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<text>
<title>
(Jan. 02, 1989) Too Many Mouths
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1988 Highlights
</history>
<link 00011>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
January 2, 1989
PLANET OF THE YEAR, Page 48
OVERPOPULATION
Too Many Mouths
</hdr>
<body>
<p>THE PROBLEM: Swarms of people are running out of food and space
</p>
<p>By Anastasia Toufexis
</p>
<p> Close to the Zocalo, Mexico City's great central square, lies
the barrio of Morelos, a vast warren of dusty, potholed streets and
narrow entryways. The passages lead to a gloomy world. On each side
of a roofless patio is a ten-room jumble. Each room holds a family;
each family averages five people. The only bathrooms--two to
serve 100 people--are located at the back of the patio. The odor
of grease and sewage permeates the air. Flies buzz relentlessly.
The people who live here are considered lucky.
</p>
<p> In the shantytowns on Mexico City's outskirts, tens of
thousands of people shelter in huts made of cardboard with aluminum
roofs. There is no running water and no sanitation. The stench is
overpowering: garbage and human waste heap up in piles. Rats roam
freely, like stray domestic animals.
</p>
<p> To the more privileged, those scenes look like a
science-fiction vision of civilization's breakdown, perhaps after
a nuclear war. In fact, Mexico City has been described as the
anteroom to an ecological Hiroshima. With 20 million residents--up from 9 million only 20 years ago--the Mexican capital is
considered the most populous urban center on earth. Mexico City has
been struck not by military weapons but by a population bomb.
</p>
<p> Ultimately, no problem may be more threatening to the earth's
environment than the proliferation of the human species. Today the
planet holds more than 5 billion people. During the next century,
world population will double, with 90% of that growth occurring in
poorer, developing countries. African nations are expanding at the
fastest rate. During the next 30 years, for example, the population
of Kenya (annual growth rate: 4%) will jump from 23 million to 79
million; Nigeria's population (growth rate: 3%) will soar from 112
million to 274 million. Expansion is slower in Brazil, China, India
and Indonesia, but in those countries the sheer size of existing
populations translates into a huge increase in people.
</p>
<p> In the poorest countries, growth rates are outstripping the
national ability to provide the bare necessities--housing, fuel
and food. Living trees are being chopped down for fuel, grasslands
overgrazed by livestock, and croplands overplowed by desperate
farmers. Horrifying images of starvation in northeastern Africa
have captured world attention in the past decade. In India,
according to government reports, 37% of the people cannot buy
enough food to sustain themselves. Warned Shri B.B. Vohra, vice
chairman of the Himachal Pradesh state land-use board in northern
India: "We may be well on the way to producing a subhuman kind of
race where people do not have enough energy to deal with their
problems."
</p>
<p> Prospects are so dire that some environmentalists urge the
world to adopt the goal of cutting in half the earth's population
growth rate during the next decade. "That means a call for a
two-child family for the world as a whole," explained Lester Brown,
president of the Worldwatch Institute. "In some countries there may
be a need to set a goal of one child per family." That is a
daunting challenge. During the past decade, many of the world's
poor nations condemned the notion of family planning as an
imperialist and racist scheme touted by the developed world. Yet
today virtually all Third World countries are committed to limiting
population growth.
</p>
<p> But the effort needs to be speeded up. For starters,
contraceptive information and devices should be available to every
man or woman on earth who wants them. According to surveys by the
United Nations and other organizations, fully half the 463 million
married women in developing countries (excluding China) do not want
more children. Yet many have little or no access to effective
methods of birth control, such as the Pill and the intrauterine
device (IUD). The World Bank estimates that making birth control
readily available on a global basis would require that the $3
billion now spent annually on family-planning services be increased
to $8 billion by the year 2000. The increase in funds could shave
projected world population from 10 billion to 8 billion over the
next 60 years. However, few modern contraceptive methods are
ideally suited to the daily lives of Third World citizens.
Two-thirds of the 60 million users of condoms, diaphragms and
sponges live in the industrialized world. Men in developing
countries frequently view condoms as a threat to their masculine
image; women often find diaphragms impractical since clean water
for washing the device is scarce.
</p>
<p> The most popular form of population control in developing
countries is sterilization. Some 98 million women and 35 million
men around the world have resorted to that permanent solution. The
other current mainstay is abortion, which the Worldwatch
Institute's Brown called "a reflection of unmet family-planning
needs." An estimated 28 million abortions are performed in Third
World nations annually, and an additional 26 million in industrial
countries. About half are illegal.
