Reprinted from The
Catholic World Report, August-September 2008
An interview with Steven W.
Mosher on the demographic consequences of birth control policies.
Steven
W. Mosher is president of Population Research Institute and author of the book
Population Control: Real Costs, Illusory Benefits (Transaction Publishers, New
Brunswick, NJ, 2008). This interview is on the subject of his book.
Miller: Dire scenarios about imminent overpopulation, from Malthus
to Paul Ehrlich’s The Population Bomb, have not materialized.
Where are the mistakes in their calculations?
Steven Mosher: In some cases they were deliberately exaggerated,
even fabricated, in an attempt to frighten individuals into having not more than
one or two children, and legislatures into funding population control programs.
Assuming
that the alarmists really believed those projections, I think that their
principal error came in the 1960s when they assumed that Third World countries
would have to reach Western standards of living before birth rates decreased.
They supposed that only affluence would convince people in Nigeria, China, or
Peru to have fewer children.
Of
course, population control programs played a role in limiting fertility. But
the principal reason why almost all Latin American countries today are at or
near replacement-rate fertility levels is that the death rate among infants and
children went down, and therefore couples voluntarily stopped having large
families. They’re still relatively poor, yet they began limiting the number of
children. Reduce the mortality rate and population growth ceases.
Miller: Even if projections about limited resources are wrong,
what’s the harm in a little “under-population?” Isn’t a nation with negative
population growth like a factory that sells its unused CO2 allowances to less
environmentally friendly businesses?
Mosher: A free-market economy is constantly looking for new markets
for goods and services. The size of those markets is driven in large part by
the size of the population. As a population grows, the demand for cars, houses,
and other goods increases. As a population shrinks, this process works in
reverse.
I
think, though, that the dangers of population decline are even more serious than
this would suggest, because a decline in absolute numbers of people is always
preceded by population aging. The population gets out of balance: too few young
people get married, have children and buy houses; and the population ages, which
puts increasing demands on retirement and healthcare programs.
You
might say, “Yes, but a growing population with lots of children has a bad
worker-to-dependent ratio as well,” But children don’t require nearly as much
health care as the elderly do, children don’t consume as many resources, and
children live with their parents, so there are economies of scale.
Europe,
for example, is going to see tax rates go through the roof in order to support
growing populations of the elderly. Who’s going to be taxed? Working people in
their 20s and 30s. When you tax that segment of the population you impoverish
it and make it less likely that they will have children at all, much less large
families. And so you eat your seed corn. You put so much economic pressure on
the young and reproductive that they stop having children.
Birth
rates in Catholic Spain and Italy are down to 1.1 children per couple. We’ve
done some back-of-the-envelope calculations, and in Italy every young couple
would have to have four children in order to stop the population decline that’s
currently underway. No combination of incentives in the world could turn this
thing around. So Italians have no choice but to accept large numbers of
immigrants, mostly Muslims from Albania, North Africa, and the Middle East.
This creates the additional problem of integrating people from very different
cultural, religious, and social backgrounds into Italian society.
Miller: You observed the effects of the one-child policy imposed
in Communist China in the early 1980s. How could such a radical
population-control program be implemented in the world’s most populous nation?
Mosher: It’s hard for Americans to imagine how any government could
control over a billion people. Chinese law allows one child per couple in the
cities; two in the countryside. How does Beijing enforce the rules?
People
need to understand that there is a Communist Party presence in every village,
hamlet, and neighborhood throughout the country. There are 60 million Chinese
Communist Party members, roughly 5 percent of the population, and they’re
everywhere. Their job is to see that government policies are not just adhered
to, but that they are popular and accepted by the people. The CCP works hard to
quell dissent over the one-child policy.
There
is a parallel organization for women called the Women’s Federation, again with
tens of millions of members. Their job since 1970 has been to enforce
compliance with the one-child policy. What do they do? They keep extensive
records on the rest of the female population and track menstrual cycles. They
ensure that women who have not yet been sterilized are contracepting. They
assist the sterilization teams that perform tubal ligations on women who have
had two children. Then there are the family planning officials themselves, who
run the whole operation.
