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- <text id=93HT0878>
- <title>
- 1988:Overpopulation:Too Many Mouths
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1988 Highlights
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- January 2, 1989
- PLANET OF THE YEAR, Page 48
- OVERPOPULATION
- Too Many Mouths
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>THE PROBLEM: Swarms of people are running out of food and space
- </p>
- <p>By Anastasia Toufexis
- </p>
- <p> Close to the Zocalo, Mexico City's great central square, lies
- the barrio of Morelos, a vast warren of dusty, potholed streets and
- narrow entryways. The passages lead to a gloomy world. On each side
- of a roofless patio is a ten-room jumble. Each room holds a family;
- each family averages five people. The only bathrooms--two to
- serve 100 people--are located at the back of the patio. The odor
- of grease and sewage permeates the air. Flies buzz relentlessly.
- The people who live here are considered lucky.
- </p>
- <p> In the shantytowns on Mexico City's outskirts, tens of
- thousands of people shelter in huts made of cardboard with aluminum
- roofs. There is no running water and no sanitation. The stench is
- overpowering: garbage and human waste heap up in piles. Rats roam
- freely, like stray domestic animals.
- </p>
- <p> To the more privileged, those scenes look like a
- science-fiction vision of civilization's breakdown, perhaps after
- a nuclear war. In fact, Mexico City has been described as the
- anteroom to an ecological Hiroshima. With 20 million residents--up from 9 million only 20 years ago--the Mexican capital is
- considered the most populous urban center on earth. Mexico City has
- been struck not by military weapons but by a population bomb.
- </p>
- <p> Ultimately, no problem may be more threatening to the earth's
- environment than the proliferation of the human species. Today the
- planet holds more than 5 billion people. During the next century,
- world population will double, with 90% of that growth occurring in
- poorer, developing countries. African nations are expanding at the
- fastest rate. During the next 30 years, for example, the population
- of Kenya (annual growth rate: 4%) will jump from 23 million to 79
- million; Nigeria's population (growth rate: 3%) will soar from 112
- million to 274 million. Expansion is slower in Brazil, China, India
- and Indonesia, but in those countries the sheer size of existing
- populations translates into a huge increase in people.
- </p>
- <p> In the poorest countries, growth rates are outstripping the
- national ability to provide the bare necessities--housing, fuel
- and food. Living trees are being chopped down for fuel, grasslands
- overgrazed by livestock, and croplands overplowed by desperate
- farmers. Horrifying images of starvation in northeastern Africa
- have captured world attention in the past decade. In India,
- according to government reports, 37% of the people cannot buy
- enough food to sustain themselves. Warned Shri B.B. Vohra, vice
- chairman of the Himachal Pradesh state land-use board in northern
- India: "We may be well on the way to producing a subhuman kind of
- race where people do not have enough energy to deal with their
- problems."
- </p>
- <p> Prospects are so dire that some environmentalists urge the
- world to adopt the goal of cutting in half the earth's population
- growth rate during the next decade. "That means a call for a
- two-child family for the world as a whole," explained Lester Brown,
- president of the Worldwatch Institute. "In some countries there may
- be a need to set a goal of one child per family." That is a
- daunting challenge. During the past decade, many of the world's
- poor nations condemned the notion of family planning as an
- imperialist and racist scheme touted by the developed world. Yet
- today virtually all Third World countries are committed to limiting
- population growth.
- </p>
- <p> But the effort needs to be speeded up. For starters,
- contraceptive information and devices should be available to every
- man or woman on earth who wants them. According to surveys by the
- United Nations and other organizations, fully half the 463 million
- married women in developing countries (excluding China) do not want
- more children. Yet many have little or no access to effective
- methods of birth control, such as the Pill and the intrauterine
- device (IUD). The World Bank estimates that making birth control
- readily available on a global basis would require that the $3
- billion now spent annually on family-planning services be increased
- to $8 billion by the year 2000. The increase in funds could shave
- projected world population from 10 billion to 8 billion over the
- next 60 years. However, few modern contraceptive methods are
- ideally suited to the daily lives of Third World citizens.
- Two-thirds of the 60 million users of condoms, diaphragms and
- sponges live in the industrialized world. Men in developing
- countries frequently view condoms as a threat to their masculine
- image; women often find diaphragms impractical since clean water
- for washing the device is scarce.
- </p>
- <p> The most popular form of population control in developing
- countries is sterilization. Some 98 million women and 35 million
- men around the world have resorted to that permanent solution. The
- other current mainstay is abortion, which the Worldwatch
- Institute's Brown called "a reflection of unmet family-planning
- needs." An estimated 28 million abortions are performed in Third
- World nations annually, and an additional 26 million in industrial
- countries. About half are illegal.
