world-wide, that's down from an average of 5 children per woman as recently as the early
1950s.
And -- even more frustrating to those
seeking an excuse for strong central governments to impose harsh controls -- it turns out
the true answer to the population "problem" is not some form of infanticide
combined with careful government rationing of limited resources, but rather prosperity and
free-market capitalism, which have demonstrated a resilient tendency to locate ever more
resources, and to distribute them so efficiently that life expectancies and standards of
living have actually gone up, not down.
Nations with the lowest rate of
births -- without the kind of draconian limits on family size espoused by those past
masters of centralized planning, the Communist Chinese -- turn out to be free economies
like Germany, Italy, Greece, and the Czech Republic, with current reproduction rates all
falling between 1.15 and 1.30. Nations with the highest fertility rates remain those that
still live under various forms of feudal kleptocracy or collectivist tyranny, including
Uganda, Afghanistan, Nigeria, and Angola -- where rates still run from 6.80 to 7.25, in
part because parents in such benighted cultures simply don't expect most of their
children to live.
But even at those rates, world
population growth is down from 2 percent a year in 1960 to 1.3 percent today, and is
expected -- even by the United
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Nations -- to drop below the no-growth level of 0.3 percent by the year 2050.
Yes, world population may still climb
to 8 billion in the next 50 years -- an increase of about 33 percent. But that will have a
far smaller impact than the tripling of the world population from 1927 to 1999. And
at that point, it actually appears human population could start to fall.
"Many people would be surprised
to learn that the growth rate is declining," U.N. demographer Thomas Buettner told
the Los Angeles Times last week. "People think it's out of control, that the
population is growing like cancer. But if you look hard, you see many signs ... that
stabilization will occur, or go into the negative. People are controlling their own lives
and this has impacts on the number of children we have. We have virtually no country
anymore that has not started at least a modest fertility decline."
How about that. The "Population
Bomb": It's another dud.
Vin Suprynowicz is assistant editorial
page editor of the Las Vegas Review-Journal. His new book, "Send in the Waco Killers:
Essays on the Freedom Movement, 1993-1998," is available at $21.95 plus $3 shipping
through Mountain Media, P.O. Box 271122, Las Vegas, Nev. 89127. The 500-page trade
paperback may also be ordered via web site http://www.thespiritof76.com/wacokillers.html,
or at 1-800-244-2224. Volume discounts available.
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