Japan | 49.0 years |
Europe | 42.0 years |
U.S. | 37.9 years |
World | 30.5 years |
Africa | 19.0 years |
Niger | 14.5 years |
* Our World in Data
Writing in retirement at Saladin’s court in 1185, the 90-year-old aristocrat ibn Munqidh goes in for some moping. In his youth, ibn M. recalls, he cheerfully rode off on weekends to spear Crusaders, political rivals, and charismatic megafauna. Now he’s worn out by a bit of calligraphy:
When I wake up I feel like a mountain is on top of me
When I walk, it’s like wearing chains
I creep around with a cane in my hand …
My hand struggles to hold up a pen, when it once
Broke spears in the hearts of lions.
Yes, well, happens to us all these days. In that era, and for most of human history, not so much. Until the 19th century life expectancy at birth was about 30 — that is, only half the public got to 30 — and a 25-year-old expected (on average) to live to 50. Ibn M. was an extreme outlier, having avoided first the pre-1800 40% child mortality rate and then the high chance of getting carried off later on by plagues, accidents, predators, or competent enemies, and making it to his 10th decade.
Today, by contrast, the elderly demographic — already with 150 million people over 80 — is the world’s fastest-growing. This, plus the fact that birth rates have fallen by nearly half since the 1970s, means that humanity is aging. Our World in Data’s tabulation finds this year’s global “median age to be 30 1/2, meaning that (a) more than half of us are over 30, and (b) the person exactly in the middle was born in 1992. Our World’s figure is about ten years older than the 20-year median of 1970 and five years older than the 25-year median of 2000, and is projected to creep up by three months per year for the next half-century. The worldwide medians over the last 50 years, with a tentative estimate for 2050, look like this:
2050 36?
2022 30
2010 27
2000 25
1970 20
Worldwide averages, of course, conceal lots of variation. Details by region below; but in general, East Asia and Europe are “old,” with median ages over 40; Japan is currently the “oldest” country* at 49. Africa is “youngest” with a median age of 19 (and turbulent Niger is the world’s single “youngest” country at 14 and a half), with the Pacific islands second-youngest. The other regions are in the middle, with Latin America and the Caribbean exactly at the world’s 30-and-a-half-year average (but aging fastest of all), and South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East a bit below. The U.S. is above the world average at 39, but aging only about 2 and a half months per year, while Europe adds about 3 and a half months, Asia 4 months, and Latin America 5 months.
So: In Europe and East Asia especially, the next decades’ experience will probably be one in which people (whether or not they start wistfully putting down their spears) start getting tired as they push around the modern equivalents of calligraphy pens. Economists accordingly predict rising demand for health equipment and telemedicine services; labor shortages in western countries and East Asia, combined with lower GDP growth rates with which to pay the new workers; production and consumer booms in India, Africa, and parts of the Middle East; and politics increasingly dominated by arguments over how to pay for health and pensions. Still, as ibn Munqidh might reluctantly agree, better than any realistic alternative.
* Counting countries with populations above 100,000. The Vatican, with about 800 people, is technically the oldest country, with its various Cardinals, secretaries, and Swiss Guards at a median age of about 58.
Our World in Data’s interactive table of median ages by country, region, income group, etc., from 1950 to the present with projections to 2100.
The CIA’s World Factbook ranks countries by life expectancy.
The International Monetary Fund has thoughts on aging, growth rates, and finance,
The World Health Organization on new health challenges.
And Usama bin Munqidh on old age, medieval battle tactics, poetry, calligraphy, Crusaders’ odd gender habits and loony “trial-by-ordeal” and “trial-by-combat” legal theories, the mighty Saladin, etc.
Detail by region
Oldest: Europe is the world’s “oldest” region with a median age of 42 — that is, 12 years above the world median. Italy, with a median of 47, has Europe’s oldest population with Portuguese, Germans, Greeks, and Bulgarians next at 45. East Asia, at 40, is almost as venerable at Europe, and Japan is currently the world’s “oldest” country,* with a median age hitting 49 this year. (Japanese also have the world’s longest lifespan, at 87.) A bit north, Koreans are slightly more youthful at 43 but aging faster, with Korea likely to pass Japan by 2040 and hold the “world’s-oldest country” status for the rest of the 21st century. Mainland China’s median age of 38 — exactly equal to America’s — is the region’s youngest but rising fast. China is likely to catch Europe in the next decade and pass Japan somewhere around mid-century, as this fall’s Shanghai elementary schoolers begin contemplating retirement.
Youngest: If the median Asians and Europeans are middle-agers thinking about young children and home payments, the “median” African is a buoyant 19-year-old just starting a career. In the world’s “youngest” country, the median Nigerien (hopefully steering clear of Niamey’s edgy military patrols last month) is a 14-and-a-half-year-old high school freshman born in the spring of 2008. Eight of sub-Saharan Africa’s 49 countries have median ages below 16, and 36 below 20. The Pacific Islands are just slightly “older” as the world’s second-youngest region, with the Solomon Islands and Vanuatu at medians of 19 years, and Samoa and Timor-Leste at 20.
Middle-aged: Other regions cluster closer to the world average. In South and Southeast Asia, median ages for India, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Malaysia, and Burma are all just a bit below the world average at 28 or 29. The Philippines and Pakistan are “young” at 24; Sri Lanka and Vietnam a bit older than average at 32. Singapore and Thailand are the region’s seniors, with the median Singaporean now 42 years old and the median Thai 40. In the Middle East and near neighbors, the age range is similar but skews a bit younger: median ages are in the teens in Yemen, the Palestinian territories, and Iraq; 28 or 29 in Egypt, Jordan, Israel, Morocco, and Lebanon; and 31 and 32 in Azerbaijan, Turkey, and Iran. Latin America and the Caribbean, finally, perfectly match the worldwide median at 30 and a half, with Cuba the “oldest” at 41 and Haiti and Honduras “youngest” at 23; Brazil is 32, Mexico 29, and Peru 28.
The United States: The U.S. can look quite young, or a bit “tempered by experience,” or right in the middle, depending on what group you put it in. Three options:
Ed Gresser is Vice President and Director for Trade and Global Markets at PPI.
Ed returns to PPI after working for the think tank from 2001-2011. He most recently served as the Assistant U.S. Trade Representative for Trade Policy and Economics at the Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR). In this position, he led USTR’s economic research unit from 2015-2021, and chaired the 21-agency Trade Policy Staff Committee.
Ed began his career on Capitol Hill before serving USTR as Policy Advisor to USTR Charlene Barshefsky from 1998 to 2001. He then led PPI’s Trade and Global Markets Project from 2001 to 2011. After PPI, he co-founded and directed the independent think tank Progressive Economy until rejoining USTR in 2015. In 2013, the Washington International Trade Association presented him with its Lighthouse Award, awarded annually to an individual or group for significant contributions to trade policy.
Ed is the author of Freedom from Want: American Liberalism and the Global Economy (2007). He has published in a variety of journals and newspapers, and his research has been cited by leading academics and international organizations including the WTO, World Bank, and International Monetary Fund. He is a graduate of Stanford University and holds a Master’s Degree in International Affairs from Columbia Universities and a certificate from the Averell Harriman Institute for Advanced Study of the Soviet Union.
Read the full email and sign up for the Trade Fact of the Week