- </p>
- <p> New forms of birth control are desperately needed, and a few
- are slowly appearing. Last year a French pharmaceutical firm
- introduced RU 486, a drug that helps induce a relatively safe
- miscarriage when given to a woman in the early stages of pregnancy.
- Another recent arrival is Norplant, steroid-filled capsules that
- are embedded in a woman's arm and deliver contraceptive protection
- for five years. The implant is approved for use in twelve
- countries, including China, Thailand and Indonesia.
- </p>
- <p> But progress is too slow. Additional spending on contraceptive
- research and development is badly needed. In 1972 global spending
- was estimated at $74 million annually, a paltry sum compared with
- many Third World military budgets. The funding in 1983 was just $57
- million. One reason for the decrease was the Reagan
- Administration's antiabortion policy. U.S. contributions to
- international population-assistance programs declined 20% between
- 1985 and 1987, to about $230 million.
- </p>
- <p> Bruce Wilcox, president of the Institute for Sustainable
- Development, an environmental-research organization based in Palo
- Alto, Calif., declared that solutions to the population challenge
- will demand "fundamental changes in society." Ingrained cultural
- attitudes that promote high birthrates will have to be challenged.
- Many families in poor agrarian societies, for example, see children
- as a source of labor and a hedge against poverty in old age. People
- need to be taught that with lower infant mortality, fewer offspring
- can provide the same measure of security. In some societies,
- numerous progeny are viewed as symbols of virility. In Kenya's
- Nyanza province, a man named Denja boasts that he has fathered 497
- children.
- </p>
- <p> Of all entrenched values, religion presents perhaps the
- greatest obstacle to population control. Roman Catholics have
- fought against national family-planning efforts in Mexico, Kenya
- and the Philippines, while Muslim fundamentalists have done the
- same in Iran, Egypt and Pakistan. Still, religious objections need
- not entirely thwart population planning. Where such resistance is
- encountered, vigorous campaigns should be mounted to promote
- natural birth-control techniques, including the rhythm method and
- fertility delay through breast feeding.
- </p>
- <p> If there is a single key to population control in developing
- countries, experts agree, it lies in improving the social status
- of women. Third World women often have relatively few political or
- legal rights, and not many receive schooling that prepares them for
- roles outside the home. Said Robert Berg, president of the
- International Development Conference: "Expanding educational and
- employment opportunities for women is necessary for permanently
- addressing the population issue."
- </p>
- <p> The effect of special programs for women has been demonstrated
- in Bangladesh. In 1975 the government launched a project in which
- associations of rural village women were provided with start-up
- loans for launching small businesses, such as making pottery,
- raising poultry and running grocery stores. About 123,000 women are
- currently enrolled in the cooperative. At weekly meetings,
- health-care and contraceptive information are distributed among
- members. An extraordinary 75% of the co-op members of childbearing
- age use contraceptives, while nationwide only 35% of married women
- practice birth control.
- </p>
- <p> Ultimately, slowing the population juggernaut will depend on
- the ability of family-planning experts to create well-tailored
- programs for different societies and even for different segments
- of societies. But first, governments will have to raise public
- awareness and rally support for population control with a cohesive
- message about the dangers of rampant growth. India, one of the
- first countries to adopt a family-planning program, some 30 years
- ago, failed to forge a national will for the task, and the
- population is now growing at 2% a year.
- </p>
- <p> In contrast, China has galvanized its people behind a huge
- population-planning effort. Still, its program demonstrates just
- how difficult--and risky--social tinkering can be. The nation
- launched its "one-family, one-child" policy in 1979. The aim: to
- contain population at 1.2 billion by the year 2000. In pursuit of
- that goal, local authorities have offered such incentives as a
- monthly stipend until the sole child turns 14 and better housing.
- Penalties for violating the policy have included dismissal from
- government jobs and fines of up to a year's wages for urban
- workers. China's effort has had some distressing consequences.
- Women have been coerced into having abortions, and there have been
- reports of female infanticide by parents determined that their one
- child should be a boy. Moreover, officials have acknowledged that
- exceptions to the one-child rule have been frequently condoned,
- especially in rural areas. In fact, only 19% of Chinese couples
- have one child. Beijing has announced that the nation will miss its
- target: the country's projected population in the year 2000 is 1.27
- billion.
- </p>
- <p> Yet for all its failings, China's effort has produced results.
- The population growth rate, once among the highest in the world,
- has been slashed in half, to 1.4%. And the Chinese are determined
- to reduce the rate still further. The same formidable task will
- face other developing countries as they confront the population
- bomb. But confront it they must.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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