ISBN:
9780833052452
,
0833052454
,
9780833051776
,
0833052470
,
0833051776
,
9780833052476
Language:
English
Pages:
1 Online-Ressource (xxviii, 141 pages)
Series Statement:
Rand Corporation monograph series MG-1091-AF
Parallel Title:
Print version Libicki, Martin C Global demographic change and its implications for military power
Keywords:
United States Manpower
;
Forecasting
;
United States
;
Balance of power Forecasting
;
Balance of power
;
Military policy ; Forecasting
;
Population forecasting
;
Military & Naval Science
;
Law, Politics & Government
;
Armies
;
HISTORY ; Military ; Other
;
TECHNOLOGY & ENGINEERING ; Military Science
;
United States
;
SOCIAL SCIENCE ; Demography
;
Armed Forces (United States)
;
Manpower ; Forecasting
;
United States Military policy
;
Forecasting
;
United States Population
;
Forecasting
;
United States
;
United States
;
Electronic books
Abstract:
What is the impact of demographics on the prospective production of military power and the causes of war? This monograph analyzes this issue by projecting working-age populations through 2050; assessing the influence of demographics on manpower, national income and expenditures, and human capital; and examining how changes in these factors may affect the ability of states to carry out military missions. It also looks at some implications of these changes for other aspects of international security. The authors find that the United States, alone of all the large affluent nations, will continue to see (modest) increases in its working-age population thanks to replacement-level fertility rates and a likely return to vigorous levels of immigration. Meanwhile, the working-age populations of Europe and Japan are slated to fall by as much as 10 to 15 percent by 2030 and as much as 30 to 40 percent by 2050. The United States will thus account for a larger percentage of the population of its Atlantic and Pacific alliances; in other words, the capacity of traditional alliances to multiply U.S. demographic power is likely to decline, perhaps sharply, through 2050. India's working-age population is likely to overtake China's by 2030. The United States, which has 4.7 percent of the world's working-age population, will still have 4.3 percent by 2050, and the current share of global gross domestic product accounted for by the U.S. economy is likely to stay quite high
Abstract:
What is the impact of demographics on the prospective production of military power and the causes of war? This monograph analyzes this issue by projecting working-age populations through 2050; assessing the influence of demographics on manpower, national income and expenditures, and human capital; and examining how changes in these factors may affect the ability of states to carry out military missions. It also looks at some implications of these changes for other aspects of international security. The authors find that the United States, alone of all the large affluent nations, will continue to see (modest) increases in its working-age population thanks to replacement-level fertility rates and a likely return to vigorous levels of immigration. Meanwhile, the working-age populations of Europe and Japan are slated to fall by as much as 10 to 15 percent by 2030 and as much as 30 to 40 percent by 2050. The United States will thus account for a larger percentage of the population of its Atlantic and Pacific alliances; in other words, the capacity of traditional alliances to multiply U.S. demographic power is likely to decline, perhaps sharply, through 2050. India's working-age population is likely to overtake China's by 2030. The United States, which has 4.7 percent of the world's working-age population, will still have 4.3 percent by 2050, and the current share of global gross domestic product accounted for by the U.S. economy is likely to stay quite high
Note:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 131-141)
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