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Where Are the Children?
World Is âRunning Out of People,â Documentary Warns
BY Steve Weatherbe REGISTER CORRESPONDENT
October 4-10, 2009 Issue |
Posted 9/25/09 at 12:05 PM
SALT LAKE CITY â In Europe, town
squares are shown emptying of people. In China, children vanish from playground
swings. In America, acres of new homes go unsold.
These are some of the compelling
images from the 2008 documentary Demographic Winter
and its sequel of this spring, Demographic Bomb, signaling
the decline in the worldâs population.
Itâs a decline already begun in
parts of Europe and Japan.
Director Rick Stout and producer
Barry McLerran argue that contrary to conventional wisdom, the world is running
out of people, especially young ones.
And while the worldâs population
will rise until 2050 â to 9.2 billion people (mainly due to people living
longer) â after that it will begin an ever-steepening decline that includes
Africa, the Americas and Asia, according to the United Nations.
âWho will operate the factories and
farms in the Europe of the future?â Demographic Bomb
asks. âWho will develop the natural resources? ... Who will care for a graying
population? A burgeoning elderly population combined with a shrinking workforce
will lead to a train wreck for state pension systems.â
Itâs a different kind of train wreck
than has been predicted since the days of Thomas Malthus. And warnings of
overpopulation continue: Just a couple of weeks ago, the Royal Society of Great
Britain issued a report saying unchecked population growth is speeding climate
change and dooming many countries to poverty.
Unless birth rates are lowered
sharply through voluntary family-planning programs the population could reach
an unsustainable 11 billion people by 2050, says the report, prepared by 42
specialists in environmental science, economics and demography.
But, says McLerran, âGlobal warming
is only a theory. Declining fertility rates are fact that has already
happened.â He cites the U.N. prediction on 2050 and adds, âSome demographers
predict [population] will decline overall as soon as 2040.â
Demographic Bomb
looks at Russia, for example, where the country could lose a third of its
population within 40 years. And Moscow is concerned enough now to offer $9,000
to mothers for each child after her first.
Likewise, Portugalâs government is
considering charging higher pension payments to those who have fewer than two
children. Japan, which has the worldâs lowest birth rate outside of Europe, 1.25,
has a whole ministry devoted to reversing its decline.
In China, the government publicly
defends its one-child-per-family rule, but the municipal administration of
Shanghai is encouraging families to have two or more as it prepares to care for
its aging population.
Germany is closing hundreds of
schools a year, the film reports, and next door, one expert says in Demographic
Bomb, itâs conceivable that some day in the near future there will
not be a single person left in France of pure French descent.
As for the United States, its
population continues to grow only because of immigration or the higher
fertility of recent immigrants from Mexico. Native American fertility rates
have been falling for decades and according to the film, the impact has already
been felt economically.
One of the most telling interviews
is with investment analyst Harry Dent, who predicted in Demographic
Winter the recession that followed by calculating when the Baby Boom
generation would pass its peak spending period.
Falling populations mean less
consumption, a shrinking economy and a shrinking tax base. To support services
for the aged, governments will have to tax working people much more, the film
warns, as has already happened in Europe.
Expert Mistakes
Not everybody is worried. The second
film features an interview with Paul Ehrlich, the insect expert whose
best-selling book The Population Bomb
started the overpopulation scare in the late 1960s.
Ehrlich is sure âsome very smart
peopleâ are working on the economic consequences but makes clear he welcomes a
reduction in consumption. He cheerily points out the advantages of the decline,
first in the number of young people and then in everyone. Fewer men of working
age will also mean fewer men of criminal age. As for seniors, they will no
longer feel the pressure to retire but can contribute to society economically
âon into their 80s.â
Ehrlich is portrayed as a Cassandra
in reverse whose warnings are always wrong but who is doomed always to be
believed. His predictions of worldwide economic collapse triggered by the
starvation of hundreds of millions of Indians, Chinese and Africans have long
ago been proven false by the Green Revolution in farming technology and
genetics.
Said
American demographer Nicholas Eberstadt in an interview: âEhrlich did not take
into account the capabilities of the human race.â
There was a second mistake that
Ehrlich, the population controllers at the United Nations, the World Bank and
U.S. foundations all made, says Eberstadt. Their efforts at controlling the
population by reducing fertility were wrongheaded. âThe worldâs population
wasnât skyrocketing because people were breeding like rabbits, but because they
werenât dying like flies.â
Faithful to the Rescue?
