Population 7 Billion
There will soon be seven
billion people on the planet. By 2045 global population is projected to reach
nine billion. Can the planet take the strain?
One day in Delft in the fall of 1677, Antoni van Leeuwenhoek, a
cloth merchant who is said to have been the long-haired model for two paintings
by Johannes Vermeer—“The Astronomer” and “The Geographer”—abruptly stopped what
he was doing with his wife and rushed to his worktable. Cloth was Leeuwenhoek’s
business but microscopy his passion. He’d had five children already by his
first wife (though four had died in infancy), and fatherhood was not on his
mind. “Before six beats of the pulse had intervened,” as he later wrote to the
Royal Society of London, Leeuwenhoek was examining his perishable sample
through a tiny magnifying glass. Its lens, no bigger than a small raindrop,
magnified objects hundreds of times. Leeuwenhoek had made it himself; nobody
else had one so powerful. The learned men in London were still trying to verify
Leeuwenhoek’s earlier claims that unseen “animalcules” lived by the millions in
a single drop of lake water and even in French wine. Now he had something more
delicate to report: Human semen contained animalcules too. “Sometimes more than
a thousand,” he wrote, “in an amount of material the size of a grain of sand.”
Pressing the glass to his eye like a jeweler, Leeuwenhoek watched his own animalcules
swim about, lashing their long tails. One imagines sunlight falling through
leaded windows on a face lost in contemplation, as in the Vermeers. One feels
for his wife.
Leeuwenhoek became a bit obsessed after that. Though his tiny
peephole gave him privileged access to a never-before-seen microscopic
universe, he spent an enormous amount of time looking at spermatozoa, as
they’re now called. Oddly enough, it was the milt he squeezed from a cod one
day that inspired him to estimate, almost casually, just how many people might
live on Earth.
Nobody then really had any idea; there were few censuses.
Leeuwenhoek started with an estimate that around a million people lived in
Holland. Using maps and a little spherical geometry, he calculated that the
inhabited land area of the planet was 13,385 times as large as Holland. It was
hard to imagine the whole planet being as densely peopled as Holland, which
seemed crowded even then. Thus, Leeuwenhoek concluded triumphantly, there
couldn’t be more than 13.385 billion people on Earth—a small number indeed
compared with the 150 billion sperm cells of a single codfish! This cheerful
little calculation, writes population biologist Joel Cohen in his book How
Many People Can the Earth Support?, may have been the first attempt to give
a quantitative answer to a question that has become far more pressing now than
it was in the 17th century. Most answers these days are far from cheerful.
Historians now estimate that in Leeuwenhoek’s day there were
only half a billion or so humans on Earth. After rising very slowly for
millennia, the number was just starting to take off. A century and a half
later, when another scientist reported the discovery of human egg cells, the
world’s population had doubled to more than a billion. A century after that,
around 1930, it had doubled again to two billion. The acceleration since then
has been astounding. Before the 20th century, no human had lived through a
doubling of the human population, but there are people alive today who have
seen it triple. Sometime in late 2011, according to the UN Population Division,
there will be seven billion of us. (Pictures:
Population 7 Billion.)
And the explosion, though it is slowing, is far from over. Not
only are people living longer, but so many women across the world are now in
their childbearing years—1.8 billion—that the global population will keep
growing for another few decades at least, even though each woman is having
fewer children than she would have had a generation ago. By 2050 the total
number could reach 10.5 billion, or it could stop at eight billion—the
difference is about one child per woman. UN demographers consider the middle road
their best estimate: They now project that the population may reach nine
billion before 2050—in 2045. The eventual tally will depend on the choices
individual couples make when they engage in that most intimate of human acts,
the one Leeuwenhoek interrupted so carelessly for the sake of science.
