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This is the second social policy type idea I'll post
here. I promise I'll quit after this one. At least for a
while.
World population increase is accelerating. For the
most part, we have not been able to control this
and it's threatening to become one of the worlds
biggest problems. We're
a pretty serious hazard to
the biosphere, endangering endless ecosystems and
we're probably setting evolution back quite a bit.
Even if we do get some kind of control over global
processes, our version of nature will probably look
like Jocelyn Wildenstein.
Besides, I want to have a lot of elbow room and I
don't want all you people standing around in my
backyard.
In poverty stricken areas there currently
economical benefits to having many children: more
people to care for you when you get older. That's
not so good.
My suggestion is to offer a sterilization bonus to
everyone. And make it age related. Perhaps a 13
year old can get $50 and a 45 year old can get $10.
Wise people will invest this money.
You may adjust the ages and numbers as you see
fit.
It should be quite possible to fund this. There's
plenty of money. I'll leave the details up to you.
But...
http://thethoughtst...penhbighoaxpett.jpg [2 fries shy of a happy meal, Apr 05 2012]
World Population to 2300
http://www.un.org/e...rldPop2300final.pdf PDF [ytk, Apr 05 2012]
A Modest Proposal
http://art-bin.com/art/omodest.html Prior Art; Jonathan Swift's slightly more radical scheme from 1729 [8th of 7, Apr 05 2012]
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didn't we just do this a couple weeks ago ? |
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Eh yes, but I chickened out and deleted it. |
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This is based on the premise that overpopulation
is a problem that needs to be addressed. In fact,
that's far from
the case. Based on extrapolation from current
trends, the general consensus among the sort of
scientists that
study such things is that the world's population is
expected to reach a plateau sometime in the next
40-50 years.
This is because population growth rates tend to
be inversely correlated with quality of life, and so
as the general
quality of life improves people have fewer
children. |
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In fact, if you're concerned with overpopulation
and substantial evidence shows that you needn't
bethe best
way to address it is not directly through
sterilization programs (which have never been
shown to work and are
laden with thorny ethical issues), but to simply
work towards improving the quality of life in the
poorest
countries, where the growth rate is highest. The
sooner we can bring these countries into the
modern age, the
sooner we'll reach the population plateau. But
we'll get there eventually regardless. Settle down
and quit
stressing about overpopulation. |
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Thankyou ytk! I hate it when people focus on
overpopulation like it's the end of the world. It's the
asteroid we need to be concerned with. |
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I can't share your optimism, [ytk]. The 'population stability through prosperity' theory is vanishingly unlikely to manifest in reality, in my opinion. Bringing the entire world into the modern age and then waiting to see what happens may be a nightmare scenario. |
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How could having a more educated and healthy planet
possibly be a bad thing? It does manifest in reality all the
time - wealthier people with more education have less kids
in the first world, why shouldn't the principle apply to the
rest of the world? |
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My favoritest comic strip yet! [link] |
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//How could having a more educated and healthy planet possibly be a bad thing?// I feel you are putting words in my mouth, to some extent. I never said that health and education were bad. I just think that that is an extraordinary claim, requiring extraordinary evidence. And isn't it clear that 'manifest in reality' means an actual, long-term stable population, combined with prosperity, over the entire world? A mere correlation between lower fertility and higher consumption does not make such a thing probable, for statistical, biological, and resource reasons. |
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I live in one of the wealthiest countries on earth, and at present population growth rates, in a mere million years, our descendants alone will have filled the universe such that each citizen will have lebensraum vanishingly smaller than quark. Yes, I know that sounds ridiculous, but it's precisely why no-one talks about population projections more than a few decades into the future - beyond that, whichever way you slice it, it's seriously messed up. |
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Seriously, do the population projections for just a few hundred years. Assume that prosperity will rapidly increase to, say, US middle class standards globally, and that population growth rates will decrease to first world levels. Then work out how much nice stuff we'll have left. |
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//I live in one of the wealthiest countries on earth,
and at present population growth
rates, in a mere million years, our descendants alone
will have filled the universe such
that each citizen will have lebensraum vanishingly
smaller than quark.// |
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This statement is a reductio ad absurdum of your
entire argument. The only logical
conclusion one can reasonably make from that
statement would be that the population growth rate
is therefore guaranteed to decrease in the future. |
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Making any statement regarding the future
population based on "present population
growth rates" is misleading. You're ignoring the rate
of change in the population growth
rate. For example, if the population is currently
growing at a rate of 10% per year, but
that rate is decreasing at a constant rate of 1% per
year, do the math and see what the
population will be in 100 years. I'll give you a hint:
year 100 sees a 90% DECREASE in the
population under this projection. |
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That's essentially what has been happening in the
developed world over the last few
decades (of course, not to nearly the same degree).