Instead, factors such as later
marriages, women working, contraception, abortion and the overriding and
misplaced fear of overpopulation were all helping to bring birth rates down.
So far, government subsidy programs
designed to reverse the trend have proved disappointing. As producer McLerran
told the Register: âPeople need other reasons than economic ones to have
children.â
Providing hope rather than dollars
might work, says demographer Philip Longman. He suggests that the post-Second
World War GI Bill triggered the Baby Boom by providing college education â and
prospects of economic advancement â to millions of returning servicemen.
In Demographic Winter,
Longman also notes a strong correlation between religious faith and higher
fertility. Will devout Christians, Jews and Muslims repopulate Europe and
America? Longman doesnât complete the thought, on camera at least.
In the same vein, the films suggest
that indirect measures encouraging traditional families would help.
This is enough for Kathryn Joyce,
writing in The Nation, to label the film a
âpro-natalistâ attempt by the Christian right to promote a repressive sexual
morality and encourage more of the ârightâ babies â white ones.
McLerran responds that the problem
clearly cuts across all populations. And Longman, tarred by the same article,
says heâs not a member of the Christian right, but is just reporting the facts.
Steve Weatherbe writes from
Vancouver, British
Columbia.
Immodest Proposal: Cut Warming by Cutting Family Size
A British group that wants the United Kingdomâs population cut by two-thirds is recommending family planning as the best way to reduce global warming.
The proposal from the Optimum Population Trust, which calls for Britainâs population to drop from 61 million to 17 million, is called âFewer Emitters, Lower Emissions, Less Cost.â
It recommends efforts to reduce global warming be concentrated on the distribution and promotion of contraceptives and increased access to abortion because these are more cost-effective than money spent on reducing CO2 emissions from motor vehicles and industry.
âConsidered purely as a method of reducing future CO2 emissions,â the report calculates that âeach $7 spent on basic family planning over the next four decades would reduce global CO2 emissions by more than a ton. To achieve the same result with low-carbon technologies would cost a minimum of $32.â Such a program would prevent 34 billion tons of CO2 by 2050 (the year, the report didnât mention, the United Nations predicts the world population will begin to decline anyway).
The trustâs chairman, Richard Martin, said that any talk of reducing CO2 levels that ignored population growth was âunreal.â
âThe carbon tonnage canât shoot down, as we want, while the population keeps shooting up,â Martin said.
The proposal was immediately mocked by London Telegraph columnist Gerald Warner, who asked, âWhy not save 80 billion tons by ending pregnancy altogether? There is one sure way to prevent man-made global warming and that is to abolish man. It must be a very tempting option for those at the U.N. and its parasite agencies who would prefer to see the planet reserved exclusively for the natterjack toad, the smallpox virus and other engaging creatures.â
Warner also attacked the reportâs premise, contending âthe total human contribution to atmospheric CO2 is minisculeâ and, anyway, many scientists argue that the globe is not warming.
But the Optimum Population Trust, in its Sept. 9 news release, cites U.N. claims that 40% of all pregnancies are unintended and that family planning would eliminate 72% of these, reducing the worldâs population by half a billion in 2050 from its projected peak of 9.2 billion â still a long way to drop before reaching the trustâs target for the world of 2.7 billion.
Demographer Nicholas Eberstadt finds the idea that people are having 40% more babies than they want absurd. âThe worldâs current birth rate is 2.5 babies per mother; 40% less would make it 1.5%. Do they seriously believe the desired family size in the world is one and a half children?â
Eberstadt, a scholar at the Washington-based American Enterprise Institute, says that the strongest predictor of family size isnât income, religion or culture. âItâs how many children the parents want.â
John Smeaton, director of the London-based Society for the Protection of Unborn Children, told the Register the âFewer Emittersâ report ârepresents the worst sort of social engineering.â
The kind of government intervention in family decisions, he went on to say, âwas predicted by Pope Paul VI in his encyclical Humanae Vitae (The Regulation of Birth).â
Smeaton also questioned the idea that 40% of the worldâs children were unintended. âThatâs just crazy.â The bottom line, Smeaton said, is that âthis is a matter for individual couples to decide and not for governments and agencies to impose on whole populations.â
Meanwhile, the seriousness of global warming was undermined by the latest data indicating the process had stopped. So reported one of the worldâs leading climate modelers, Mojib Latif of the Germanyâs Leibniz Institute, at the U.N.âs World Climate Conference in Geneva last month.
According to Latif, there has been no warming for a decade and the world is facing one or two decades of cooling.
â Steve Weatherbe
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