With the population still growing by about 80 million each year,
it’s hard not to be alarmed. Right now on Earth, water tables are falling, soil
is eroding, glaciers are melting, and fish stocks are vanishing. Close to a
billion people go hungry each day. Decades from now, there will likely be two
billion more mouths to feed, mostly in poor countries. There will be billions
more people wanting and deserving to boost themselves out of poverty. If they
follow the path blazed by wealthy countries—clearing forests, burning coal and
oil, freely scattering fertilizers and pesticides—they too will be stepping
hard on the planet’s natural resources. How exactly is this going to work?
THERE MAY BE SOME COMFORT in knowing that people have long been
alarmed about population. From the beginning, says French demographer Hervé Le
Bras, demography has been steeped in talk of the apocalypse. Some of the
field’s founding papers were written just a few years after Leeuwenhoek’s discovery
by Sir William Petty, a founder of the Royal Society. He estimated that world
population would double six times by the Last Judgment, which was expected in
about 2,000 years. At that point it would exceed 20 billion people—more, Petty
thought, than the planet could feed. “And then, according to the prediction of
the Scriptures, there must be wars, and great slaughter, &c.,” he wrote.
As religious forecasts of the world’s end receded, Le Bras
argues, population growth itself provided an ersatz mechanism of apocalypse.
“It crystallized the ancient fear, and perhaps the ancient hope, of the end of
days,” he writes. In 1798 Thomas Malthus, an English priest and economist,
enunciated his general law of population: that it necessarily grows faster than
the food supply, until war, disease, and famine arrive to reduce the number of
people. As it turned out, the last plagues great enough to put a dent in global
population had already happened when Malthus wrote. World population hasn’t
fallen, historians think, since the Black Death of the 14th century.
In the two centuries after Malthus declared that population
couldn’t continue to soar, that’s exactly what it did. The process started in
what we now call the developed countries, which were then still developing. The
spread of New World crops like corn and the potato, along with the discovery of
chemical fertilizers, helped banish starvation in Europe. Growing cities
remained cesspools of disease at first, but from the mid-19th century on,
sewers began to channel human waste away from drinking water, which was then
filtered and chlorinated; that dramatically reduced the spread of cholera and
typhus.
Moreover in 1798, the same year that Malthus published his
dyspeptic tract, his compatriot Edward Jenner described a vaccine for
smallpox—the first and most important in a series of vaccines and antibiotics
that, along with better nutrition and sanitation, would double life expectancy
in the industrializing countries, from 35 years to 77 today. It would take a
cranky person to see that trend as gloomy: “The development of medical science
was the straw that broke the camel’s back,” wrote Stanford population biologist
Paul Ehrlich in 1968.
Ehrlich’s book, The Population Bomb, made him the
most famous of modern Malthusians. In the 1970s, Ehrlich predicted, “hundreds
of millions of people are going to starve to death,” and it was too late to do
anything about it. “The cancer of population growth … must be cut out,” Ehrlich wrote, “by compulsion if voluntary
methods fail.” The very
future of the United States was at risk. In spite or perhaps because of such
language, the book was a best seller, as Malthus’s had been. And this time too
the bomb proved a dud. The green revolution—a combination of high-yield seeds,
irrigation, pesticides, and fertilizers that enabled grain production to
double—was already under way. Today many people are undernourished, but mass
starvation is rare.
Ehrlich was right, though, that population would surge as
medical science spared many lives. After World War II the developing countries
got a sudden transfusion of preventive care, with the help of institutions like
the World Health Organization and UNICEF. Penicillin, the smallpox vaccine, DDT
(which, though later controversial, saved millions from dying of malaria)—all
arrived at once. In India life expectancy went from 38 years in 1952 to 64
today; in China, from 41 to 73. Millions of people in developing countries who
would have died in childhood survived to have children themselves. That’s why
the population explosion spread around the planet: because a great many people
were saved from dying.
And because, for a time, women kept giving birth at a high rate.