It
is a huge and costly effort. But mass mobilization campaigns are the kind of
thing that the Chinese Communist Party is very good at. It is an Orwellian
organization that is used to intrude into the most intimate decisions that
people make.
There
is dissent, of course. There are women who conceal their pregnancies and run
away and go into hiding when they’re discovered. We are able to help a few of
these women through our Safe House program. But by and large the policy is
effective.
Miller: The last half-century saw the end of colonialism and also
the worldwide spread of population control programs funded by the West. Have
any Third World nations successfully resisted the “incentives” to start such
programs?
Mosher: In the book I quote African leaders who denounce this kind
of new imperialism. To understand how intrusive it is, imagine the outcry if
the Chinese government funded a program to reduce the American birthrate and
paid workers to go door-to-door with contraceptives, insisting that American
women use them. Yet that is what we, the United States, do around the world.
It is not surprising that these programs are resented.
In
the book I describe at length the enormous pressures that are brought to bear on
governments around the world. Do you want short-term, long-term loans from the
World Bank or the International Monetary Fund? You must have a family planning
program in place. Do you want money from the US Agency for International
Development (USAID)? You must distribute contraceptives to your women; we’ll
send you the pills. Many countries resisted these kinds of pressure for a time,
but most have caved in.
There’s
another force at work here: many needy countries in Africa especially, are
governed by corrupt dictators. How convenient for them to have a prestigious
foreign theory on which to blame their countries’ problems! “Our country is
impoverished because there are too many people,” the dictator can say, “not
because my bureaucracy is hopelessly inept, lazy, and corrupt.” The theory of
overpopulation gives them an excuse for the results of their own misrule.
Miller: How did the United States government get into the
business of distributing contraceptives?
Mosher: At the end of World War II the United States was engaged
militarily around the world, and Americans learned where Burma, Singapore, and
Papua New Guinea were. Since Japan and Europe was devastated, half the world’s
goods and services were produced in the United States. Being a generous people,
we decided to fund foreign aid programs. We went in to improve living
conditions around the world and succeeded in lowering infant mortality rates in
a number of countries by providing modern medical care.
World
population began to increase rapidly. Here is the origin of the notion that
there is a “population bomb.” If the population kept doubling every 30 years,
the alarmists said, there would soon be tens of billions of people on the
planet; unsustainable growth would eventually cause economic, environmental, and
societal collapse.
The
hysteria about “overpopulation” translated into a stampede to include family
planning in our foreign aid program. Laws were passed stating that population
stabilization was an official goal of US foreign policy, and that every foreign
and program had to have a family planning component.
The
whole movement gained strength from both the left and the right. The liberal
argument was that too many people would devastate the environment. The radical
feminist argument was that women in Third World countries were being forced to
breed because they didn’t have access to modern contraceptives.
The
conservative argument – it’s really a national security argument – was that
growing populations in Africa, Latin America, and Asia would destabilize the
political situation in those regions and lead to Communist insurrection. The
other “conservative” argument was that if Third World populations grew too
rapidly, the Asians and the Africans and the Latin Americans might want to
consume their minerals and resources instead of selling them to us at cheap
prices.
Miller: You write that “when the population controllers move into
a poor country like Kenya or Peru, primary health care invariably suffers.”
Please explain.
Mosher: Imagine that you’re the minister of health in Peru and you
have a fixed budget to pay a certain number of doctors and nurses in public
clinics nationwide to provide medical care for the poor. Part of that budget
comes from government revenues; it’s a poor country, however, and much of your
funding comes from foreign aid. Your principal source, the United States,
announces that it wants you to make population control a priority of your
medical care program. Not just one of 10 goals, along with combating malaria
and providing vaccinations. “Unless you make it the number-one priority, we
will stop our foreign aid; if you do, we will increase it.”