While total population in these
countries is on the rise, the rate of population
increase has been steadily decreasing. |
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//Seriously, do the population projections for just a
few hundred years. Assume that
prosperity will rapidly increase to, say, US middle
class standards globally, and that
population growth rates will decrease to first world
levels. Then work out how much nice
stuff we'll have left.// |
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These projections have been done, again and again,
and as I said before, the prevailing
scientific thought is that the world population will
level out in roughly half a century. If
you choose to ignore this fact, and cling to
demonstrably bad science, then I guess that's
your business. |
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//wealthier people with more education have less kids in the first world, why shouldn't the principle apply to the rest of the world?// |
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what principle ? and why should it ? The major difference is that the third world is having their bootstraps hauled up by the first world. Why shouldn't they expect that to continue in perpetua ? |
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With respect, I don't think I'm stubbornly clinging to anything, except that the idea that global population will stabilise over the long term due to global prosperity is an extraordinary claim, requiring extraordinary evidence. You seem to be stating it as fact; I'm not entirely ruling it out, I just think it's highly unlikely. As far as I can tell, most projections show population in most regions, and in the world as a whole, increasing over the next several decades. |
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To be clear, I'm not denying that there is sometimes a link between prosperity and low fertility (for example, in present day Europe). But it's drawing a long bow to extrapolate that to the future of the entire planet. Over the long term, through periods of relative prosperity and scarcity, the only exceptions to the rule of population increase have been almost insignificant blips, caused not by plenty, but by disease and war. And: |
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"The highest rates of growth global increases above 1.8% per year were seen briefly during the 1950s, and for a longer period during the 1960s and 1970s.", |
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a period of unrivalled prosperity and optimism. |
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We're already scraping the bottom of the barrel in many ways - such as extracting oil from tar sands. Are we really going to be able to multiply current levels of consumption by the six times or more needed to sustain 8 to 12 billion or whatever people at first world standards? Alas, it seems more likely that we will be limited by scarcity. |
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And the claim that the entire universe will be full to the brim with people
in a million years is anything less than extraordinary? |
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All that I'm statingalong with the majority of the scientific communityis
that the population growth rate in developed countries tends to decrease
as quality of life increases, and based on this fact and given the rate of
quality of life improvements throughout the world, reasonable world
population projections predict a plateau in the mid-21st century. If you
want to see the evidence you need only do a quick Google search for it. |
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Besides, your claims cannot possibly be true. Global population
necessarily must stabilize at some point, if for no other reason than that
the demand for resources necessary to sustain life outstrips supply. So
you see, the only question (and it's not much of a question, really) is
WHEN the Earth's population will stabilize. If you're off in the weeds
arguing WHETHER it will stabilize, then you're the one making
extraordinary claims. |
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//As far as I can tell, most projections show population in most regions,
and in the world as a whole, increasing over the next several decades.// |
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Yes. And then the world population is expected to plateau at between 9
and 12 billion in about half a century. Think of it as an asymptotic
approach to this number. While the population will increase over what it
is now, the closer we get to this number the more slowly it increases, until
it effectively levels out. For the developed world, we're already seeing
this happen. And while the developing world hasn't started to level out
yet, all signs indicate that with global improvements in technology and
living standards, these countries will eventually begin to experience the
same thingexactly as we did. If you believe otherwise, then that's a
claim that flies in the face of historical evidence, and you need to provide
extraordinary evidence indicating you know something the rest of the
scientific community doesn't. |
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You also need to provide extraordinary evidence controverting the laws of
physics, because there just ain't enough resources to support all of those
people you predict coming into being. In terms of energy alone, we're
already struggling to meet our needs, and there are no signs of that
situation improving any in the near future. So again, I say: Your belief
that the population is spiraling rapidly upwards simply has no scientific
basis. |
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I mustn't be making myself clear. I completely agree with you that the human population will be limited (although that's not remotely the same thing as stabilised). I just have trouble accepting as fact that the limiting factor will be universal global prosperity. |
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//Your belief that the population is spiraling rapidly upwards simply has no scientific basis.// Again, will you kindly refrain from putting words in my mouth. I expressed no such belief. I simply find it more likely that the limiting factor will be scarcity rather than prosperity. |
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Okay. Which part don't you believe? That things
aren't getting better overall? Or that as quality of
life improves population growth decreases? Both are
easily verifiable with a quick search on The Google. |
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Look for the UN projections for world population.
High estimates of the population in 2050 show
constant linear growth between now and then, and
low estimates show slowed growth followed by an
actual decline in population. The middle estimate
shows population leveling off around 9 billion people. |
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The relevant document is a 240-page tome entitled
"World Population to 2300" (link to PDF), and it
provides ample evidence and analysis to support
these projections. I'm not sure why you have so
much trouble accepting this, but you really ought to
face the facts that it's your claim that is
extraordinary. |
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It's true that populations have a way of controlling themselves, however I fail to find a single example of "everyone got so comfy that they stopped having babies" in nature. Possibly you can explain the basis for this theory. Also how this isn't "hubris". |
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I don't see any harm in anything if it's voluntary,
but why do it this way? |
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Why not, instead, offer financial incentives to
people with fewer children - sort of an inverse
child benefit? This preserves people's freedom of
choice, but also gives them the freedom to
change their minds. |
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And, if it's true that people in poor rural areas
have large families because it makes financial
sense, then a reverse child benefit is the logical
way to counter that tendency. |
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This needs more background paragraphs and references to questionable science, and then I'd be comfortable with it as a Vernon idea. |
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//It's true that populations have a way of
controlling themselves, however I fail to find a
single example of "everyone got so comfy that
they stopped having babies" in nature. Possibly
you can explain the basis for this theory. Also how
this isn't "hubris".// |
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Just look at a list of countries by population
growth rate and you'll see it plain as day.
