问答题
Despite wars, famines, and epidemics, Earth's population is
booming ahead to new records—with no end in sight.
Every day,
the world adds enough people to populate a medium-sized city in the US. In one
month, the number of new-world citizens equals the population of New York
City.
Every year, there are 90 million more mouths to feed, more
than the total population of Germany.
Several factors are
propelling this rapid growth, including an element that is often overlooked: the
huge number of teenagers who are becoming mothers, particularly in the countries
of sub-Saharan Africa.
In four African nations—Niger, Mali,
Sierra Leone, and Ivory Coast—1 out of every 5 adolescent females of
childbearing age has a baby annually.
The US Bureau of the
Census says this high rate of motherhood among teens has helped to maintain the
high pace of births across most of the African continent. By starting a family
early, a typical woman in Somalia, for instance, has seven children during her
lifetime. Equally large-families are the rule in Zambia, Zaire, Uganda,
Mauritania, Mali, Malawi, and Ethiopia.
The current
record-holder for fertility is strife: torn Rwanda, where a typical mother has
at least eight or nine children. While population experts often focus on
Africa's problems, analysts note that teenage mothers are also far more
prevalent in the United States than in France, Germany, Italy, Sweden, or
Britain.
This issue—"babies having babies"—has recently gained
prominence in the US. Teenaged motherhood in the US has fueled an expansion of
the state-federal welfare system and brought cries for welfare reform from
lawmakers.
With its high rate of teen births, the US now ranks
alongside Indonesia and parts of South America, and only modesty ahead of
Mexico, India, and Pakistan.
Overall, the fertility rate among
Americans remains relatively low at 2.1 births per woman—about the replacement
level. Although the US population is expected to climb steadily, from 260
million today to 323 million by 2020, most of that growth will come from
immigration.
The Census Bureau estimates that in Haiti, where
thousands of citizens are trying to flee to the US because of military
oppression and poverty AIDS will cut the annual growth rate during the next 25
years from 2.1 percent to 1.3 percent.
The decline in growth is
even sharper in the Central African Republic, where rates will dip from 2.4
percent to 0.7 percent. In Thailand, which already had low birth rates, AIDS
will drive population downward to 0.8 percent a year.
In the 16
countries that are hit hardest, AIDS will lower populations by 121 million over
expected projections by 2020. In Africa, the impact of AIDS is so great that
trends toward longer fife spans during the past 40 years are being reversed.
Some nations will suffer declines in average life spans of 10 to 30 years
compared with expected life spans without AIDS.
In the US, where
AIDS is also a substantial problem, the impact will be lower because the disease
is mostly limited to homosexuals and drug users, says Peter Way, a Census Bureau
researcher. In many African nations, AIDS is prevalent among the heterosexual
population, which sharply boosts infant mortality.
A compelling
chapter in the research deals with aging. Today the median age in developed
countries is 35, and in developing nations is only 23. By 2020, the
corresponding figures will be 42 and 28.
Today there are fewer
adults over 60 (525 million) than children under 5 (636 million). As the world
population ages, by 2020, the number over 60 will be more than 1 billion, while
those under 5 will total 717 million.
【正确答案】
【答案解析】The first factor is the huge number of teenagers are becoming mothers, particularly in the countries of sub-Saharan Africa, Niger, Mali, Sierra Leone, and Ivory Coast. The second one is by starting a family early, a typical woman in Somalia, Zambia, Zaire, Uganda, Mauritania, Mali, Malawi, and Ethiopia has seven children during her lifetime. In Rwanda a typical mother has at least eight or nine children. The third One is "babies having babies" which has recently gained prominence in the US.