In 18th-century Europe or early 20th-century Asia, when the average woman had
six children, she was doing what it took to replace herself and her mate,
because most of those children never reached adulthood. When child mortality
declines, couples eventually have fewer children—but that transition usually
takes a generation at the very least. Today in developed countries, an average
of 2.1 births per woman would maintain a steady population; in the developing
world, “replacement fertility” is somewhat higher. In the time it takes for the
birthrate to settle into that new balance with the death rate, population
explodes.
Demographers call this evolution the demographic transition. All
countries go through it in their own time. It’s a hallmark of human progress:
In a country that has completed the transition, people have wrested from nature
at least some control over death and birth. The global population explosion is
an inevitable side effect, a huge one that some people are not sure our
civilization can survive. But the growth rate was actually at its peak just as
Ehrlich was sounding his alarm. By the early 1970s, fertility rates around the
world had begun dropping faster than anyone had anticipated. Since then, the
population growth rate has fallen by more than 40 percent.
THE FERTILITY DECLINE that is now sweeping the planet started at
different times in different countries. France was one of the first. By the
early 18th century, noblewomen at the French court were knowing carnal
pleasures without bearing more than two children. They often relied on the same
method Leeuwenhoek used for his studies: withdrawal, or coitus interruptus.
Village parish records show the trend had spread to the peasantry by the late
18th century; by the end of the 19th, fertility in France had fallen to three
children per woman—without the help of modern contraceptives. The key
innovation was conceptual, not contraceptive, says Gilles Pison of the National
Institute for Demographic Studies in Paris. Until the Enlightenment, “the
number of children you had, it was God who decided. People couldn’t fathom that
it might be up to them.”
Other countries in the West eventually followed France’s lead.
By the onset of World War II, fertility had fallen close to the replacement
level in parts of Europe and the U.S. Then, after the surprising blip known as
the baby boom, came the bust, again catching demographers off guard. They
assumed some instinct would lead women to keep having enough children to ensure
the survival of the species. Instead, in country after developed country, the
fertility rate fell below replacement level. In the late 1990s in Europe it
fell to 1.4. “The evidence I’m familiar with, which is anecdotal, is that women
couldn’t care less about replacing the species,” Joel Cohen says.
The end of a baby boom can have two big economic effects on a
country. The first is the “demographic dividend”—a blissful few decades when
the boomers swell the labor force and the number of young and old dependents is
relatively small, and there is thus a lot of money for other things. Then the
second effect kicks in: The boomers start to retire. What had been considered
the enduring demographic order is revealed to be a party that has to end. The
sharpening American debate over Social Security and last year’s strikes in
France over increasing the retirement age are responses to a problem that
exists throughout the developed world: how to support an aging population. “In
2050 will there be enough people working to pay for pensions?” asks Frans
Willekens, director of the Netherlands Interdisciplinary Demographic Institute
in The Hague. “The answer is no.”
In industrialized countries it took generations for fertility to
fall to the replacement level or below. As that same transition takes place in
the rest of the world, what has astonished demographers is how much faster it
is happening there. Though its population continues to grow, China, home to a
fifth of the world’s people, is already below replacement fertility and has
been for nearly 20 years, thanks in part to the coercive one-child policy
implemented in 1979; Chinese women, who were bearing an average of six children
each as recently as 1965, are now having around 1.5. In Iran, with the support
of the Islamic regime, fertility has fallen more than 70 percent since the
early ’80s. In Catholic and democratic Brazil, women have reduced their
fertility rate by half over the same quarter century. “We still don’t
understand why fertility has gone down so fast in so many societies, so many
cultures and religions. It’s just mind-boggling,” says Hania Zlotnik, director
of the UN Population Division.
“At this moment, much as I want to say there’s still a problem
of high fertility rates, it’s only about 16 percent of the world population,
mostly in Africa,” says Zlotnik. South of the Sahara, fertility is still five
children per woman; in Niger it is seven. But then, 17 of the countries in the
region still have life expectancies of 50 or less; they have just begun the
demographic transition. In most of the world, however, family size has shrunk
dramatically. The UN projects that the world will reach replacement fertility
by 2030. “The population as a whole is on a path toward nonexplosion—which is good
news,” Zlotnik says.
