The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on population growth: a small planet needs big solutions

- Editorial

In 1798, Thomas Malthus wrung his hands as he contemplat­ed the growing mass of humanity, warning: “The power of population is so superior to the power of the earth to produce subsistenc­e for man, that premature death must in some shape or other visit the human race.”

A few years after he wrote that essay, the global population hit 1 billion. Now, thanks to the exponentia­l growth which he described, it is closing in on 8 billion. The scholar’s direst warnings, echoed by others through the years, have not come to pass. But his concerns about the strain on resources have been multiplied by the climate crisis, with greenhouse gas emissions rising, and global heating in turn causing land loss and deteriorat­ion.

Now, a new report released this month suggests that the world’s population could stand at 2 billion less than United Nations projection­s by the end of the century. The research, led by the University of Washington and published in the Lancet, suggests that the earth’s population will peak at 9.6 billion in 2064 – rather than 11.2 billion in 2100, as the UN forecasts – thanks mostly to improved education for women and greater access to contracept­ion. Though the UN has an impressive track record in its forecasts to date, others too have suggested that fertility will fall more sharply than it predicts.

This may look like good news. But even on the lower population estimates, the strain on resources would be immense. Nor would the reduction save us from climate catastroph­e. Action must be taken now, not by future generation­s. And emissions are heavily dependent on economic circumstan­ces, policy and personal choices: what matters most is not how many people there are in the world, nor even where they live, but what they do.

The projection­s in the study also suggest that some existing challenges will be sharpened, with immense cultural, social and political effects to match their material impact. The number of old people will overtake the young; by 2100, there could be 2.4 billion people over the age of 65, compared with 1.7 billion under the age of 20. Developed countries are facing the problems of ageing and declining population­s first; the paper predicts that Japan’s population will halve, while Nigeria’s will almost quadruple. Many societies will face dying communitie­s

and younger workers may struggle to support large numbers of retirees.

The worst-case scenario, as the report’s lead author notes, could see countries reducing access to birth control in a peculiar mirror image of the Malthus-inspired sterilisat­ion campaigns and eugenics movements designed to head off growth. In contrast, planned and humane population movement – avoiding the creation of permanent underclass­es – could benefit both growing and shrinking countries.

Yet migration policies alone will not be enough. At present, countries seem to be turning away from cooperatio­n. But in a crowded world, where national population­s are on vastly diverging trajectori­es, we will – more than ever – need internatio­nal solutions.

 ?? Photograph: Eugene Hoshiko/AP ?? A report by the University of Washington predicts that Japan’s population will halve by by 2100.
Photograph: Eugene Hoshiko/AP A report by the University of Washington predicts that Japan’s population will halve by by 2100.

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