ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Hans Rosling - Global health expert; data visionary
In Hans Rosling’s hands, data sings. Global trends in health and economics come to vivid life. And the big picture of global development—with some surprisingly good news—snaps into sharp focus.

Why you should listen

Even the most worldly and well-traveled among us have had their perspectives shifted by Hans Rosling. A professor of global health at Sweden's Karolinska Institute, his work focused on dispelling common myths about the so-called developing world, which (as he pointed out) is no longer worlds away from the West. In fact, most of the Third World is on the same trajectory toward health and prosperity, and many countries are moving twice as fast as the west did.

What set Rosling apart wasn't just his apt observations of broad social and economic trends, but the stunning way he presented them. Guaranteed: You've never seen data presented like this. A presentation that tracks global health and poverty trends should be, in a word: boring. But in Rosling's hands, data sings. Trends come to life. And the big picture — usually hazy at best — snaps into sharp focus.

Rosling's presentations were grounded in solid statistics (often drawn from United Nations and World Bank data), illustrated by the visualization software he developed. The animations transform development statistics into moving bubbles and flowing curves that make global trends clear, intuitive and even playful. During his legendary presentations, Rosling took this one step farther, narrating the animations with a sportscaster's flair.

Rosling developed the breakthrough software behind his visualizations through his nonprofit Gapminder, founded with his son and daughter-in-law. The free software — which can be loaded with any data — was purchased by Google in March 2007. (Rosling met the Google founders at TED.)

Rosling began his wide-ranging career as a physician, spending many years in rural Africa tracking a rare paralytic disease (which he named konzo) and discovering its cause: hunger and badly processed cassava. He co-founded Médecins sans Frontièrs (Doctors without Borders) Sweden, wrote a textbook on global health, and as a professor at the Karolinska Institut in Stockholm initiated key international research collaborations. He's also personally argued with many heads of state, including Fidel Castro.

Hans Rosling passed away in February 2017. He is greatly missed.


More profile about the speaker
Hans Rosling | Speaker | TED.com
TED@Cannes

Hans Rosling: Global population growth, box by box

Filmed:
3,914,736 views

The world's population will grow to 9 billion over the next 50 years -- and only by raising the living standards of the poorest can we check population growth. This is the paradoxical answer that Hans Rosling unveils at TED@Cannes using colorful new data display technology (you'll see).
- Global health expert; data visionary
In Hans Rosling’s hands, data sings. Global trends in health and economics come to vivid life. And the big picture of global development—with some surprisingly good news—snaps into sharp focus. Full bio

Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.