</p>
<p> New forms of birth control are desperately needed, and a few
are slowly appearing. Last year a French pharmaceutical firm
introduced RU 486, a drug that helps induce a relatively safe
miscarriage when given to a woman in the early stages of pregnancy.
Another recent arrival is Norplant, steroid-filled capsules that
are embedded in a woman's arm and deliver contraceptive protection
for five years. The implant is approved for use in twelve
countries, including China, Thailand and Indonesia.
</p>
<p> But progress is too slow. Additional spending on contraceptive
research and development is badly needed. In 1972 global spending
was estimated at $74 million annually, a paltry sum compared with
many Third World military budgets. The funding in 1983 was just $57
million. One reason for the decrease was the Reagan
Administration's antiabortion policy. U.S. contributions to
international population-assistance programs declined 20% between
1985 and 1987, to about $230 million.
</p>
<p> Bruce Wilcox, president of the Institute for Sustainable
Development, an environmental-research organization based in Palo
Alto, Calif., declared that solutions to the population challenge
will demand "fundamental changes in society." Ingrained cultural
attitudes that promote high birthrates will have to be challenged.
Many families in poor agrarian societies, for example, see children
as a source of labor and a hedge against poverty in old age. People
need to be taught that with lower infant mortality, fewer offspring
can provide the same measure of security. In some societies,
numerous progeny are viewed as symbols of virility. In Kenya's
Nyanza province, a man named Denja boasts that he has fathered 497
children.
</p>
<p> Of all entrenched values, religion presents perhaps the
greatest obstacle to population control. Roman Catholics have
fought against national family-planning efforts in Mexico, Kenya
and the Philippines, while Muslim fundamentalists have done the
same in Iran, Egypt and Pakistan. Still, religious objections need
not entirely thwart population planning. Where such resistance is
encountered, vigorous campaigns should be mounted to promote
natural birth-control techniques, including the rhythm method and
fertility delay through breast feeding.
</p>
<p> If there is a single key to population control in developing
countries, experts agree, it lies in improving the social status
of women. Third World women often have relatively few political or
legal rights, and not many receive schooling that prepares them for
roles outside the home. Said Robert Berg, president of the
International Development Conference: "Expanding educational and
employment opportunities for women is necessary for permanently
addressing the population issue."
</p>
<p> The effect of special programs for women has been demonstrated
in Bangladesh. In 1975 the government launched a project in which
associations of rural village women were provided with start-up
loans for launching small businesses, such as making pottery,
raising poultry and running grocery stores. About 123,000 women are
currently enrolled in the cooperative. At weekly meetings,
health-care and contraceptive information are distributed among
members. An extraordinary 75% of the co-op members of childbearing
age use contraceptives, while nationwide only 35% of married women
practice birth control.
</p>
<p> Ultimately, slowing the population juggernaut will depend on
the ability of family-planning experts to create well-tailored
programs for different societies and even for different segments
of societies. But first, governments will have to raise public
awareness and rally support for population control with a cohesive
message about the dangers of rampant growth. India, one of the
first countries to adopt a family-planning program, some 30 years
ago, failed to forge a national will for the task, and the
population is now growing at 2% a year.
</p>
<p> In contrast, China has galvanized its people behind a huge
population-planning effort. Still, its program demonstrates just
how difficult--and risky--social tinkering can be. The nation
launched its "one-family, one-child" policy in 1979. The aim: to
contain population at 1.2 billion by the year 2000. In pursuit of
that goal, local authorities have offered such incentives as a
monthly stipend until the sole child turns 14 and better housing.
Penalties for violating the policy have included dismissal from
government jobs and fines of up to a year's wages for urban
workers. China's effort has had some distressing consequences.
Women have been coerced into having abortions, and there have been
reports of female infanticide by parents determined that their one
child should be a boy. Moreover, officials have acknowledged that
exceptions to the one-child rule have been frequently condoned,
especially in rural areas. In fact, only 19% of Chinese couples
have one child. Beijing has announced that the nation will miss its
target: the country's projected population in the year 2000 is 1.27
billion.
</p>
<p> Yet for all its failings, China's effort has produced results.
The population growth rate, once among the highest in the world,
has been slashed in half, to 1.4%. And the Chinese are determined
to reduce the rate still further. The same formidable task will
face other developing countries as they confront the population
bomb. But confront it they must.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>