Editorial report: This report dates from 2008 but it seems so very important to understand properly the problem of food, consumption and overpopulation in a way that points to the real sinners that we think it is at least as relevant today as it was when it was first published. - SON
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Oliver Munday |
TO mathematicians, 32 is an interesting number: it’s 2 raised to the
fifth power, 2 times 2 times 2 times 2 times 2. To economists, 32 is
even more special, because it measures the difference in lifestyles
between the first world and the developing world. The average rates at
which people consume resources like oil and metals, and produce wastes
like plastics and greenhouse gases, are about 32 times higher in North
America, Western Europe, Japan and Australia than they are in the
developing world. That factor of 32 has big consequences.
To
understand them, consider our concern with world population. Today,
there are more than 6.5 billion people, and that number may grow to
around 9 billion within this half-century. Several decades ago, many
people considered rising population to be the main challenge facing
humanity. Now we realize that it matters only insofar as people consume
and produce.
If most of the world’s 6.5 billion people were in
cold storage and not metabolizing or consuming, they would create no
resource problem. What really matters is total world consumption, the
sum of all local consumptions, which is the product of local population
times the local per capita consumption rate.
The estimated one
billion people who live in developed countries have a relative per
capita consumption rate of 32. Most of the world’s other 5.5 billion
people constitute the developing world, with relative per capita
consumption rates below 32, mostly down toward 1.
The population
especially of the developing world is growing, and some people remain
fixated on this. They note that populations of countries like Kenya are
growing rapidly, and they say that’s a big problem. Yes, it is a problem
for Kenya’s more than 30 million people, but it’s not a burden on the
whole world, because Kenyans consume so little. (Their relative per
capita rate is 1.) A real problem for the world is that each of us 300
million Americans consumes as much as 32 Kenyans. With 10 times the
population, the United States consumes 320 times more resources than
Kenya does.
People in the third world are aware of this difference
in per capita consumption, although most of them couldn’t specify that
it’s by a factor of 32. When they believe their chances of catching up
to be hopeless, they sometimes get frustrated and angry, and some
become terrorists, or tolerate or support terrorists. Since Sept. 11,
2001, it has become clear that the oceans that once protected the United
States no longer do so. There will be more terrorist attacks against us
and Europe, and perhaps against Japan and Australia, as long as that
factorial difference of 32 in consumption rates persists.
People
who consume little want to enjoy the high-consumption lifestyle.
Governments of developing countries make an increase in living standards
a primary goal of national policy. And tens of millions of people in
the developing world seek the first-world lifestyle on their own, by
emigrating, especially to the United States and Western Europe, Japan
and Australia. Each such transfer of a person to a high-consumption
country raises world consumption rates, even though most immigrants
don’t succeed immediately in multiplying their consumption by 32.
Among
the developing countries that are seeking to increase per capita
consumption rates at home, China stands out. It has the world’s fastest
growing economy, and there are 1.3 billion Chinese, four times the
United States population. The world is already running out of resources,
and it will do so even sooner if China achieves American-level
consumption rates. Already, China is competing with us for oil and
metals on world markets.
Per capita consumption rates in China
are still about 11 times below ours, but let’s suppose they rise to our
level. Let’s also make things easy by imagining that nothing else
happens to increase world consumption — that is, no other country
increases its consumption, all national populations (including China’s)
remain unchanged and immigration ceases. China’s catching up alone would
roughly double world consumption rates. Oil consumption would increase
by 106 percent, for instance, and world metal consumption by 94 percent.
If India as well as China were to catch up, world consumption
rates would triple. If the whole developing world were suddenly to catch
up, world rates would increase elevenfold. It would be as if the world
population ballooned to 72 billion people (retaining present consumption
rates).
Some optimists claim that we could support a world with
nine billion people. But I haven’t met anyone crazy enough to claim that
we could support 72 billion. Yet we often promise developing countries
that if they will only adopt good policies — for example, institute
honest government and a free-market economy — they, too, will be able to
enjoy a first-world lifestyle. This promise is impossible, a cruel
hoax: we are having difficulty supporting a first-world lifestyle even
now for only one billion people.
We Americans may think of China’s
growing consumption as a problem. But the Chinese are only reaching for
the consumption rate we already have. To tell them not to try would be
futile.
The only approach that China and other developing
countries will accept is to aim to make consumption rates and living
standards more equal around the world. But the world doesn’t have enough
resources to allow for raising China’s consumption rates, let alone
those of the rest of the world, to our levels. Does this mean we’re
headed for disaster?
No, we could have a stable outcome in which
all countries converge on consumption rates considerably below the
current highest levels. Americans might object: there is no way we would
sacrifice our living standards for the benefit of people in the rest of
the world. Nevertheless, whether we get there willingly or not, we
shall soon have lower consumption rates, because our present rates are
unsustainable.
Real sacrifice wouldn’t be required, however,
because living standards are not tightly coupled to consumption rates.
Much American consumption is wasteful and contributes little or nothing
to quality of life. For example, per capita oil consumption in Western
Europe is about half of ours, yet Western Europe’s standard of living
is higher by any reasonable criterion, including life expectancy,
health, infant mortality, access to medical care, financial security
after retirement, vacation time, quality of public schools and support
for the arts. Ask yourself whether Americans’ wasteful use of gasoline
contributes positively to any of those measures.
Other aspects of
our consumption are wasteful, too. Most of the world’s fisheries are
still operated non-sustainably, and many have already collapsed or
fallen to low yields — even though we know how to manage them in such a
way as to preserve the environment and the fish supply. If we were to
operate all fisheries sustainably, we could extract fish from the oceans
at maximum historical rates and carry on indefinitely.
The same
is true of forests: we already know how to log them sustainably, and if
we did so worldwide, we could extract enough timber to meet the world’s
wood and paper needs. Yet most forests are managed non-sustainably, with
decreasing yields.
Just as it is certain that within most of our
lifetimes we’ll be consuming less than we do now, it is also certain
that per capita consumption rates in many developing countries will one
day be more nearly equal to ours. These are desirable trends, not
horrible prospects. In fact, we already know how to encourage the
trends; the main thing lacking has been political will.
Fortunately,
in the last year there have been encouraging signs. Australia held a
recent election in which a large majority of voters reversed the
head-in-the-sand political course their government had followed for a
decade; the new government immediately supported the Kyoto Protocol on
cutting greenhouse gas emissions.
Also in the last year, concern
about climate change has increased greatly in the United States. Even in
China, vigorous arguments about environmental policy are taking place,
and public protests recently halted construction of a huge chemical
plant near the center of Xiamen. Hence I am cautiously optimistic. The
world has serious consumption problems, but we can solve them if we
choose to do so.
Jared
Diamond, a professor of geography at the University of California, Los
Angeles, is the author of “Collapse” and “Guns, Germs and Steel.”
Source: The New York Times