1. We’re
approaching 100 million! Is there reason to be scared?
Fear
usually comes from misunderstanding the issue. No thanks to Thomas Malthus and Paul
Ehrlich who both said that runaway population growth (to borrow the term from
the media) will lead to widespread hunger, famine, and disease. Ehrlic said
this will happen in the 70s. It did not happen. He said it will happen in the
80s. It did not happen. Today, the media, fueled by ignorance and denial of
many people, still say that this will happen in the future, but by now we
already know not to trust them.
photo courtesy of http://candobetter.net/node/2080 |
2. How
can you say that?! Do you think there will be enough food to feed everyone?
The World
Food Programme lists several factors for the lack of food in certain places,
and having too many people is not one of them. Here in our country, there are
factors that affect food production, like the fact that our farmers lack the
technology and the infrastructure required to grow more food. The key is to
produce more food, not to curb population.
3. But
curbing “runaway population growth” means less mouths to feed!
Yes, but
these “mouths to feed” (a very insulting thing to say to PEOPLE by the way)
also have two arms, two feet, a heart, and a brain that can be part of the
workforce in the future, stabilizing our economy.
courtesy of http://krissthesexyatheist.blogspot.com/2012/07/my-seemingly-quarterly-post-on.html |
4. But
more people means a weaker economy!
Says who?
There is no real evidence that supports the claim that population growth has
jeopardized the economy. If anything, population growth has actually helped the
economy of China, Singapore, and the Philippines, according to the study of
Wong Hok Tsen and Fumitaka Furuoka entitled “The Relationship between
Population and Economic Growth in Asian Economies”[1].
So clearly, if there’s a direction that our population must take, it has to
increase, not decrease.
5. 100
Million! We’re going to be filling every island in the Philippines and get
overcrowded!
No we won’t.
Population isn’t just about the number of people; you have to factor in
population growth rate, population density, and total fertility rate in as well.
Our growth rate is around 1.7%[2],
our population density is 330 people per
square kilometers[3],
and the average number of children every Filipina mother is having is just
around 3.10, which is way down from an average of 7.15 in 1960[4].
It is very easy to make the mistake of saying that the Philippines is
overpopulated just because Metro Manila is congested. The National Statistical
Coordination Board of the Philippines says: With a land area of only 619.5
square kilometers and a population of 11,553,427, Metro Manila has a population
density of 18,650 persons per square kilometer in 2007[5].
courtesy of http://globalbalita.com/2013/06/22/industrialization-and-overpopulation/ |
7. What
needs to be done then?
Our
government needs to curb corruption, not the population! Esteemed economist Dr.
Bernardo Villegas explains the problem succinctly: “P400 billion is yearly lost to corruption: P200 billion lost in tax
evasion and another P200 billion lost in government resources used
unproductively.”[6]
And this statement was made prior to the PDAF scandal!
It makes
much, much more sense to invest in the population than to curb it. While a lot
of countries like Japan and Singapore, and many of the European countries like
France, Italy, Spain, and Russia are very worried about their aging and
dwindling population, to the point that they had to come up with so many
creative ways to get couples to procreate, the media, the government, and a lot
of sectors are passing around ignorance by emphasizing on curbing our
population.
Let us
invest on education, skills training, and the creation of businesses that will
employ more people rather than focusing our energies on slowing our population
growth.
[1] Wong Hok Tsen, Fumitaka Furuoka, The
Relationship between Population and Economic Growth in Asian Economies, http://muse.jhu.edu/login?auth=0&type=summary&url=/journals/asean_economic_bulletin/v022/22.3.wong.html
[3] The World Bank, http://data.worldbank.org/indicator/EN.POP.DNST
[5] National Statistical Coordination
Board, http://www.nscb.gov.ph/factsheet/pdf08/FS-200806-SS1-01.asp
[6] Cunan, Bel Political Tidbits, http://www.polbits.com/2010_08_01_archive.html