You
won’t want to forfeit half your budget. In the case of Peru, the government
actually launched a sterilization campaign. That country’s doctors and nurses,
who had been administering vaccinations, begin inserting IUDs and distributing
birth control pills. Many surgeons who had been performing emergency surgery
and appendectomies and setting broken bones were organized into mobile surgical
teams to travel around doing nothing but tubal ligations.
We
know from Dr. Carbone, the Peruvian minister of health who served after the
sterilization campaign, that rates of infectious diseases skyrocketed in Peru
during the height of the sterilization campaign.
In
every country where pride of place is given to family planning, resources are
taken away from other forms of healthcare. Death rates go up as people die of
preventable diseases or from accidents because the medical system has other
priorities - preventing pregnancies.
Miller: Bishop Oscar Andres Rodriguez, then president of the
Latin American Catholic bishops’ conference, condemned a 1995 USAID report
warning about “dangerous” population growth rates in Honduras. Are you aware of
any attempt by the United States bishops to criticize USAID policies at the
source?
Mosher: No, I am not. The Respect Life Office of the US bishops’
conference has been a very stout defender of the Mexico City Policy, which
denies US family planning funding to any organization that does not specifically
commit to eschew promoting or performing abortions or lobbying for the
legalization of abortion. They have been helpful in getting laws passed like
the Tiahrt Amendment, which defines voluntarism in family planning programs,
mandates informed consent, and rules out targets and quotas or the use of
experimental methods on women. They have also been helpful in pointing out
abuses in these programs.
But
what is needed is a full-scale frontal assault on the whole population-control
enterprise. It needs to be defunded. We need to go turn out the lights at the
United Nations Fund for Population Activities (UNFPA). If there was any reason
for such an organization to exist in the 1960s, that reason no longer exists
today.
Miller: The encyclical Humanae Vitae turns 40 this summer. In
your opinion, does the experience of recent decades corroborate the teaching of
Paul VI about the social effects of contraception?
Mosher: Absolutely. I think that it’s one of the most prophetic
documents ever penned by a pope. I think that Pope Paul VI was right not only
in his general argument, but in his specific arguments about the rise in divorce
rates, the rise in the abortion rate, the devaluing of children. On all of
these points he was tremendously prescient. I think that we need to continue to
read and study this document and subsequent documents like Evangelium Vitae
(The Gospel of Life), which point out the dangers of going any farther
down the road of devaluing and instrumentalizing human life.
Miller: Do you think that there’s any chance of mobilizing human
rights groups to demand greater accountability from international organizations
that promote population control?
Mosher: Well, this was my great hope back in the 80s when I was
doing my initial research on China. I went to Amnesty International, Human
Rights Watch, and the major human rights organizations. I found the assistant
secretary of state for human rights under the Reagan administration very
sympathetic. For the first time in the state department’s annual human rights
report it mentioned, in the context of China, forced abortions and forced
sterilizations. That was a victory.
The
other human rights organizations were very reluctant to get involved because of
their ideological commitment to abortion. It took several years, but in the
late 1980s and early 1990s Amnesty International finally began to refer to
forced abortion as a violation of human rights. Now, I’m afraid, Amnesty
International has taken the former position that abortion is a human right, and
it condemns countries that do not allow abortion on demand.
Miller: What advice would you give to pro-life activists and
legislators in Western nations who would like to defund population control
programs?
Mosher: We need a
family-friendly foreign policy. Pro-life and pro-family groups have to learn a
little bit about what’s happening overseas and tell their congressmen that they
think that our policies are fundamentally wrong-headed. In a world of falling
birthrates we need pro-natal policies.
One
US congressman expressed frustration to me not long ago. He said that when he
voted against international population control funding, he got a half a dozen
angry letters from his district. He said, “Can’t anybody write me and tell me
that I did the right thing? The other side can set people to writing or calling
at a moment’s notice.” Well, we need to be doing that. Politicians are
politicians. Even the best ones need to be encouraged. To know that where they
lead, we’re following.
SOURCE:
http://www.issuesforlife.com/Population/TheUnderpopulationProblem.htm
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