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Possible consequences of increasing life expectancy in Brazil: the perspective of a European historical demographer

机译:欧洲历史人口学家的观点认为,巴西预期寿命的延长可能会带来后果

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Those over sixty years of age accounted for 6.6% of the total population of Brazil in 1985, in the Federal Republic of Germany this proportion was 20.3% in 1984. As early as 1950 it had been 14.5%. This proportion will not even be reached in Brazil in the year 2000 when persons aged sixty years and older are only projected to make up 8.8% of the total population. Similarly, in 1982/84 life expectancy at birth in the Federal Republic was 70.8 years for men and 77.5 for women; in Brazil the figures for 1980/85 were, by contrast, "only" 61.0 and 66.0. Against this background it is easy to understand why the discussion concerning an ageing society with its many related medical, economic, individual and social problems has been so slow in coming into its own in Brazil. As important as a more intensive consideration of these aspects may be in Brazil at present, they are, nevertheless, only one side of the story. For a European historical demographer with a long-term perspective of three of four hundred years, the other side of the story is just as important. The life expectancy which is almost ten years lower in Brazil is not a result of the fact that no one in Brazil lives to old age. In 1981 people sixty-five years and older accounted for 34.4% of all deaths! At the same time infants accounted for only 22.1% of total mortality. They are responsible, along with the "premature" deaths among youths and adults, for the low, "average" life expectancy figure. In Europe, by contrast, these "premature" deaths no longer play much of a role. In 1982/84 more than half of the women (52.8%) in the Federal Republic of Germany lived to see their eightieth birthdays and almost half of the men (47.3%) lived to see their seventy-fifth. Our biological existence is guaranteed to an extent today that would have been unthinkable a few generations ago. Then, the classic troika of "plague, hunger and war" threatened our forefathers all the time and everywhere. The radical transition from the formerly uncertain to a present-day certain lifetime, which is the result of the repression of "plague, hunger and war", led to unexpected consequences for our living together. Our forefathers were forced to live in closely knit Gemeinschaften in the interest of physical survival and to subordinate their egoistic goals to a common value, but now these pressures have, for the most part, fallen away. Correspondingly, this much more certain EGO has taken center stage. An ever greater number of us chooses to live life as single beings: the number of marriages is lower every year; the number of divorces is on the increase; in Berlin (West) more than half (sic! 52.3%) of all households are already composed on only one person. For the last dozen years the annual number of births in the Federal Republic has been insufficient to ensure population replacement. Not a population explosion but rather the opposite, a population implosion, is our problem. Human beings do not appear to be "social animals", as was axiomatically assumed for so long. They were only forced to behave as such for as long as "plague, hunger and war" forced them to do so. When these life endangering conditions no longer exist and life becomes certain even without their being integrated into a Gemeinschaft then humans suddenly show themselves more and more to be independent single beings. It is not the percentage of the population that is over sixty or sixty-five that is decisive in this context but rather how certain adults perceive their biological lives to be, since they are the ones who organize their lives, who build communities or who are ever more often willing only to enter into means-to-an-end personal unions without lasting or close ties and mutual responsibilities. There are many signs which seem to point to a development in this direction in Brazil as well. More and more adults in Brazil are caught up in the deep-seated transition from an uncertain to a certain lifetime. A third of them die after having reached their sixty-fifth birthday. It therefore seems to me to be high time that one began to give more consideration to the other side of the story in Brazil as well. And who is more suited intensively to consider the long-term perspectives than those engaged in the public health sector in whose competence, after all, such aspects, as "life certainty", "life expectancy" and "age at death" belong?
机译:1985年,年龄在60岁以上的人口占巴西总人口的6.6%,在德意志联邦共和国,这一比例在1984年为20.3%。早在1950年,这一比例为14.5%。到了2000年,巴西的六十岁及以上人口仅占总人口的8.8%,甚至没有达到这一比例。同样,在1982/84年,联邦共和国的出生时预期寿命为男性70.8岁,女性77.5岁;相比之下,在巴西,1980/85年的数字仅为“ 61.0”和“ 66.0”。在这种背景下,很容易理解为什么在巴西,关于老龄化社会及其许多相关的医疗,经济,个人和社会问题的讨论如此缓慢地出现在巴西。尽管在巴西目前对这些方面进行更深入的考虑可能很重要,但它们只是故事的一方面。对于一个具有400年中的三个长期发展前景的欧洲历史人口统计学家而言,故事的另一面也同样重要。巴西的预期寿命将近十年,这并不是因为巴西没有人能长寿。 1981年,六十五岁及以上的人占所有死亡的34.4%!同时,婴儿仅占总死亡率的22.1%。他们与低的“平均”预期寿命数字以及青年和成年人中的“过早”死亡有关。相比之下,在欧洲,这些“过早”死亡不再发挥很大作用。在1982/84年度,德意志联邦共和国一半以上的妇女(52.8%)活着看到自己的80岁生日,而几乎一半的男性(47.3%)活着看到了其75岁。今天我们的生物生存得到了一定程度的保证,这在几代人之前是无法想象的。然后,经典的“瘟疫,饥饿和战争”三驾马车无时无刻地威胁着我们的祖先。从“瘟疫,饥饿和战争”受到压制的结果,从过去的不确定性过渡到当今的一定时期,从根本上过渡到我们共同生活。为了身体生存,我们的祖先被迫生活在紧密联系的Gemeinschaften中,并将他们的利己主义目标服从于一个共同的价值观,但是现在,这些压力在很大程度上已经消失了。相应地,这个更加确定的EGO占据了中心位置。我们越来越多的人选择单身生活:每年结婚的次数减少;离婚人数在增加;在柏林(西部),一半以上的家庭(原来是52.3%)已经只有一个人组成。在过去的十二年中,联邦共和国的年出生人数不足以确保人口替代。我们的问题不是人口爆炸,而是相反,人口爆炸。人类似乎并没有像公理学上长期以来所认为的那样是“社会动物”。只要“瘟疫,饥饿和战争”迫使他们这样做,他们就只能被迫这样做。当这些威胁生命的条件不再存在,并且即使没有将它们整合到Gemeinschaft中,生命也会变得确定,然后人类突然显示出越来越多的自己成为独立的单身生物。在这一背景下,决定性的因素不是六十五岁或六十五岁以上人口的百分比,而是某些成年人如何看待自己的生物生活,因为他们是组织生活,建立社区或生活的人。越来越多的人只愿意建立起端到端的个人工会,而没有持久或密切的联系和共同责任。巴西也有许多迹象表明朝着这个方向发展。巴西越来越多的成年人陷入了从不确定到确定的一生的深层次过渡。他们中的三分之一在达到65岁生日后死亡。因此,在我看来,现在是时候也应该开始更多考虑巴西故事的另一面了。谁比那些从事公共卫生部门工作的人更能集中考虑长远的观点呢?毕竟,公共卫生部门的能力属于“生命确定性”,“预期寿命”和“死亡年龄”等方面?

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