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A world worried about aging? | By Khalid Saleem

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A world worried about aging?

ONE often comes across pieces in the media of the Third World stressing the fact that several developing countries are ‘youth-heavy’, in that young people constitute the majority of their populations.

The First World, on the other hand, is worried about the ‘problem’ of aging. Looking at the world as a whole, this does represent a paradox if ever there was one.

This country figures in the category of young entities in more senses than one. It is young in view of its year of creation; it is more so when one looks at its ever-blooming population.

But more about that later! As far back as public memory goes, man has been relentlessly searching for the secret of long life.

For some obscure reason, death even at a ripe old age holds a terror for most people. This is particularly true of persons who have led a blissful life, mainly at the expense of their less endowed fellow beings.

Scientific researchers, by the same token, have bent their energies towards discovering the elusive secret of living longer.

Scientific research in this field , coupled with developments in the fields of medicine and nutrition, have resulted in a dramatic rise in life expectancy, especially in the more prosperous regions of this blessed planet.

So far so good! Life expectancy, thereby, has been pushed up a few notches; but to what end and for what purpose?

By the benefit of hindsight, one cannot help noticing that this single-minded quest for long life has been pursued singularly with hardly a sense of purpose.

This realization now appears to be coming home to haunt the planners of the First World. In the First World, allied to the single-minded determination to have people live longer, was the drive to reduce the birth rate.

These two developments have contributed to a state of affairs in which old people are set to outnumber the young, sooner than anyone expected.

Some years ago, the Center for International and Strategic Studies, a public-policy Think Tank in Washington, had raised the alarm.

Global ‘aging’, falling fertility, untenable pension costs with fewer tax payers to support them and financial market chaos as developed countries ‘grow old’ were cited as causes for serious concern.

This model, though, was not relevant to most of the developing states. It was given out that human life expectancy has made greater gains in the past fifty years or so than in the last five thousand years.

But, this is only half the tale. It would appear that the planners may need to confront what may appear to be a boon but may prove to be a bane.

Statistics in this regard make interesting reading. In developed countries, for instance, the percentage of population aged over sixty-five is due to rise to twenty-seven by 2050, as against fifteen at the turn of the century.

Japan is already way ahead in terms of its graying population. The question that presents itself, begging for an answer is: where does the world go from here; and, what is more relevant, where do the developing countries like the Land of the Pure fit into the model?

All in all, the growing percentage of the aged spells disaster not only from the economic but also from the ecological point of view.

It just goes to prove that that man’s efforts to go one up on nature are, at best, ill-advised. Nature has devised an optimum balance in everything and man would do well not to make ham-handed attempts to upset it.

Developing countries like the Land of the Pure are at the receiving end. Nothing seems to go right.

As the events of the past few weeks have shown, even having a surfeit of young people has its drawbacks.

Young people are restive and impatient. They want everything accomplished in double quick time.

Sparing time to contemplate appears to them a waste of precious moments. The secret would lie somewhere between the impatient yearnings of the young and the slow and steady approach of the seniors.

How to reach the optimum is no easy task! While the young have their strong points, among them enthusiasm and fresh ideas reinforced by the latest technology, but what must not be lost sight of is that there is no substitute for experience.

It is experience that teaches humankind how to avoid pitfalls that could lead to disaster and how to temper their decisions with circumspection and good sense.

The young are by definition impetuous and rash. A middle path is what is or, at least should be, advisable.

The developed countries that are worried about ‘global aging’ have a point. But, then, this is the price they have to pay for tinkering with the laws of nature.

Nature, left to itself, always tends to develop a balance of sorts that keeps things in check. Mankind in its unbridled enthusiasm moves in a way as to upset this balance, thus setting in motion events that are beyond its control.

Nature should always be treated with the respect that it deserves. Mankind in its turn needs to be aware of its limitations and not attempt to transgress them.

On another note, there are always exceptions to the rule. While on this subject, one must not overlook the case of those regions of the world that are naturally known for longevity.

Hunza Valley in Pakistan is one such area. But if one looks at it closely nature has its own fine-tuning mechanism that is missing in the efforts of the scientific researchers.

In places like Hunza Valley, nature has assured that robust good health goes with longevity.

Most of the aged residents of Hunza Valley – quite a few of them over 100 years of age – remain active workers and thus no burden on society. Can the scientific community match that?

— The writer is a former Ambassador and former Assistant Secretary General of OIC.

 

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