World at 2100: More + 100-year-olds will be added, illiterates will disappear (Demo)

How will today's demographic trends shape the world in the future? The BBC has offered a form of navigation that Periscopi translated for our readers. By 2050 it is paid to become 9.4 billion inhabitants of the world, with an increase of 21% by 2020. In 2020, the world is spent [...]
By 2050 it is paid to become 9.4 billion inhabitants of the world, with an increase of 21% by 2020. In 2020 the world is designed to have 7.8 billion inhabitants.
But it is surprising that from 2050 to 2100, there is not expected to be an increase in residents, the opposite is expected to have a slight decline of 1%. Of the 9.4 billion in 2050, 9.3 are expected in 2100.

It is also expected that average life expectancy will grow to nothing less than 14 years, from 72 to 86. So 100-year-olds will be much more frequent than they are today and will not be a miracle to our offspring, or even we if we have the destiny to live long.
By 2100, over 48 million people in the world are expected to be over 100 years of age, as opposed to today to only about half a million.
The group with the largest number of residents that year is expected to be 55 to 59 years old, Periscope follows.
Currently, the world has only 16 percent of the global population of higher education. This figure is expected to rise by 44 percent in 2011. Meanwhile, the share of people without education will be almost extinct, with only 1% total. /Periscope











