The latest census in Ukraine revealed an apocalyptic drop of 10 per
cent in its population - from 52.5 million a decade ago to a mere 47.5
million last year. Demographers predict a precipitous decline of one third
in Russia's impoverished, inebriated, disillusioned, and ageing citizenry.
Births in many countries in the rich, industrialized, West are below the
replacement rate. These bastions of conspicuous affluence are shrivelling.
Scholars and decision-makers - once terrified by the Malthusian
dystopia of a "population bomb" - are more sanguine now.
Advances in agricultural technology eradicated hunger even in teeming
places like India and China. And then there is the old idea of progress:
birth rates tend to decline with higher education levels and growing
incomes. Family planning has had resounding successes in places as diverse
as Thailand, China, and western Africa.
In the near past, fecundity used to compensate for infant mortality. As
the latter declined - so did the former. Children are means of production
in many destitute countries. Hence the inordinately large families of the
past - a form of insurance against the economic outcomes of the inevitable
demise of some of one's off-spring.
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Yet, despite these trends, the world's populace is augmented by 80
million people annually. All of them are born to the younger inhabitants
of the more penurious corners of the Earth. There were only 1 billion
people alive in 1804. The number doubled a century later.
But our last billion - the sixth - required only 12 fertile years. The
entire population of Germany is added every half a decade to both India
and China. Clearly, Mankind's growth is out of control, as affirmed in the
1994 Cairo International Conference on Population and Development.
Dozens of millions of people regularly starve - many of them to death.
In only one corner of the Earth - southern Africa - food aid is the
sole subsistence of entire countries. More than 18 million people in
Zambia, Malawi, and Angola survived on charitable donations in 1992. More
than 10 million expect the same this year, among them the emaciated
denizens of erstwhile food exporter, Zimbabwe.
According to Medecins Sans Frontiere, AIDS kills 3 million people a
year, Tuberculosis another 2 million. Malaria decimates 2 people every
minute. More than 14 million people fall prey to parasitic and infectious
diseases every year - 90% of them in the developing countries.
Millions emigrate every year in search of a better life.
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These massive shifts are facilitated by modern modes of transportation.
But, despite these tectonic relocations - and despite famine, disease, and
war, the classic Malthusian regulatory mechanisms - the depletion of
natural resources - from arable land to water - is undeniable and
gargantuan.
Our pressing environmental issues - global warming, water stress,
salinization, desertification, deforestation, pollution, loss of
biological diversity - and our ominous social ills - crime at the
forefront - are traceable to one, politically incorrect, truth:
There are too many of us. We are way too numerous. The population load
is unsustainable. We, the survivors, would be better off if others were to
perish. Should population growth continue unabated - we are all doomed.
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