Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe...

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Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England J. Med 353: 1171-1176 Wikipedia http://www.lastfirst.net/images/product/R004

Transcript of Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe...

Page 1: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Population

Sources:

The World Food Problem

Leathers and Foster, 2004

World Hunger 12 MythsLappe Collins and Rossett, 1998

Hesketh et al.,New England J. Med 353: 1171-1176

Wikipedia

http://www.lastfirst.net/images/product/R004548.jpg

Page 2: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Thomas Malthus

• 1798: Essay on the Principle of Population as it Affects the Future Improvement of Society

– Population growth tends to outstrip the means of subsistence

– Food increases arithmetically while population increases geometrically

– The poor can be kept alive by charity, but since they would then propagate, this is cruelty in disguise.

Page 3: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Paul Ehrlich

• 1968: The Population Bomb

• “The battle to feed all of humanity is over.

• In the 1970s the world will undergo famines—

• Hundreds of millions of people are going to starve to death”

Page 4: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

World Population

Page 5: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

World Population

http://www.theglobaleducationproject.org/earth/images/final-images/g-pop-growth-chart-map-sm.gif

Page 6: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Human Population Density

http://images.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.theglobaleducationproject.org/earth/images/final-images/life-expectancy-map.gif&imgrefurl=http://www.theglobaleducationproject.org/earth/human-conditions.php%3Fformat%3Dprint&h=279&w=600&sz=15&hl=en&start=3&tbnid=s2UwthIUrW89qM:&tbnh=63&tbnw=135&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dlife%2Bexpectancy%2Bmap%26gbv%3D2%26hl%3Den

Page 7: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Demographic Transition

• First, high birth rates and high death rates

• Then, improved living standards, health cause death rates to drop

• Finally, low birth rates match low death rates

Page 8: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Demographic Transition

• 1750-1950: Occurred in developed countries

• 1950: Began to see death rates drop in developing countries

• 2050: Projected completion of transition

Page 9: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Demographic Transition

• Example: U.S. History– When agrarian

society, people had many kids

• Source of security, labor

Page 10: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Demographic Transition

• Example: U.S. History– When became

industrial, fewer kids/family

• Lowered infant mortality

• No need to rely on children’s labor

• More opportunities for women

• Happened without birth control

Page 11: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.
Page 12: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.
Page 13: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Global Fertility

• 1950’s: 5 children/woman

• 1970’s: 4 children/woman

• 1990’s: 2.8 children/woman

• Replacement: 2.1 children/woman

Page 14: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Global Population

• Population growth rate is slowing down and will eventually stop

• Dip in 1960 due to 30 million deaths in China– Great Leap Forward

Famine

Page 15: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

World Population Projection• Estimated to peak at 11 billion in 2200

Page 16: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

World Population Growth

Page 17: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

AIDS

• 40 million people infected with HIV– Many will die of AIDS

• Will not greatly impact global population growth

• Will Impact some countries • Losses by 2020:

– Uganda 45% – Rwanda 35%– Malawi 30%

Malawi AIDS orphans

Page 18: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Global HIV

Page 19: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Food Production per Capita

• Food Production per capita is rising worldwide– But falling in Africa

• Food production is keeping up with population– Otherwise food prices

would have risen– Food prices have dropped

Page 20: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Food Production in Sub-Saharan Africa

• Food Production in Sub Saharan Africa not keeping up with population

Page 21: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Per Capita Production of Calories, Fat, Protein

Page 22: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Progressivist View• Things are good and getting

better: – Worldwide standard of living

– Education

– Health

– Trade

• People are an asset.

• Population causes shortages which raise prices, – stimulating entrepreneurs to

satisfy the shortages.

• We end up better off as a result.Julian Simon

Page 23: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Progressivist View

• Two important indicators of progress and improvement in life are – Decreased Infant

Mortality

– Increased Life Expectancy

Page 24: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Life Expectancy

http://www.theglobaleducationproject.org/earth/images/final-images/life-expectancy-map.gif

Page 25: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Revisionist View

• Adoption and spread of agriculture have trapped humanity in a spiral of – Population growth– Ecological destruction– Social tyranny.

• The problem stems from the anti-ecological culture (religion) of agricultural societies

– humans are above and not part of nature (global ecosystem)

– and therefore can destroy it at will.

Civilization is based on Agriculture

Page 26: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Daniel Quinn

• 1992: Ishmael – Although population is 5.5 billion, we

produce enough food for 6.0 billion even though millions are starving

– Because we produce enough food for 6 billion, in 3 or 4 years there will be 6 billion people.

– Then, even though millions are starving, we will produce enough for 6.5 billion.

– Thus in another 3-4 years there will be 6.5 billion

– To halt this process, must face the fact that increasing food production doesn’t feed the hungry, it only fuels the population explosion.

