SINGAPORE,, May 4, 2025 / Prnewswire / – Political decision -makers around the world are not ready for a new demographic order of global depopulation and how it will refound societies, economies and power policy.
The birth rate rates on a global scale, countries are faced with a future of narrowing and aging of societies motivated by an implacable collapse of fertility.
Family structures and life agreements previously imagined in science fiction will become common characteristics of daily life with an unprecedented collapse of procreator power.
These warnings struck by an era of omnipresent depopulation were issued on the initiative of the Asia-Pacific Congress in 2025 on reproduction (Aspire) in Singapore Today.
Internationally respected political economist, Dr. Nicholas Eberstadtsupports an aspire campaign pleading for policy changes that encourage family construction, especially in the Asia-Pacific region.
Dr. Eberstadt is the president of Henry Wendt in political economy of the American Enterprise Institute where he is renowned for his demographic research and his studies on international security. He is also a principal advisor to the National Bureau of Asian Research.
He told the Aspire Congress that between 1965 and 2015, the human fertility rate in births by woman had fallen in half and that the diving of “Recpen Bather, Dossing” has accelerated in recent years in rich and poor countries.
Dr. Eberstadt said that 2023 fertility levels were 40% below replacement levels in Japan50% continent China60% Taiwan and 65% South Korea. Sub-filing trends are also obvious in countries, especially Malaysia,, Singapore,, Thailand,, Vietnam And Indonesia.
“The workforce forces will shrink from all over the world due to the spread of under-filmed birth rate rates with the old start to be more numerous than young people,” said Dr. Eberstadt.
“Companies will have to adjust their expectations to behave with new realities of fewer workers, savings, taxpayers, tenants, house buyers, entrepreneurs, innovators, inventors, consumers and voterss.
“The decrease in staff, the reduction in savings and investment and unsustainable social spending and budgetary deficits are all on cards for developed countries today without missing changes in immigration, life and consumption life cycle schemes, and government policies for taxation and social spending.
“Super -Elders over 80 are the fastest growth cohort in the world. By 2050, there will be more than children in certain countries. The burden of the care of dementia will pose increasing – human, social, economic – costs in an aging and narrowing world.”
Dr. Eberstadt said that families and companies are assuming new long -term population structures, the challenge will be to develop new habits of mind, conventions and cooperative objectives.
“Decision-makers will have to learn new development rules in the midst of depopulation,” he said. “Investors will also need new game manuals to take advantage of an altered opportunity and risk environment.
“There will be less margin of error for investment projects, whether public or private, and no growing tide of the demand for a growing basin of consumers or taxpayers on which to count.
“Prosperity in a depopulation world will also depend on the open economy, free trade in goods, services and finance to counter the constraints that narrowed populations impose. As the hunt for rare talents becomes more acute, the movement of people will take a new economic salience and more important immigration than today.”
Aspire President, Dr Clare Boothroydsaid that in response to the disturbing drop in fertility rates, a new special Aspire interest group would be created to exploit expertise in the sustainability of populations.
She will co -reside the group with an acclaimed reproductive endocrinologist, professor Dominique de Ziegler of the Foch hospital in Paris.
“Humanity is entering an unexplored territory in the phenomenon of depopulation, and it is a challenge that must be expressed by governments, industry, education and public sector to put pressure for family policies that encourage family planning,” said Dr. Boothroyd.
The congress aspires to the Santec Convention and Exhibition Center in Singapore Attracted more than 2,000 leaders from various disciplines in assisted reproduction to respond to the latest advances and knowledge in fertility health.
For more information, go to www.aspire2025.com
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Source Asia Pacific Initiative on reproduction