The bad news is that 2030 is two decades away and that the
largest generation of adolescents in history will then be entering their
childbearing years. Even if each of those women has only two children,
population will coast upward under its own momentum for another quarter
century. Is a train wreck in the offing, or will people then be able to live
humanely and in a way that doesn’t destroy their environment? One thing is
certain: Close to one in six of them will live in India.
I have understood the population explosion intellectually for a
long time. I came to understand it emotionally one stinking hot night in Delhi
a couple of years ago… The temperature was well over 100, and the air was a
haze of dust and smoke. The streets seemed alive with people. People eating,
people washing, people sleeping. People visiting, arguing, and screaming.
People thrusting the ir hands through the taxi window, begging. People defecating and
urinating. People clinging to buses. People herding animals. People, people,
people, people.—Paul Ehrlich
In 1966, when Ehrlich took that taxi ride, there were around
half a billion Indians. There are 1.2 billion now. Delhi’s population has
increased even faster, to around 22 million, as people have flooded in from small
towns and villages and crowded into sprawling shantytowns. Early last June in
the stinking hot city, the summer monsoon had not yet arrived to wash the dust
from the innumerable construction sites, which only added to the dust that
blows in from the deserts of Rajasthan. On the new divided highways that funnel
people into the unplanned city, oxcarts were heading the wrong way in the fast
lane. Families of four cruised on motorbikes, the women’s scarves flapping like
vivid pennants, toddlers dangling from their arms. Families of a dozen or more
sardined themselves into buzzing, bumblebee-colored auto rickshaws designed for
two passengers. In the stalled traffic, amputees and wasted little children
cried for alms. Delhi today is boomingly different from the city Ehrlich
visited, and it is also very much the same.
At Lok Nayak Hospital, on the edge
of the chaotic and densely peopled nest of lanes that is Old Delhi, a human
tide flows through the entrance gate every morning and crowds inside on the
lobby floor. “Who could see this and not be worried about the population of
India?” a surgeon named Chandan Bortamuly asked one afternoon as he made his
way toward his vasectomy clinic. “Population is our biggest problem.” Removing
the padlock from the clinic door, Bortamuly stepped into a small operating
room. Inside, two men lay stretched out on examination tables, their testicles
poking up through holes in the green sheets. A ceiling fan pushed cool air from
two window units around the room.
Bortamuly is on the front lines of
a battle that has been going on in India for nearly 60 years. In 1952, just
five years after it gained independence from Britain, India became the first
country to establish a policy for population control. Since then the government
has repeatedly set ambitious goals—and repeatedly missed them by a mile. A
national policy adopted in 2000 called for the country to reach the replacement
fertility of 2.1 by 2010. That won’t happen for at least another decade. In the
UN’s medium projection, India’s population will rise to just over 1.6 billion
people by 2050. “What’s inevitable is that India is going to exceed the
population of China by 2030,” says A. R. Nanda, former head of the Population
Foundation of India, an advocacy group. “Nothing less than a huge catastrophe,
nuclear or otherwise, can change that.”
Sterilization is the dominant form
of birth control in India today, and the vast majority of the procedures are
performed on women. The government is trying to change that; a no-scalpel
vasectomy costs far less and is easier on a man than a tubal ligation is on a
woman. In the operating theater Bortamuly worked quickly. “They say the needle
pricks like an ant bite,” he explained, when the first patient flinched at the
local anesthetic. “After that it’s basically painless, bloodless surgery.”
Using the pointed tip of a forceps, Bortamuly made a tiny hole in the skin of
the scrotum and pulled out an oxbow of white, stringy vas deferens—the sperm
conduit from the patient’s right testicle. He tied off both ends of the oxbow
with fine black thread, snipped them, and pushed them back under the skin. In
less than seven minutes—a nurse timed him—the patient was walking out without
so much as a Band-Aid. The government will pay him an incentive fee of 1,100
rupees (around $25), a week’s wages for a laborer.
