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Can We Afford So Many Americans?
by Dr. Norman Myers
The US [population] growth rate is 1.24 percent and far and away the
highest among developed countries, which average 0.1 percent. It is
even higher than China's. Only around half is made up of births, the
rest being due to immigration. All the same, American women produce an
average of 2.1 children, by contrast with 1.5 for most developed
countries; the US's year 2000 birth rate was the highest since 1971.
Of US births today, 26 percent rank as unplanned and 50 percent of
those are unwanted, both proportions putting the country in a league
of its own among developed countries. In France the amounts are 15
percent and 25 percent, roughly mirroring those of other developed
countries. During the 1990s the US population grew by 13 percent--the
largest 10-year population increase ever. Can the country consider
itself a truly developed nation with such a large proportion of its
population growth being "accidental?"
Yet ...the US has no population policy, nor has it any thought of
producing one. It even supplies munificent cash payments for a third
child. Meantime its growth rate means that, if it persists, the US
population (already the fourth biggest in the world) will soar to well
over twice its present 285 million by the time today's child becomes a
grandparent. Is this prospect what the future grandchildren--or even
today's Americans--want? According to a Roper public opinion survey, 72
percent of Americans worry that overpopulation will become "a serious
problem," and 59 percent think the US population is too big
already....How about reducing the 4.3 million births each year? Yet a
comprehensive population policy remains an absolute no-no.
Consider too the US's position among the family of nations. With only
4.6 percent of the world's population, it produces a whopping 25
percent of the world's carbon dioxide emissions which contribute half
of global warming processes. Put another way, an average American
consumes six times more fossil fuels, with all the pollution they
cause, than the global average. He or she consumes at least 50 times
more goods and services than an average Bangladeshi, including water,
grain, wood, steel and coal. Of course, the first four of these can be
used indefinitely through recycling and other renewability
technologies; regrettably they generally aren't. In any case,
America's agriculture, proclaimed the most bountiful in the world and
sufficient to supply surplus food to over 100 nations, is not nearly
so productive as it might seem. To grow one calorie of grain takes 10
calories of fossil fuels in the form of fertilizers, pesticides,
machinery fuel and the like. Truly, American agriculture is a case of
"eating oil," and it is anything but sustainable in the long run,
partly because of its over-loading of croplands and partly because
over half of America's oil now comes from other nations, many of them
less than friendly to the US.
All in all, the US causes more damage to the world's environments than
China and India with their combined populations of 2.3 billion--eight
times as many people.
Few people in Bangladesh--or in Cambodia, Madagascar, Bolivia and a
good number of other countries for that matter--drive gas-guzzling
cars, jet around the world, consume lots of grain-raised meat every
day, enjoy food that has traveled an average of over 1000 miles to
reach meal tables, sport several TVs with standby switches left on
permanently, accumulate piles of plastic junk and generate waste that
loads landfills to bursting point. Few countries have desertified so
much of their territory as has the western US through overgrazing by
livestock. Yet all these activities are called "growth." Key question:
Can the US--and the world--afford so many Americans?
Dr. Myers is a Fellow of Oxford University. He was a Senior Advisor to
the World Conference on Population and Development, and to the World
Summit on Sustainable Development. Reprinted with permission from
Population Press, www.popco.org
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