Declining fertility rates are decreasing college-aged populations and placing sustained pressure on higher education systems worldwide. This study examines how long-term demographic contraction brings recurring system-level challenges, using Germany, the United States, South Korea, and Japan as illustrative examples. Drawing on secondary data from official demographic and higher education statistics, the study applies a data-informed analytical approach and a structured analytical framework to identify key pressures related to financial and operational viability, educational quality assurance, structural and regional imbalances, and governance constraints. The analysis indicates that higher education systems have responded with strategic and operational measures, including international student recruitment, lifelong and recurrent education, institutional consolidation, and enrollment and retention management. While these responses can partially mitigate demographic pressures in the short to medium term, they face structural limits under sustained population decline. Long-term sustainability, therefore, requires coordinated system-level adaptation through diversified learner populations, institutional differentiation, and policy frameworks aligned with evolving labor market and societal demands, in order to maintain educational quality and equitable access.
Yinghui Zhou (Sat,) studied this question.