The Indian government tried once
before to push vasectomies, in the 1970s, when anxiety about the population
bomb was at its height. Prime Minister Indira Gandhi and her son Sanjay used
state-of-emergency powers to force a dramatic increase in sterilizations. From
1976 to 1977 the number of operations tripled, to more than eight million. Over
six million of those were vasectomies. Family planning workers were pressured
to meet quotas; in a few states, sterilization became a condition for receiving
new housing or other government benefits. In some cases the police simply
rounded up poor people and hauled them to sterilization camps.
The excesses gave the whole
concept of family planning a bad name. “Successive governments refused to touch
the subject,” says Shailaja Chandra, former head of the National Population
Stabilisation Fund (NPSF). Yet fertility in India has dropped anyway, though
not as fast as in China, where it was nose-diving even before the draconian
one-child policy took effect. The national average in India is now 2.6 children
per woman, less than half what it was when Ehrlich visited. The southern half
of the country and a few states in the northern half are already at replacement
fertility or below.
In Kerala, on the southwest coast,
investments in health and education helped fertility fall to 1.7. The key,
demographers there say, is the female literacy rate: At around 90 percent, it’s
easily the highest in India. Girls who go to school start having children later
than ones who don’t. They are more open to contraception and more likely to
understand their options.
SO FAR THIS APPROACH, held up as a
model internationally, has not caught on in the poor states of northern
India—in the “Hindi belt” that stretches across the country just south of
Delhi. Nearly half of India’s population growth is occurring in Rajasthan,
Madhya Pradesh, Bihar, and Uttar Pradesh, where fertility rates still hover
between three and four children per woman. More than half the women in the
Hindi belt are illiterate, and many marry well before reaching the legal age of
18. They gain social status by bearing children—and usually don’t stop until
they have at least one son.
As an alternative to the Kerala
model, some point to the southern state of Andhra Pradesh, where sterilization
“camps”—temporary operating rooms often set up in schools—were introduced
during the ’70s and where sterilization rates have remained high as improved
hospitals have replaced the camps. In a single decade beginning in the early
1990s, the fertility rate fell from around three to less than two. Unlike in
Kerala, half of all women in Andhra Pradesh remain illiterate.
Amarjit Singh, the current
executive director of the NPSF, calculates that if the four biggest states of
the Hindi belt had followed the Andhra Pradesh model, they would have avoided
40 million births—and considerable suffering. “Because 40 million were born,
2.5 million children died,” Singh says. He thinks if all India were to adopt
high-quality programs to encourage sterilizations, in hospitals rather than
camps, it could have 1.4 billion people in 2050 instead of 1.6 billion.
Critics of the Andhra Pradesh
model, such as the Population Foundation’s Nanda, say Indians need better
health care, particularly in rural areas. They are against numerical targets
that pressure government workers to sterilize people or cash incentives that
distort a couple’s choice of family size. “It’s a private decision,” Nanda
says.
In Indian cities today, many couples
are making the same choice as their counterparts in Europe or America. Sonalde
Desai, a senior fellow at New Delhi’s National Council of Applied Economic
Research, introduced me to five working women in Delhi who were spending most
of their salaries on private-school fees and after-school tutors; each had one
or two children and was not planning to have more. In a nationwide survey of
41,554 households, Desai’s team identified a small but growing vanguard of
urban one-child families. “We were totally blown away at the emphasis parents
were placing on their children,” she says. “It suddenly makes you
understand—that is why fertility is going down.” Indian children on average are
much better educated than their parents.
That’s less true in the countryside.
