Food for thought article forwarded below for information purposes only. 
But whether population growth or population decline would be best for
Dane County and the Madison area communities at this particular point in
time seems germane for discussion on the SDdiscuss listserv (and perhaps
a few others local discussion lists?).
M. Neuman
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ClimateArchive/message/229

"If you really love America, hang that flag on a bicycle!"
http://www.honku.org

--------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Craig McKie <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Fri, 15 Aug 2003 18:21:59 -0700
Subject: [canfutures-l] Declining Population
Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Coming to terms with the declining population numbers has yet to begin
in any serious way. Here is one well-considered take on the situation.
The reality of decline will condition the social conditions in which
those alive today will live out the rest of their lives. Incidentally,
the latest published Total Fertility Rate for Canada was 1.51, so far
below replacement (2.1) that the latter will likely never been seen
again.

=====


Comment
We should welcome signs of a shrinking population

Martin Woollacott: Lower birthrates could mean a better, more
sustainable world

Friday August 15, 2003
The Guardian

What is regarded as good news and bad news is a changeable thing.
Thirty years ago, when anxiety about rising population and diminished
resources was fresher than it is today, figures showing a flattening
out of population growth in many countries, including our own, would
have been seen as a boon.

Today, on the left-hand page of a newspaper you can read about John
Prescott's plans to rim Dickens's moody estuarial lands with houses,
about proposals for yet another London airport, about Britain's
vanishing oil and gas, about threatened birds and sick seals, about
nuclear power stations in France bubbling away like so many dangerous
cafetieres - all demonstrating the stress rising human numbers place
on the environment and society.

Yet, on the right-hand page of the same paper, news about the slowing
down of population growth in Europe, North America and Japan,
presaging an easing of the very pressures just fearfully related, is
also gloomily presented. The demographic transition, in this latest
manifestation, is seen as a threat rather than a relief.

The questions glowering over such accounts are how to pay pensions,
how to avoid recession, and how, if possible, to slow the slowdown.
The morally and practically complex issues of migration and asylum
tend to be bundled into the argument on the grounds that more people
coming in will help retard the downward curve.

It is of course arguable that there are dangers in both sorts of
curves. But rarely is a moment given to voice thanks for a profoundly
welcome shift in reproductive behaviour, one even more welcome as it
has taken hold across the world in countries such as India and China.

A small organisation, the Optimum Population Trust, had some publicity
recently with its suggestion that Britain might be best served if it
had a population of 30 million or so. If such a thing were ever to
come about, would it be such a disaster? Yet many act as if it would.

In western countries, at least, the natalism of the past has been
replaced by an unrealistic dependence on migration as the means of
maintaining supposedly desirable numbers. The figures suggest,
however, that while immigration can help a society get over the hump
represented by a temporarily high proportion of older people, it
cannot be a substitute for falling rates of natural increase for long.

Anxieties such as these were also in the air when new towns were being
planned and new airports projected. The Royal Commission on Population
warned in 1945 of "the ultimate threat of a fading out of the British
people". Eva Hubback, author of a Penguin book on the subject
published two years later, argued that Britain simply could not meet
its responsibilities if the population fell beyond a certain point.

For instance, the country was already having trouble recruiting the
750,000 men and women needed for the armed forces and, if certain
trends continued, by the year 2000, the men available for military
service would be "just half" of those available in 1939. "We would
then be bound to become a second- or third-class power."

What now seem arcane calculations about mass armies illustrate how
irrelevant yesterday's arguments can become. Today's German anxieties,
for example, about a halving of population by the end of the century
ring similar bells, although concerned with industrial rather than
military manpower, and both the prediction and the arguments could
prove equally wrong-headed. But Mrs Hubback also knew that population
levels are only distantly under the influence of governments, quoting
AP Herbert's lines on the subject:

The world, in short, which never was extravagantly sane,

Developed all the signs of inflammation of the brain,

The past was not encouraging, the future none could tell,

And some of us were not surprised the population fell.

Whether the low birthrate of the 1930s in Britain was largely a result
of uncertainty and fear of the future, as Herbert implied, could not
be easily established. The equally important cause, as it is today,
would be a determination both to enjoy the present and to focus more
resources on fewer children so as to equip them better for life in
their turn.

Perhaps, as proposed on these comment pages this week, better daycare
and other services would make some difference. Perhaps, too, as also
argued here this week, more migration would help, but, again, not to
the point of reversing a settled trend. The aspirations involved in
choosing smaller families and in emigrating are, after all, similar
ones of personal and family betterment.

The one set will not long work against the other, as most new arrivals
come to make similar reproductive choices to established residents.
Indeed, they are already making them in developing countries.
Professor Robert Cassen, an expert on development and population at
the London School of Economics, notes that two-thirds of the reduction
in the population rate in India, for example, is the result of choices
made by uneducated people, especially women who want their children to
go to school and reckon the chances are better if there are fewer of
them.

The fundamental point, as Professor Cassen says, is that population
growth in any given society must end, and, as it ends, the problem of
a disproportionate class of ageing people has to be tackled. His is an
insight which seems obvious enough, yet it is rarely part of the
discussion.

This inevitable change cannot be staved off by natalist policies such
as those practised by most European societies, and by the Soviet Union
in the past. It can be made somewhat easier by the right kind of
family policies, by extending the retirement age, and by a judicious
approach to immigration. But the sooner the transition is negotiated,
the better. On the other side of it should lie a better and more
sustainable world.

Reduction in population growth, or its actual decline in some
societies, will not have an immediately miraculous effect on problems
of pollution and overdevelopment anywhere, since a smaller number of
people will expect and demand more. The increased demand and reduced
population growth are, after all, aspects of the same change in
mentality.

What people demand will be contradictory. The recent trouble at
Heathrow is just a minor example of this in comfortable Europe. People
want cheap air travel and holidays, yet recoil from the consequences
of their choices when they affect the reliability of the services on
which they depend or their own wages and conditions.

Maintaining this kind of contradiction, whether in the travel,
construction or health industries, leads to exploitative immigration
policies, all part of the attempt to hang on to population growth's
supposed advantages after the fact. The idea that what is not going up
must be on its way down is deeply engrained. But in fact we should be
celebrating the opposite, which is that in the 21st century going down
is the best way to go.

[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1019179,00.html





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