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I still remember the day in school
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when our teacher told us
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that the world population had become
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three billion people,
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and that was in 1960.
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I'm going to talk now about
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how world population has changed from that year
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and into the future,
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but I will not use digital technology,
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as I've done during my first five TEDTalks.
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Instead, I have progressed,
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and I am, today, launching
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a brand new analog teaching technology
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that I picked up from IKEA:
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this box.
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This box contains one billion people.
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And our teacher told us
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that the industrialized world, 1960,
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had one billion people.
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In the developing world, she said,
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they had two billion people.
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And they lived away then.
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There was a big gap between
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the one billion in the industrialized world
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and the two billion in the developing world.
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In the industrialized world,
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people were healthy,
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educated, rich,
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and they had small families.
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And their aspiration
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was to buy a car.
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And in 1960, all Swedes were saving
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to try to buy a Volvo like this.
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This was the economic level at which Sweden was.
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But in contrast to this,
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in the developing world, far away,
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the aspiration of the average family there
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was to have food for the day.
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They were saving
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to be able to buy a pair of shoes.
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There was an enormous gap in the world
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when I grew up.
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And this gap between the West and the rest
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has created a mindset of the world,
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which we still use linguistically
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when we talk about "the West"
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and "the Developing World."
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But the world has changed,
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and it's overdue to upgrade that mindset
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and that taxonomy of the world, and to understand it.
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And that's what I'm going to show you,
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because since 1960
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what has happened in the world up to 2010
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is that a staggering
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four billion people
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have been added to the world population.
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Just look how many.
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The world population has doubled
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since I went to school.
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And of course, there's been economic growth in the West.
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A lot of companies have happened to grow the economy,
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so the Western population moved over to here.
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And now their aspiration is not only to have a car.
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Now they want to have a holiday on a very remote destination
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and they want to fly.
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So this is where they are today.
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And the most successful of the developing countries,
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they have moved on, you know,
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and they have become emerging economies, we call them.
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They are now buying cars.
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And what happened a month ago
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was that the Chinese company, Geely,
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they acquired the Volvo company,
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and then finally the Swedes understood that
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something big had happened in the world.
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(Laughter)
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So there they are.
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And the tragedy is that the two billion over here
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that is struggling for food and shoes,
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they are still almost as poor
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as they were 50 years ago.
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The new thing is that
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we have the biggest pile of billions, the three billions here,
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which are also becoming emerging economies,
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because they are quite healthy, relatively well-educated,
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and they already also have two to three children
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per woman, as those [richer also] have.
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And their aspiration now
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is, of course, to buy a bicycle,
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and then later on they would like to have a motorbike also.
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But this is the world
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we have today,
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no longer any gap.
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But the distance from the poorest here, the very poorest,
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to the very richest over here is wider than ever.
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But there is a continuous world
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from walking, biking,
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driving, flying --
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there are people on all levels,
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and most people tend to be somewhere in the middle.
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This is the new world we have today
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in 2010.
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And what will happen in the future?
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Well, I'm going to project
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into 2050.
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I was in Shanghai recently,
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and I listened to what's happening in China,
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and it's pretty sure that they will catch up,
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just as Japan did.
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All the projections [say that] this one [billion] will [only] grow with
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one to two or three percent.
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[But this second] grows with seven, eight percent, and then they will end up here.
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They will start flying.
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And these
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lower or middle income countries, the emerging income countries,
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they will also forge forwards economically.
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And if,
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but only if,
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we invest in the right green technology --
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so that we can avoid severe climate change,
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and energy can still be relatively cheap --
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then they will move all the way up here.
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And they will start to buy
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electric cars.
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This is what we will find there.
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So what about the poorest two billion?
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What about the poorest two billion here?
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Will they move on?
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Well, here population [growth] comes in
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because there [among emerging economies] we already have two to three children per woman,
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family planning is widely used,
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and population growth is coming to an end.
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Here [among the poorest], population is growing.
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So these [poorest] two billion will, in the next decades,
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increase to three billion,
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and they will thereafter
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increase to four billion.
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There is nothing --
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but a nuclear war of a kind we've never seen --
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that can stop this [growth] from happening.
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Because we already have this [growth] in process.
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But if, and only if,
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[the poorest] get out of poverty,
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they get education, they get improved child survival,
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they can buy a bicycle and a cell phone and come [to live] here,
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then population growth
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will stop in 2050.
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We cannot have people on this level
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looking for food and shoes
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because then we get continued population growth.
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And let me show you why
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by converting back to the old-time
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digital technology.
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Here I have on the screen
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my country bubbles.
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Every bubble is a country. The size is population.
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The colors show the continent.
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The yellow on there is the Americas;
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dark blue is Africa; brown is Europe;
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green is the Middle East
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and this light blue is South Asia.
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That's India and this is China. Size is population.
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Here I have children per woman:
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two children, four children, six children, eight children --
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big families, small families.
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The year is 1960.
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And down here, child survival,
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the percentage of children surviving childhood
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up to starting school:
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60 percent, 70 percent, 80 percent, 90,
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and almost 100 percent, as we have today
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in the wealthiest and healthiest countries.
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But look, this is the world my teacher talked about in 1960:
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one billion Western world here --
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high child-survival, small families --
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and all the rest,
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the rainbow of developing countries,
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with very large families
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and poor child survival.
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What has happened? I start the world. Here we go.
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Can you see, as the years pass by, child survival is increasing?
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They get soap, hygiene, education,
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vaccination, penicillin
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and then family planning. Family size is decreasing.
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[When] they get up to 90-percent child survival, then families decrease,
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and most of the Arab countries in the Middle East
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is falling down there [to small families].
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Look, Bangladesh catching up with India.
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The whole emerging world
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joins the Western world
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with good child survival
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and small family size,
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but we still have the poorest billion.
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Can you see the poorest billion,
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those [two] boxes I had over here?
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They are still up here.
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And they still have a child survival
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of only 70 to 80 percent,
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meaning that if you have six children born,
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there will be at least four who survive
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to the next generation.
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And the population will double in one generation.
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So the only way
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of really getting world population [growth] to stop
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is to continue to improve child survival
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to 90 percent.
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That's why investments by Gates Foundation,
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UNICEF and aid organizations,
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together with national government in the poorest countries,
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are so good;
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because they are actually
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helping us to reach
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a sustainable population size of the world.
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We can stop at nine billion if we do the right things.
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Child survival is the new green.
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It's only by child survival
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that we will stop population growth.
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And will it happen?
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Well, I'm not an optimist,
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neither am I a pessimist.
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I'm a very serious "possibilist."
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It's a new category where we take emotion apart,
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and we just work analytically with the world.
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It can be done.
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We can have a much more just world.
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With green technology
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and with investments to alleviate poverty,
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and global governance,
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the world can become like this.
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And look at the position of the old West.
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Remember when this blue box was all alone,
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leading the world, living its own life.
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This will not happen [again].
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The role of the old West in the new world
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is to become the foundation
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of the modern world --
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nothing more, nothing less.
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But it's a very important role.
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Do it well and get used to it.
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Thank you very much.
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(Applause)
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▲Back to top

