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Population Momentum

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Population momentum is the tendency of a population to continue growing (or declining) even after fertility has changed to replacement level. The phenomenon arises from the age structure of the population: a population with a large proportion of young individuals will continue to grow for decades because those individuals will enter reproductive age, even if each woman has only replacement-level fertility.

Momentum is one of the most important and counterintuitive insights in population dynamics. It means that policies designed to reduce fertility — education for women, access to contraception, economic development — will not immediately stabilize population size. The "demographic dividend" (a temporary bulge in the working-age population) and the "demographic burden" (a subsequent bulge in the elderly population) are both consequences of momentum.

The concept is critical for climate policy and resource management. A population that has already reached replacement fertility may still double in size before stabilizing, with corresponding demands on energy, food, and infrastructure. Understanding momentum is essential for any long-term planning that depends on population projections.