Undeveloped countries tend to have higher
population growth than developed countries. |
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The theory is simple. As more opportunity exists
for prosperity, peopleparticularly womentend
to put off childbearing until later in life. As a
result, they have fewer children. Also, as people
move from rural to urban areas as development
progresses, the cost of living goes up and smaller
families become easier to maintain in terms of
necessary space and resources. That's not to
mention that with greater prosperity comes
increased access to family planning methods such
as birth control. |
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We are already seeing this theory borne out in
places like the United States, where the average
family size has decreased from 3.1 in 1970 to 2.6 in
2007, and Europe, parts of which have actually
experienced a sustained decrease in population in
recent years. |
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As for your last statement, the only hubris is
entertaining the notion that if WE don't take
active steps to solve what WE perceive to be a
problem, then there's no way anything will
POSSIBLY change. |
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I believe, if you ignore imigration, the US already has neutral or negative population growth. |
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//I don't see any harm in anything if it's voluntary// |
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By offering a flat rate for sterilization, you're effectively creating a regressive
tax on having children. The net result is that you're putting disproportionate
(artificial) economic pressure on the poorest individuals not to reproduce. |
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One may argue that this is the intent of the idea and ultimately the goal of such
a program, but the whole thing smacks of creepy eugenicist social planning to
me. |
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//By offering a flat rate for sterilization, you're
effectively creating a regressive tax on having
children.// |
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Yes, that's true, at least under the realistic
assumption that the money has to come from
somewhere (ie, there's a net loss to people who
don't accept the offer). But then again, any
financial incentive to have fewer children
amounts to the same thing. |
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I don't like the proposed idea. However, if
overpopulation is seen as a problem, then it
makes sense to offer some sort of financial
incentive to have fewer children. |
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In one sense, it would be better to have these
incentives provided by the richer nations (much as
the richer nations perhaps ought to pay to help
the poorer countries reduce their environmental
impact). But then you get into all sorts of other
issues. |
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//However, if overpopulation is seen as a problem, then it makes sense to offer some
sort of financial incentive to have fewer children.// |
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That's already the case in China. The unintended consequence has been a sharp rise in
female infanticide. Granted, this is in part due to the importance of sons in Chinese
culture, but there can be no denying the contributory effect of the One Child Policy. |
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My larger point though is that this line of thinking is flawed. Just because
overpopulation is seen as a problem, /doesn't/ necessarily mean it makes sense to
attempt to solve that problemat least not directly. Solving the root problem is more
effective than treating a single symptom. |
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//The
unintended consequence has been a sharp rise in
female infanticide. // |
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You know, I'm not normally one for conspiracy
theories, but what if that isn't an unintended
consequence? After all, it will go a long way
towards reducing population in the second
generation. |
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//Just because overpopulation is seen as a
problem, /doesn't/ necessarily mean it makes
sense to attempt to solve that problemat least
not directly.// |
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Yeah, I sort of agree. On the other hand, every
bit helps. And, regarding China, my understanding
is that the one-child policy isn't really about
rewarding people who have fewer children, but
about penalizing those who have more. There are
also the issues of gender bias and of infanticide.
But I don't think that invalidates the simple idea
of rewarding people for having fewer children. |
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//Just because overpopulation is seen as a problem, /doesn't/ necessarily mean it makes sense to attempt to solve that problemat least not directly.// |
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Fair enough; though I tend to think that the world is already overpopulated, and is unlikely to sustain even a modest increase in both population and per-capita consumption in the long term without serious grief. And (partly for that reason) the idea that prosperity will result in population stability is just a theory, not a fact. Hopefully we can arrive at a gentlemanly disagreement over that. |
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//Solving the root problem is more effective than treating a single symptom.// |
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Or as Spike Milligan put it, "Copulation equals population equals pollution." |
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Evolution nicely provides a self-correcting
mechanism, which is not in need of augmentation.
And, in the absence of an intelligent observer, the
biosphere doesn't give a fuck. |
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what, me worry? I'm thinking the biosphere should
be thankful (in advance) for that asteroid we'll move
out of the way, eventually. |
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There is another problem with this whole train of though: it assumes that if the population grows to 9-12 billion everybody will be living in tents eating Soylent Green. If we keep up this rate of developing eco-friendly products and energy sources then by the time the population gets that large we should have much better fuels than oil and coal. Food should never be an issue, right now we have so much extra food that farmers are paid to destroy surplus crops. |
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