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- <text id=91TT2767>
- <title>
- Dec. 16, 1991: America Abroad
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Dec. 16, 1991 The Smile of Freedom
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- WORLD, Page 52
- AMERICA ABROAD
- How Bush Has Wimped Out
- </hdr><body>
- <p>By Strobe Talbott
- </p>
- <p> In 1968, when the U.S. was sinking into the quagmire of
- Vietnam, Robert McNamara resigned as Secretary of Defense and
- became president of the World Bank. Having retreated from the
- war against communism, he threw himself into the struggle
- against another enemy, which has turned out to be more robust
- and insidious: human misery so extreme and extensive that it can
- spread across borders in the form of marauding armies or
- refugees fleeing hunger and chaos.
- </p>
- <p> As McNamara quickly realized, the poorest countries were
- all but beyond help if their citizens brought babies into the
- world at a rate that defied the ability of society to make life
- worth living. In his inaugural speech after coming to the bank,
- he identified overpopulation as "one of the greatest barriers
- to economic growth and social well being." That was 23 years
- ago. There were 3.4 billion people on the planet.
- </p>
- <p> Five years later, the U.S. representative to the United
- Nations, an enlightened and conscientious fellow named George
- Bush, wrote that "success in the population field" might
- "determine whether we can resolve successfully the other great
- questions of peace, prosperity and individual rights that face
- the world." By then, there were an additional half a billion
- mouths to feed. Most of the increase had occurred in countries
- like Bangladesh, Egypt, Kenya and Nicaragua, with annual growth
- rates of around 3%, which means the population doubles every 23
- years.
- </p>
- <p> Now, with the world head count at 5.4 billion, McNamara,
- 75, has returned to the subject of the population explosion
- with a vengeance. Bush, by contrast--even though he is in a
- position to do much more good than a private citizen like
- McNamara--has wimped out in spectacular fashion.
- </p>
- <p> In a paper imposingly titled "A Global Population Policy
- to Advance Human Development in the 21st Century," to be issued
- this week by the U.N., McNamara estimates that a billion people
- are living in what he calls "absolute poverty," their lives "so
- characterized by malnutrition, illiteracy and disease as to be
- beneath any reasonable definition of human dignity," and that
- 40,000 children die each day. Yet he argues that the
- statistics, depressing as they are in many ways, still offer
- some grounds for hope--and a major incentive for action.
- </p>
- <p> Our species was on the earth a million years before it
- numbered 1 billion. That was in 1800. It took only 130 years to
- reach the second billion, 30 years to reach the third, 15 the
- fourth, 12 the fifth. The good news is that a graph of this
- exponential growth projected into the future forms an S curve,
- taking off slowly, then rising sharply, but eventually
- flattening out. Fertility rates--the average number of
- children per woman--have declined dramatically. In part that
- is because of severe limits on family size in the most populous
- country, China, but it is also due to the worldwide promotion
- of birth control by the U.N. and private organizations like the
- International Planned Parenthood Foundation.
- </p>
- <p> The trouble is, even if fertility rates in the Third World
- dropped immediately from around 4 births per woman to the
- "replacement level" of 2 (a baby to replace each parent), the
- population would still climb to more than 8 billion sometime in
- the middle of the next century. That is because the vast numbers
- of females born on the steepest part of the S curve in the '50s
- and '60s have generated "demographic momentum," a boom in
- childbearing that will last for some time to come.
- </p>
- <p> How big that baby boom is and how long it lasts will
- depend on what happens to fertility rates during the decade
- ahead. Jessica Mathews, vice president of the World Resources
- Institute, illustrates the point neatly: "A young woman today
- who bears three children instead of the six her mother may have
- borne will have 27 great-grandchildren instead of 216." If
- enough women follow that example--which means, above all,
- practicing contraception--the world's population may
- eventually stabilize at around 10 billion, rather than the 15
- billion some demographers predict. A human race twice as
- numerous as it is now might be able to feed itself and avoid
- disastrous social, political and environmental consequences.
- However, at three times today's level, there would be far
- greater risk of a Malthusian cataclysm.
- </p>
- <p> McNamara concludes by recommending that the U.N. help
- developing countries establish step-by-step, long-range
- programs, financed with the assistance of the World Bank, for
- coming as close as possible to zero population growth.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. should take the lead in this campaign, but it
- probably won't as long as Bush has anything to say about it. He
- cravenly repudiated his earlier championship of serious family
- planning when he went to work for Ronald Reagan. As President,
- Bush has kept in place his predecessor's withdrawal of U.S.
- payments to the U.N. Fund for Population Activities and
- International Planned Parenthood on the specious grounds that
- they support abortion.
- </p>
- <p> Bush continues to pay lip service to this canard out of
- fear of Republican right-wingers who claim to be "pro-life." In
- its implications for the slums and villages of the Third World,
- that slogan disguises a policy that is pro-death. Bush, who
- hopes that his standing as an international leader will help him
- next year, says his position has "evolved" after much
- "soul-searching." Soul-selling is more like it.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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