misinterpreted as such frequently enough. A projection is a “what-if” exercise based on explicit assumptions that may or may not themselves be correct. As long as the arithmetic of a projection is done correctly, its utility is determined by the plausibility of its central assumptions. If the assumptions embody plausible future trends, then the projection’s outputs may be plausible and useful. If the assumptions are implausible, then so is the projection. Because the course of demographic trends is hard to anticipate very far into the future, most demographers calculate a set of alternative projections that, taken together, are expected to define a range of plausible futures, rather than to predict or forecast any single future. Because demographic trends sometimes change in unexpected ways, it is important that all demographic projections be updated on a regular basis to incorporate new trends and newly developed data.
A standard set of projections for the world and for its constituent countries is prepared every two years by the Population Division of the United Nations. These projections include a low, medium, and high variant for each country and region.