In
an era of climate change, Malthus has made a return to popularity.
A
basic idea of the Socialist Party is that more
people
means
more ingenuity, more talent and more innovation, today, our
fellow-workers are being told by environmentalist activists it means
less for each of us. We get informed that we will need to radically
reduce humanity's footprint on the environment by reducing our
numbers, as well as changes to our lifestyles and that until the
world’s population stops growing, there is an urgent need to
squeeze people's consumption. Does pushing population growth down
actually put the environment on a more sustainable path? And if so
what measures would the policy makers have to apply to actually
bring about such a change? Those who believe reducing the population
to be a key to the global warming problem typically say little
about which policies would spare the planet many more billions of
people, particularly when the existing trend is already towards
smaller family sizes. There is an overall global decline in the
fertility rate, and many nations are no longer achieving replacement
levels of births.
The
Socialist Party says forget population control and instead help each
and every woman bear a child in good health when she chooses to have
a baby. It might sound counter-intuitive for stabilising and lowering
the population. Unintended pregnancies exceed the millions by which
world population grows every year. When a choice of contraceptives is
available and is backed up by reasonably accessible safe abortion for
when contraception fails, women have two or fewer children.
Furthermore, educating girls reduces birthrates. Analysis shows women
with no schooling have an average of 4.5 children, whereas those with
a few years of primary school have just three. Women who complete one
or two years of secondary school have an average of 1.9 children
apiece—a figure that over time leads to a decreasing population.
With one or two years of college, the average childbearing rate falls
even further, to 1.7. When women enter the workforce and interact with men on an
equal footing, their wish for more than a couple of children fades
even more dramatically. Many developing countries—from Thailand to
Colombia experience declines in family size by getting better
family-planning services and educational opportunities to more
females in more places.
Giving women control of their lives and their
bodies controls population growth.
No comments:
Post a Comment