ABOUT THE SPEAKER
Hans Rosling - Global health expert; data visionary
In Hans Rosling’s hands, data sings. Global trends in health and economics come to vivid life. And the big picture of global development—with some surprisingly good news—snaps into sharp focus.

Why you should listen

Even the most worldly and well-traveled among us have had their perspectives shifted by Hans Rosling. A professor of global health at Sweden's Karolinska Institute, his work focused on dispelling common myths about the so-called developing world, which (as he pointed out) is no longer worlds away from the West. In fact, most of the Third World is on the same trajectory toward health and prosperity, and many countries are moving twice as fast as the west did.

What set Rosling apart wasn't just his apt observations of broad social and economic trends, but the stunning way he presented them. Guaranteed: You've never seen data presented like this. A presentation that tracks global health and poverty trends should be, in a word: boring. But in Rosling's hands, data sings. Trends come to life. And the big picture — usually hazy at best — snaps into sharp focus.

Rosling's presentations were grounded in solid statistics (often drawn from United Nations and World Bank data), illustrated by the visualization software he developed. The animations transform development statistics into moving bubbles and flowing curves that make global trends clear, intuitive and even playful. During his legendary presentations, Rosling took this one step farther, narrating the animations with a sportscaster's flair.

Rosling developed the breakthrough software behind his visualizations through his nonprofit Gapminder, founded with his son and daughter-in-law. The free software — which can be loaded with any data — was purchased by Google in March 2007. (Rosling met the Google founders at TED.)

Rosling began his wide-ranging career as a physician, spending many years in rural Africa tracking a rare paralytic disease (which he named konzo) and discovering its cause: hunger and badly processed cassava. He co-founded Médecins sans Frontièrs (Doctors without Borders) Sweden, wrote a textbook on global health, and as a professor at the Karolinska Institut in Stockholm initiated key international research collaborations. He's also personally argued with many heads of state, including Fidel Castro.

Hans Rosling passed away in February 2017. He is greatly missed.


More profile about the speaker
Hans Rosling | Speaker | TED.com