With Desai’s team I went to Palanpur, a village in Uttar Pradesh—a Hindi-belt
state with as many people as Brazil. Walking into the village we passed a cell
phone tower but also rivulets of raw sewage running along the lanes of small
brick houses. Under a mango tree, the keeper of the grove said he saw no reason
to educate his three daughters. Under a neem tree in the center of the village,
I asked a dozen farmers what would improve their lives most. “If we could get a
little money, that would be wonderful,” one joked.
The goal in India should not be
reducing fertility or population, Almas Ali of the Population Foundation told
me when I spoke to him a few days later. “The goal should be to make the
villages livable,” he said. “Whenever we talk of population in India, even
today, what comes to our mind is the increasing numbers. And the numbers are
looked at with fright. This phobia has penetrated the mind-set so much that all
the focus is on reducing the number. The focus on people has been pushed to the
background.”
It was a four-hour drive back to
Delhi from Palanpur, through the gathering night of a Sunday. We sat in traffic
in one market town after another, each one hopping with activity that sometimes
engulfed the car. As we came down a viaduct into Moradabad, I saw a man pushing
a cart up the steep hill, piled with a load so large it blocked his view. I
thought of Ehrlich’s epiphany on his cab ride all those decades ago. People,
people, people, people—yes. But also an overwhelming sense of energy, of striving,
of aspiration.
THE ANNUAL meeting of the
Population Association of America (PAA) is one of the premier gatherings of the
world’s demographers. Last April the global population explosion was not on the
agenda. “The problem has become a bit passé,” Hervé Le Bras says. Demographers
are generally confident that by the second half of this century we will be
ending one unique era in history—the population explosion—and entering another,
in which population will level out or even fall.
But will there be too many of us?
At the PAA meeting, in the Dallas Hyatt Regency, I learned that the current
population of the planet could fit into the state of Texas, if Texas were
settled as densely as New York City. The comparison made me start thinking like
Leeuwenhoek. If in 2045 there are nine billion people living on the six
habitable continents, the world population density will be a little more than
half that of France today. France is not usually considered a hellish place.
Will the world be hellish then?
Some parts of it may well be; some
parts of it are hellish today. There are now 21 cities with populations larger
than ten million, and by 2050 there will be many more. Delhi adds hundreds of
thousands of migrants each year, and those people arrive to find that “no plans
have been made for water, sewage, or habitation,” says Shailaja Chandra. Dhaka
in Bangladesh and Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of the Congo are 40 times
larger today than they were in 1950. Their slums are filled with desperately
poor people who have fled worse poverty in the countryside.
Whole countries today face
population pressures that seem as insurmountable to us as India’s did to
Ehrlich in 1966. Bangladesh is among the most densely populated countries in
the world and one of the most immediately threatened by climate change; rising
seas could displace tens of millions of Bangladeshis. Rwanda is an equally
alarming case. In his bookCollapse, Jared Diamond argued that the
genocidal massacre of some 800,000 Rwandans in 1994 was the result of several
factors, not only ethnic hatred but also overpopulation—too many farmers
dividing the same amount of land into increasingly small pieces that became
inadequate to support a farmer’s family. “Malthus’s worst-case scenario may
sometimes be realized,” Diamond concluded.
Many people are justifiably
worried that Malthus will finally be proved right on a global scale—that the
planet won’t be able to feed nine billion people. Lester Brown, founder of
Worldwatch Institute and now head of the Earth Policy Institute in Washington,
believes food shortages could cause a collapse of global civilization. Human
beings are living off natural capital, Brown argues, eroding soil and depleting
groundwater faster than they can be replenished. All of that will soon be
cramping food production. Brown’s Plan B to save civilization would put the
whole world on a wartime footing, like the U.S. after Pearl Harbor, to
stabilize climate and repair the ecological damage. “Filling the family
planning gap may be the most urgent item on the global agenda,” he writes, so
if we don’t hold the world’s population to eight billion by reducing fertility,
the death rate may increase instead.
