Africa’s potential workforce will likely be larger than that of Asia by the end of the 21st century as both continents wrestle with different demographic and economic challenges.
The number of 15-to-64-year-old Africans today is a quarter of the size of Asia’s working-age population. By 2100, however, Africa will surpass Asia, a Bloomberg analysis of UN World Population Division data shows. Asia will be confronted by an ageing population, while the shift in Africa will be toward more youth in need of employment.
One caveat for African nations: A fast-growing economy typically requires a robust and growing working-age population and it isn’t clear that economies on the continent will expand enough to provide employment for job seekers. Further, it’s not clear potential employees will have the skills those jobs require.
Nigeria’s potential labour force is projected to rise by almost 350%, or 375mn, by the end of the century to more than 485mn. But the IMF recently highlighted substantial inequality in access to education by gender and between the rich and poor in Africa’s most-populous nation. According to a survey conducted by the Nigeria Bureau of Statistics, a girl born into a family in the poorest fifth of society spends only about one year in school.
“As global supply chains reduce labour inputs with better technology and machines for even lower value-added production, it will be difficult for young workers in Africa to find unskilled manufacturing jobs in the future similar to those now employing Asian youth,” said William Lee, chief economist at the Milken Institute.
The number of available employees worldwide will rise an estimated 29% to 6.5bn from 5bn by the end of the century. Africa’s share will jump to more than a third around 2100 from almost 15% currently, according to the Bloomberg analysis. The continent’s working-age population will grow by 2bn to 2.75bn in the next 80 years, while Asia’s will decline by 415mn, or 13%, the projections show.
“Most people overlook the fact that the Chinese dependency ratio – the working-age to over-65 population – is deteriorating rapidly and is already showing signs of straining,” Lee said.
Globally, the total number of people age 15 to 64 will peak at 6.5bn around 2090, an increase of 1.5bn from today. Nearly 80% of this gain is expected to come from low-income countries, with the remainder from middle-income nations.
The potential labour force in high-income countries is projected to shrink as birth rates remain low. The demographic changes will occur in a relatively short period of time. In 2020, everyone over 65 will be supported by an estimated seven workers globally, but by mid-century the ratio will drop to four as the share of seniors increases.
These shifts will create challenges for governments in a number of countries. Taxation, assets prices and the use of resources will come under pressure while innovations in artificial intelligence, machine learning, engineering and computing power may cause trepidation about employment within many industries. A recent Oxford Economics report estimates that 20mn manufacturing positions will be lost by 2030 with lower-skilled regions hit the hardest.
Oxford’s econometric model found that, on average, each newly installed robot displaces 1.6 manufacturing workers. About 1.7mn factory jobs already have gone to robots since 2000, including 400,000 in Europe, 260,000 in the US and 550,000 in China, the report found.
The labour force in North America and Oceana will increase by close to 38mn and 17mn, respectively, while Europe will experience a decline of 137mn or 28%. The working-age population in Latin America and the Caribbean will shrink by 15% or 66mn.
While birth rates have fallen sharply in much of the developed world, migration has enabled the population in North America to continue growing.
The number of working-age men and women in the US will rise 1.2% to 243mn by 2030 and then climb 14% to 278mn by 2100. The number of people in North America living longer 100 years will soar to almost 1.9mn from about 1mn today.
The two most populous nations also are ageing fast. By 2050, China and India will account for 31% of total population and 39% of the world’s seniors. Meanwhile both will see their share of the global labour force shrink. India’s working-age population is projected to peak around 2050, but 40 years later there will be fewer 15-to-64-year-olds than there are today.
The shift in China will come sooner. Its working-age population already is shrinking and will contract by 27.5mn by 2030. India’s working-age population is expected to overtake China’s in 2027.
The potential labour force in Russia, Japan, Germany and South Korea also will be reduced because of the slow pace of births and migration.