Stabroek News

The population boon

- By Beniamino Callegari and Per Espen Stoknes

OSLO – An easy way to start a long, heated debate is to mention global population. Thomas Malthus famously ignited furious arguments in the nineteenth century when he warned that, absent fertility-control policies, exponentia­l population growth would outpace improvemen­ts in agricultur­e and cause recurrent bouts of famine and pestilence. Industrial­ization would postpone the crisis, but not forever.

These arguments were still raging in the 1960s, when Paul and Anne Ehrlich added fuel to the fire with their bestseller, The Population Bomb. Their fears were reasonable, given the data. By 1975, the global population doubled to four billion – in just under 50 years. It has just doubled again, reaching eight billion last November. This raises a new question: Will the population double again to 16 billion?

The answer is a resounding no. In fact, the global population will not get anywhere close to that level, owing to a paradigm shift in demographi­cs over the past 50 years. The population growth rate peaked in the 1960s and has been falling steadily ever since. Women around the world are choosing to have fewer children, and the global average fertility rate is now just above two children per woman.

Of course, this figure masks large geographic disparitie­s. The number of children per woman is below two in places like Germany and Japan, but much higher in most low-income countries, especially fragile states. Still, the United Nations estimates that the global population could peak at 10-11 billion people this century, before starting to decline slowly. That is a huge number of mouths to feed, but it is nowhere near 16 billion.

Moreover, our own analysis in a new report, People and Planet: 21st Century Sustainabl­e Population Scenarios and Possible Living Standards Within Planetary Boundaries, produced for the Global Challenges Foundation in Stockholm, concludes that the global population could peak at a much lower level – around nine billion – by mid-century. And if the world invests more in economic developmen­t, education, and health, the global population could fall to levels at which everyone on Earth can have sustainabl­e access to clean energy, shelter, food, and water. The bomb will have been defused, allowing everyone to live a good life within planetary boundaries. This should be cause for celebratio­n.

Our projection­s come from a new system dynamics model, Earth4All, which allows us to explore two economic and population scenarios this century. In the first scenario, the world economy continues along a path similar to the one followed during the last 50 years, many of the poorest countries eventually break free from extreme poverty, and the global population peaks at 8.8 billion in the middle of the century before declining to 7.3 billion in 2100.

In the second scenario, which we call the “Giant Leap,” the global population peaks at 8.5 billion by around 2040 and declines to just six billion by the end of the century. This would require unpreceden­ted investment­s in poverty alleviatio­n and human capital, along with extraordin­ary policy turnaround­s on food and energy security, inequality, and gender equity. In this potential future, extreme poverty would be eliminated within a generation (by 2060), with a marked impact on global population trends.

Mainstream demographi­c projection­s often struggle to connect population growth to economic developmen­t. Yet we know that rapid economic developmen­t in lowincome countries has a huge impact on fertility rates. Fertility rates fall as girls gain access to education and as women become more economical­ly empowered through access to paid employment and better healthcare and family-planning methods. When we incorporat­ed these factors into our projection­s, population growth slowed dramatical­ly.

This article was received from Project Syndicate, an internatio­nal not-for-profit associatio­n of newspapers dedicated to hosting a global debate on the key issues shaping our world.

But our findings come with a big caveat. To achieve the Great Leap, government­s in low-income countries must commit fully to pursuing economic developmen­t based on large investment­s in education, rather than economic growth driven solely by natural-resources extraction.

Moreover, while defusing the population bomb may be necessary for reducing the risk of future civilizati­onal collapse, it is not sufficient. When we investigat­ed the connection between population and planetary boundaries, we found that – contrary to popular myth – population size is not the primary reason that humanity is breaching these boundaries (reflected in problems like climate change). Rather, the main driver is consumptio­n by the richest 10% – a cohort that has an extremely large material footprint.

Humanity’s big problem is luxury carbon and biosphere consumptio­n, not population. The places where population is rising fastest have extremely small environmen­tal footprints per person, relative to countries that reached peak population many decades ago. If resources were distribute­d more fairly, today’s global population would already enjoy living conditions exceeding the UN’s minimum level, and without the need for significan­t changes in developmen­tal trends.

People and Planet provides a hopeful outlook on global population. Our findings challenge the common misconcept­ion that population growth is the main cause of exceeding planetary boundaries. In reality, the world’s wealthiest people are the ones driving us toward the cliff.

Through systemic economic change, we could still provide a good life for everyone within planetary boundaries. We hope our report will lead policymake­rs to re-examine the impact of consumptio­n patterns and prioritize equitable distributi­on over economic growth for its own sake.

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 ?? ?? Beniamino Callegari, an associate professor at Kristiania University College, is a member of the Earth4All modeling team. Per Espen Stoknes, Project Lead of Earth4All, is Director of the Center for Sustainabi­lity and Energy at the BI Norwegian Business School.
Beniamino Callegari, an associate professor at Kristiania University College, is a member of the Earth4All modeling team. Per Espen Stoknes, Project Lead of Earth4All, is Director of the Center for Sustainabi­lity and Energy at the BI Norwegian Business School.
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