Page 27: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Social Equity View

• Problems of – poverty

– overpopulation

– ecological destruction

• Are due to – inequity of wealth

– unfairness of economic and social systems

Frances Moore Lappe, Food First

http://www.mediathatmattersfest.org/mtm05/img/frances_moore_lappe.jpg

Page 28: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

If the world were 100 people (2005)

• 51 male– 49 female

• 60 Asians, – 14 Africans, – 12 Europeans, – 8 Latin Americans,– 5 from USA and Canada – 1 from the South Pacific

• 82 nonwhite– 18 white

• 67 non-Christian– 33 be Christian

(Source: Family Care Foundation)

Page 29: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

If the world were 100 people(2005)

• 80 live in substandard housing

• 67 unable to read • 50 malnourished

– 1 dying of starvation

• 33 without access to safe water supply

• 39 lack access to improved sanitation

• 24 have no electricity– Most of the 76 with electricity

use it only for light at night

(Source: Family Care Foundation)

Page 30: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

If the world were 100 people(2005)

(Source: Family Care Foundation)

• 7 have access to the internet

• 1 has a college education

• 1 has HIV

• 2 near birth– 1 near death

• 5 control 32% of the entire world’s wealth – All 5 U.S. citizens

• 33 attempt to live on 3% of global income

Page 31: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Both hunger and high fertility occur when:

• Poverty is extreme and widespread

• Society denies security and opportunity to people

• Infant mortality is high• Most people can’t get land,

jobs, education, health care, old age security

• Few opportunities for women outside of home

Bangladesh mother

Page 32: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Children

• Labor force

• Chance for a job in city

• Security– major investment

– rational choice

Page 33: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Women’s Education

• Powerful predictor of lower fertility

• Reflects opportunity in society

Page 34: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Male Poverty

• Low self-esteem

• Dominate women and children

• Thus more children

Page 35: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Examples

• Sri Lanka: – lower price rice

• led to population decline

• Cuba: – low prices for food and health care

• reduced population rate from 4.7 to 1.6

• Kerala, India: – lower price rice, kerosene

• 1/3 birth rate of average in India• Literacy for women is 2.5 times

average in India

Kerala, India

Page 36: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Family Planning• Birth Control is responsible for only 15-

20% total fertility decline– Thus population growth cannot be brought

down simply by family planning or contraception

– but it can speed the decline

• Contraceptive use in Developing World has increased – 9% in 1960– 60% in late 1990s

• Demographic Transition requires improved– Health– Social Security– Education

IUD: Intra Uterine Device

Page 37: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Sterilization

• Encouraged by Western donors for developing countries– Quotas are set

– Incentives are used• Cash, roads, transportation,

latrines

• For hungry, choices are limited

• 1/3 of married women in India and China are sterilized

Indian woman

Page 38: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Puerto Rico: La Operacion

• U. S. seized in 1898• Sugar companies set up vast

plantations• Small farmers evicted• By 1925, 2% of population

owned 80% of land, 70% of population landless’

• Unemployment termed “overpopulation” by U.S.

• By 1940’s light manufacturing moved in attracted to cheap labor, low taxes

Page 39: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Puerto Rico: La Operacion

• Young women were key to labor force

• Problem was pregnancy

• Result: massive sterilization program

• Women coerced into sterilization without being told it was irreversible

• By 1968, 1/3 of women childbearing age were sterilized.

• Emigration and sterilization resulted in population drop with no increase in standard of living.

Page 40: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Bangladesh

• Intensive Family Planning in Matlab region

• Contraceptive use doubled

• Resulted in reduced birth rate

• Cost was very high: $120/birth averted– This is 120% of per capita

gross domestic product

– Not replicable on a national scale

Page 41: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

China

• 1950s, 60s Under Mao– children encouraged

– Fertility rate: 5.9 children/woman

• 1970-1979 new policy to cope with overpopulation– “one is good, 2 is ok, 3 is too many”

– “late, long, few”• Have fewer children later

• greater spacing between

• Fertility dropped steeply to 2.9

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/shared/spl/hi/asia_pac/02/china_party_congress/china_ruling_party/key_people_events/html/default.stm

Page 42: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Fertility decline in China

Page 43: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

China One Child Policy• 1979 “one child” policy enacted

– For urban areas

• Material benefits – if have 1 child

• Social & official pressure– If have more than 1 child

• 71% Chinese are rural– Multiple children are common

• Fertility rate has declined – But also declined in other Asian

countries without coersion

• Human rights violation?

Page 44: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Birth Control Methods in China

Page 45: Population Sources: The World Food Problem Leathers and Foster, 2004 World Hunger 12 Myths Lappe Collins and Rossett, 1998 Hesketh et al., New England.

Skewed sex ratio

• Sex ratio at birth (2000)– 117:100 male:female

• Maternal Hepatitus B may account for much of the skewing

• Boys preferred– Men care for parents in old age– Women join husband’s family

• Care for husband’s parents

• Selective abortion of girls– Use ultrasound to determine sex– If first child is a girl, want second to be a

boy– Illegal but suspected

• Female infanticide suspected– before ultrasound