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<text id=91TT2767>
<title>
Dec. 16, 1991: America Abroad
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
Dec. 16, 1991 The Smile of Freedom
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
WORLD, Page 52
AMERICA ABROAD
How Bush Has Wimped Out
</hdr><body>
<p>By Strobe Talbott
</p>
<p> In 1968, when the U.S. was sinking into the quagmire of
Vietnam, Robert McNamara resigned as Secretary of Defense and
became president of the World Bank. Having retreated from the
war against communism, he threw himself into the struggle
against another enemy, which has turned out to be more robust
and insidious: human misery so extreme and extensive that it can
spread across borders in the form of marauding armies or
refugees fleeing hunger and chaos.
</p>
<p> As McNamara quickly realized, the poorest countries were
all but beyond help if their citizens brought babies into the
world at a rate that defied the ability of society to make life
worth living. In his inaugural speech after coming to the bank,
he identified overpopulation as "one of the greatest barriers
to economic growth and social well being." That was 23 years
ago. There were 3.4 billion people on the planet.
</p>
<p> Five years later, the U.S. representative to the United
Nations, an enlightened and conscientious fellow named George
Bush, wrote that "success in the population field" might
"determine whether we can resolve successfully the other great
questions of peace, prosperity and individual rights that face
the world." By then, there were an additional half a billion
mouths to feed. Most of the increase had occurred in countries
like Bangladesh, Egypt, Kenya and Nicaragua, with annual growth
rates of around 3%, which means the population doubles every 23
years.
</p>
<p> Now, with the world head count at 5.4 billion, McNamara,
75, has returned to the subject of the population explosion
with a vengeance. Bush, by contrast--even though he is in a
position to do much more good than a private citizen like
McNamara--has wimped out in spectacular fashion.
</p>
<p> In a paper imposingly titled "A Global Population Policy
to Advance Human Development in the 21st Century," to be issued
this week by the U.N., McNamara estimates that a billion people
are living in what he calls "absolute poverty," their lives "so
characterized by malnutrition, illiteracy and disease as to be
beneath any reasonable definition of human dignity," and that
40,000 children die each day. Yet he argues that the
statistics, depressing as they are in many ways, still offer
some grounds for hope--and a major incentive for action.
</p>
<p> Our species was on the earth a million years before it
numbered 1 billion. That was in 1800. It took only 130 years to
reach the second billion, 30 years to reach the third, 15 the
fourth, 12 the fifth. The good news is that a graph of this
exponential growth projected into the future forms an S curve,
taking off slowly, then rising sharply, but eventually
flattening out. Fertility rates--the average number of
children per woman--have declined dramatically. In part that
is because of severe limits on family size in the most populous
country, China, but it is also due to the worldwide promotion
of birth control by the U.N. and private organizations like the
International Planned Parenthood Foundation.
</p>
<p> The trouble is, even if fertility rates in the Third World
dropped immediately from around 4 births per woman to the
"replacement level" of 2 (a baby to replace each parent), the
population would still climb to more than 8 billion sometime in
the middle of the next century. That is because the vast numbers
of females born on the steepest part of the S curve in the '50s
and '60s have generated "demographic momentum," a boom in
childbearing that will last for some time to come.
</p>
<p> How big that baby boom is and how long it lasts will
depend on what happens to fertility rates during the decade
ahead. Jessica Mathews, vice president of the World Resources
Institute, illustrates the point neatly: "A young woman today
who bears three children instead of the six her mother may have
borne will have 27 great-grandchildren instead of 216." If
enough women follow that example--which means, above all,
practicing contraception--the world's population may
eventually stabilize at around 10 billion, rather than the 15
billion some demographers predict. A human race twice as
numerous as it is now might be able to feed itself and avoid
disastrous social, political and environmental consequences.
However, at three times today's level, there would be far
greater risk of a Malthusian cataclysm.
</p>
<p> McNamara concludes by recommending that the U.N. help
developing countries establish step-by-step, long-range
programs, financed with the assistance of the World Bank, for
coming as close as possible to zero population growth.
</p>
<p> The U.S. should take the lead in this campaign, but it
probably won't as long as Bush has anything to say about it. He
cravenly repudiated his earlier championship of serious family
planning when he went to work for Ronald Reagan. As President,
Bush has kept in place his predecessor's withdrawal of U.S.
payments to the U.N. Fund for Population Activities and
International Planned Parenthood on the specious grounds that
they support abortion.
</p>
<p> Bush continues to pay lip service to this canard out of
fear of Republican right-wingers who claim to be "pro-life." In
its implications for the slums and villages of the Third World,
that slogan disguises a policy that is pro-death. Bush, who
hopes that his standing as an international leader will help him
next year, says his position has "evolved" after much
"soul-searching." Soul-selling is more like it.
</p>
</body></article>
</text>