Low Fertility - the Challenge of Demographic Security of Georgia

Low Fertility - the Challenge of Demographic Security of Georgia

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.52340/ggj.2023.03.02.08

Keywords:

Georgia, demographic security, low fertility, population

Abstract

Ensuring the demographic security of the country is an important component of the national security of the state. In recent years, among Georgia's demographic challenges, fertility issues have gained particular prominence. Based on the relevant indicators of demographic and statistical materials, the article considers the current state of fertility and its prospects. Based on the demographic and statistical materials of relevant indicators, the current situation of fertility and its prospects are considered. It is noted that fertility decline is a global phenomenon. Today, in 101 countries around the world, the total fertility rate is below the level of simple reproduction of the population (2.1). This process will continue in the future, and it will cover more countries. Georgia is in the fourth phase of the demographic transition. This phase is characterized by declining fertility and a reduction in the number of children in families. As a result of the negative events that have developed since the 1990s, the demographic system of Georgia dropped out of the natural course of development. In recent years, one of the most important elements of the natural movement of the population—fertility—has declined even more. In 2022, the crude birth rate was 11.4‰, which is the lowest rate since 2002 and significantly less than the level of simple population reproduction (15‰). The fact that only a small portion of generations born in the 1990s are now actively childbearing in Georgia complicates the issue. The fact that a small generation born in the 1990s entered the active childbearing age in Georgia complicates the issue. According to the medium variant of the 10th revision of the UN projections for 2022, by 2035, due to declining fertility, the number of children under the age of 15 will be less than the number of people aged 65 and over. This process is very dangerous for Georgia because it will worsen the functioning of the demographic system, which, without the implementation of a reasonable sociodemographic policy based on demographic security, will lead to serious social and economic problems in the future.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

Author Biography

Giorgi Meladze, Tbilisi State University

Department of Geography, I. Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University, Faculty of Exact and Natural Sciences,

Department of Human Geography, TSU, Vakhushti Bagrationi Institute of Geography. Tbilisi, Georgia

References

Bondarenko N.A., Syupova M.S. (2017). Formy proyavleniya demograficheskoy bezopasnosti regiona i ocenka ee ugroz [Forms of manifestation of the demographic security of the region and assessment of its threats]//Vestnik TOGU N3 (46). P. 193 (in Rissian).

Grover D. What is the Demographic Transition Model. https://populationeducation.org/what-demographic-transition-model/).

Tsuladze G., Meladze G. (1998). Demografiuli gadasvlis shedegi:stabilizacia tu regresi? [The results of demographic transition: stability or regress?]//Georgia. Journal for the humanities. Tbilisi, N3, 1998. P. 176 (in Georgian).

Gujabidze V.V. Prostranstvenno-vremennaya diffuziya demograficheskogo perekhoda I prognozirovanie estestvennogo dvizheniya naseleniya [Spatiotemporal diffusion of demographic transition and forecasting of natural movement of population]//Proceedings of international scientific conference - Problems of regional demographic planning. Dushanbe, 1979. P.35 (in Russian).

Gujabidze V.V. Demograficheskiy perekhod i starenie naseleniya v Gruzii [. Demographic transition and population aging in Georgia]//Proceedings of international scientific conference - Actual problems of the development of demographic processes in Georgia. Tbilisi, 1990. P. 5 (in Russian).

Carlson A.C. Family Questions: Reflections on the American Social Crisis. New Brunswick (USA) & Oxford (U.K), 1990.

Volk A., Atkinson J. Infant and child death in the human environment of evolutionary adaptation//Evolution and Human Behavior. 34 (2013) 182–192 2013 P. 182

Lorant K. The demographic challenge in Europe.Brussels, April, 2005. P. 6.

https://www.prb.org/international/indicator/fertility/table.

Fertility, mortality, migration, and population scenarios for 195 countries and territories from 2017 to 2100: a forecasting analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study//Lancet 2020; P. 1285.

Vielose E. Elements of the Natural Movement of Population. Oxford-London. 1965. PP. 159-165.

Bourjeois-Pichat J. Stable, Semistable populations and growth potential. Population studie, vol. 25, N2, 1971, p. 235-254.

Valentey D., Kvasha A. Demografiya [Demography]. Moscow, 1989. P. 177-178 (in Russian).

Coale A.J. The Calculation of Approximate Intrinsic Rates//Population Index. Vol. 21. № 2, April 1955. P. 94-97.

http://demoscope.ru/weekly/ssp/ussr_ed_1935.php

https://www.statista.com/statistics/611593/crude-birth-rate-in-europe/.

Semya I semeynaya politika v Pskovskoy oblasti [Family and family policy in the Pskov region]. Ed. by Vasilievoy N.V. I Arkhangelskogo V.N. Pskov, 1994. P. 180-181 (in Russian).

https://www.statista.com/statistics/612074/fertility-rates-in-european-countries/

http://data.un.org/Glossary.aspx?q=Net+reproduction+rate+(surviving+daughters+per+woman)

Downloads

Published

2023-12-08

How to Cite

Meladze, G. (2023). Low Fertility - the Challenge of Demographic Security of Georgia. Georgian Geographical Journal, 3(2). https://doi.org/10.52340/ggj.2023.03.02.08

Issue

Section

Articles

Similar Articles

1 2 3 4 5 6 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.

Loading...