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March 16, 2026


India Moved First. Bangladesh Moved Fast. Pakistan Moved Slow. But Is “Slow” Now an Advantage?
South Asia’s fertility story is more nuanced than we often admit.
Looking at long-run trends:
India began its fertility decline earlier — steady reduction starting in the 1970s.
Bangladesh looked similar to Pakistan until the early 1980s — then experienced a sharp and rapid fall.
Pakistan declined too — but more gradually.
By the 1990s:
India was clearly ahead.
Bangladesh had dramatically converged.
Pakistan was still moving down — but at a slower pace.
A Different Global Context Today
Here’s the twist.
In the 1980s and 1990s, high fertility was seen as the problem.
In the 2020s, low fertility is increasingly the concern.
Across Europe, East Asia, and parts of North America:
Fertility is well below replacement.
Populations are aging rapidly.
Labor shortages are emerging.
Pension systems are under strain.
Governments are spending billions trying (unsuccessfully) to push fertility back up.
The world’s anxiety has shifted from “too many children” to “too few children.”
So What Does That Mean for Pakistan?
Pakistan’s slower decline has often been framed as failure.
But in a world entering demographic contraction, could this be an opportunity?
Pakistan today:
Still has a relatively young population.
Still has labor force expansion potential.
Still has demographic momentum.
If managed well, this could mean:
A longer demographic dividend window.
A larger working-age population when others are shrinking.
Greater strategic relevance in a labor-constrained global economy.
Of course, this is conditional.
Youth bulges without:
Jobs
Education quality
Female participation
Urban planning
… do not produce dividends. They produce frustration.