Eight billion corresponds to the
UN’s lowest projection for 2050. In that optimistic scenario, Bangladesh has a
fertility rate of 1.35 in 2050, but it still has 25 million more people than it
does today. Rwanda’s fertility rate also falls below the replacement level, but
its population still rises to well over twice what it was before the genocide.
If that’s the optimistic scenario, one might argue, the future is indeed bleak.
But one can also draw a different
conclusion—that fixating on population numbers is not the best way to confront
the future. People packed into slums need help, but the problem that needs
solving is poverty and lack of infrastructure, not overpopulation. Giving every
woman access to family planning services is a good idea—“the one strategy that
can make the biggest difference to women’s lives,” Chandra calls it. But the
most aggressive population control program imaginable will not save Bangladesh
from sea level rise, Rwanda from another genocide, or all of us from our
enormous environmental problems.
Global warming is a good example.
Carbon emissions from fossil fuels are growing fastest in China, thanks to its
prolonged economic boom, but fertility there is already below replacement; not
much more can be done to control population. Where population is growing
fastest, in sub-Saharan Africa, emissions per person are only a few percent of
what they are in the U.S.—so population control would have little effect on
climate. Brian O’Neill of the National Center for Atmospheric Research has calculated
that if the population were to reach 7.4 billion in 2050 instead of 8.9
billion, it would reduce emissions by 15 percent. “Those who say the whole
problem is population are wrong,” Joel Cohen says. “It’s not even the dominant
factor.” To stop global warming we’ll have to switch from fossil fuels to
alternative energy—regardless of how big the population gets.
The number of people does matter,
of course. But how people consume resources matters a lot more. Some of us
leave much bigger footprints than others. The central challenge for the future
of people and the planet is how to raise more of us out of poverty—the slum
dwellers in Delhi, the subsistence farmers in Rwanda—while reducing the impact
each of us has on the planet.
The World Bank has predicted that
by 2030 more than a billion people in the developing world will belong to the
“global middle class,” up from just 400 million in 2005. That’s a good thing.
But it will be a hard thing for the planet if those people are eating meat and
driving gasoline-powered cars at the same rate as Americans now do. It’s too
late to keep the new middle class of 2030 from being born; it’s not too late to
change how they and the rest of us will produce and consume food and energy.
“Eating less meat seems more reasonable to me than saying, ‘Have fewer
children!’ ” Le Bras says.
How many people can the Earth
support? Cohen spent years reviewing all the research, from Leeuwenhoek on. “I
wrote the book thinking I would answer the question,” he says. “I found out
it’s unanswerable in the present state of knowledge.” What he found instead was
an enormous range of “political numbers, intended to persuade people” one
way or the other.
For centuries population
pessimists have hurled apocalyptic warnings at the congenital optimists, who
believe in their bones that humanity will find ways to cope and even improve
its lot. History, on the whole, has so far favored the optimists, but history
is no certain guide to the future. Neither is science. It cannot predict the
outcome of People v. Planet, because all the
facts of the case—how many of us there will be and how we will live—depend on
choices we have yet to make and ideas we have yet to have. We may, for example,
says Cohen, “see to it that all children are nourished well enough to learn in
school and are educated well enough to solve the problems they will face as
adults.” That would change the future significantly.
The debate was present at the
creation of population alarmism, in the person of Rev. Thomas Malthus himself.
Toward the end of the book in which he formulated the iron law by which
unchecked population growth leads to famine, he declared that law a good thing:
It gets us off our duffs. It leads us to conquer the world. Man, Malthus wrote,
and he must have meant woman too, is “inert, sluggish, and averse from labour,
unless compelled by necessity.” But necessity, he added, gives hope:
“The exertions that men find it
necessary to make, in order to support themselves or families, frequently
awaken faculties that might otherwise have lain for ever dormant, and it has
been commonly remarked that new and extraordinary situations generally create
minds adequate to grapple with the difficulties in which they are involved.”
Seven billion of us soon, nine
billion in 2045. Let’s hope that Malthus was right about our ingenuity.
Source: National Geographic
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