FOREIGN AFFAIRS

Population growth and economic development: the case of Mexico
Coale AJ
China and the world: self-reliance or interdependence
Terrill R
Population and development: is a consensus possible?
Teitelbaum MS
Health and population
Taylor CE
Japan: the problems of success
Drucker PF
Third world development: a rebuttal
Stedman LC
Reply [to Lawrence C. Stedman's "Third world development: a rebuttal"]
Coale AJ
Right versus right: immigration and refugee policy in the United States
Teitelbaum MS
Women's vital voices. The costs of exclusion in Eastern Europe
Hunt S
Refugees: a never-ending story
Smyser WR
Redefining security
Mathews JT
Population change and national security
Eberstadt N
The population threat
Teitelbaum MS
The exploding cities of the developing world
Linden E
Japan's aging economics
Ezrati M
"Japan's population is aging faster than that of any other country in the world. The unprecedented increase in retirees relative to the size of Japan's work force will force radical change if the nation is to avoid a fiscal crisis, or worse. These seemingly innocent demographic changes will force Japan to shrink its famously high savings rate, reverse its proud trade surplus, send more industry overseas, liberalize its tightly controlled markets, and take on a more active, high-profile foreign policy. Ultimately, these changes will shift the balance of power in East Asia."
Coping with illegal immigrants
Hewlett SA
The global food fight
Paarlberg R