Mungaf said:
What worries me about population growth is the tendency of less advanced regions to have skyrocketing populations (Africa & Middle East) while more advanced ones (Europe, North America, East Asia) have slow growth or shrinking populations.
You shouldn't. There's a thing called "demographic transition", that explains quite well why advanced states have a much, much, much lowere growth than less advanced ones.
Basically, it goes like this : when a country is poor, agricultural and undevelopped, its birth rate is quite high (more than 7 kids per family) due to lakc of birth control, lack of women's education, and cultural / religious traditions, BUT its death rate is also quite high, due to poor medications, high death rate of babies, lack of hospital and such.
Then comes progress. The thing is, progress goes much much faster than society can cope. So you actually have a period of a century or two during which any population will benefit from progress, that is, will significantly lower its death rate, BUT the birth rate will remain really high because it takes time for society to adapt. That's the time when the population will dramatically increase. All "advanced" nations went through such a phase.
Then when progress manage to impact culture and traditions, the birth rate decrease : women work and thus have less time for children, pill, condoms and birth controls are widely spread and acknowledged, having lots of children to help in the farm is no longer necessary...
So basically, just wait, and soon every nation in the world will have a low birth rate AND a low death rate. Demographic transition is an unusual and non permanent state.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographic_transition
http://www.uwmc.uwc.edu/geography/Demotrans/demtran.htm