非洲:人口快速增长阻碍了发展。

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引用次数: 0

摘要

非洲统一组织(OAU)、非洲开发银行(ADB)和联合国非洲经济委员会(ECA)批评非洲各国政府没有足够重视人口不受控制的增长问题。非统组织负责政治事务的助理秘书长马普兰加在一个关于“人口与发展”的研讨会上说:“直到最近,大多数非洲政府还没有把人口的快速增长视为一个值得关注的问题。”非统组织估计,每年3.1%的平均人口增长远远超过非洲的经济增长,1992年非洲的经济增长还不到1%。马普兰加承认,减少人口增长是一场艰苦的斗争,尤其是在农村社区。非洲农业很大程度上是劳动密集型的,由小农维持,这鼓励农民生育更多的孩子。像其他工薪族一样,非洲农民在年老时希望得到家庭的支持,因此,子女的数量也很重要。但随着农业产量以年均2.5%的速度增长,粮食自给自足仍然是一个难以实现的目标。撒哈拉以南非洲地区城市的增长速度远远快于每年3.1%的总体人口增长速度。1980年至1988年间,该地区的城市人口以每年6.9%的速度增长。目前,城市人口占撒哈拉以南非洲人口的近30%,目前为6.8亿。到2025年,预计将有大约7亿人生活在城市地区。尽管向城镇迁移,但农村人口预计将增长68%以上,达到5.9亿以上。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Africa: rapid population increase retards development.

The Organization of African Unity (OAU), the African Development Bank (ADB) and the UN Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) have criticized African governments for not taking the problem of unchecked population growth seriously enough. "Until recently most African governments did not view rapid population growth as a matter for concern," said the OAU assistant secretary-general for political affairs, Machivenyika Mapuranga, at a seminar on 'population and development'. The OAU estimates that an annual average population increase of 3.1% far outstrips Africa's economic growth, which in 1992 was less than 1%. Mapuranga acknowledged that cutting the population increase is an uphill struggle, especially among rural communities. African agriculture is largely labor intensive, sustained by smallholders, which encourages farmers to have more children. Like other wage earners, African farmers look to support from their family when they grow old and, for that reason, the number of children also counts. But with agricultural production growing at an average annual rate of 2.5%, self-sufficiency in food remains an elusive goal. Cities in sub-Saharan Africa are growing much faster than the overall rate of population increase of 3.1% per year. Between 1980 and 1988 the region's urban population increased at the rate of 6.9% a year. Urban areas now account for nearly 30% of the sub-Saharan Africa population, currently put at 680 million. By 2025, approximately 700 million people are expected to live in urban areas. Despite migration to towns, the rural population is expected to rise more than 68%, reaching over 590 million.

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