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Economist: We Can Procreate Our Way Out of Climate Catastrophe

Posted by Lindsay Beyerstein, Majikthise at 3:00 PM on September 25, 2009.


Get to it, folks -- innovation requires it.

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Economist Casey Mulligan argues that population control is overrated as a solution to global warming:

The director-general of Unicef has been quoted as saying, “Family planning could bring more benefits to more people at less cost than any other single technology now available to the human race.” And one of the benefits of reduced population, it is claimed, is reduced carbon emissions and therefore mitigation of climate change.

This statement takes technology for granted, yet technology itself depends on population. [NYT]

Mulligan's argument goes like this: i) only innovation can save us from climate change, and ii) more people equals more innovation, iii) population control would result in fewer people, therefore population control is bad for climate change.

Mulligan's first premise is dubious. The consensus at yesterday's UN Summit on Climate Change was that we already know how to prevent climate change but lack the political will to act. But let's grant Mulligan his first premise for the sake of argument.

The second premise is where Mulligan's argument founders. A larger population doesn't automatically translate into greater innovation. The two are probably correlated: The more humans there are, the more likely one of them will be the next Thomas Edison, Marie Curie, or Norman Borlaug.

The real question, though, is whether a larger population would generate enough additional innovation to offset the extra resources required to sustain it. Mulligan gives us no reason to think so.

More importantly, the innovators of tomorrow need to be educated and nurtured. Yet the most explosive population growth is taking place in the world's poorest communities. When resources are very scarce, rapid population growth may stifle innovation.

Untold human potential is squandered because of lack of reproductive choice. In a world where 200 million women lack access to contraception, unplanned pregnancies can derail women's education or employment. Family planning isn't just about having fewer babies, it's also about timing births to make the best possible use of resources. Ever wonder how many potential Marie Curies had to drop out of school because they got pregnant? The real Curie didn't have her first baby until after her first Nobel Prize.

Poor families with many children often pull them out of school to support the family. Children toiling in sweatshops are unlikely to become tomorrow's engineers and agronomists, no matter how brilliant they are.  Game-changing high tech solutions won't come from shantytowns without running water, electricity, or primary education. 

The world desperately needs scientific and technical innovation. For example, global food production will have to increase by 50% by 2050 in order to support the planet's projected population of 9.1 billion, according to the latest figures from the UN Agricultural Organization.

If we want to increase innovation, we should support family planning and cultivate the potential of the people who are already here.  It's safe to assume that there are potential Curies and Borlaugs among the world's tens of millions of child laborers. Simply adding more mouths to feed without increasing educational opportunities won't produce the innovators that Mulligan is hoping for.

If Mulligan is serious about fostering innovation, he should support family planning because it gives women and children better odds of achieving their full potential.

Digg!

Tagged as: economics, contraception, population, climate change, un, family planning, mulligan

Lindsay Beyerstein a New York writer blogging at Majikthise.


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Mulligan is an idiot ...
Posted by: mmckinl on Sep 25, 2009 3:42 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The idea of increasing the population to solve our problems is wrong on so many levels it amazes me that he has any standing to be repeated let alone be reprinted ...

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As we procreate our way out of climate catastrophe,
Posted by: pelican beak on Sep 25, 2009 5:14 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
let's also torture our way to sainthood,
and shoot ourselves in the head for good health.

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Casey Mulligan is delusional!
Posted by: jhecht on Sep 25, 2009 6:03 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Talk about grasping at straws! If we breed more people, there will be more creativity... NOT!

There will only be a faster decrease in the livability of the Earth for ALL species, as the hordes of ever-more-desperate people destroy the climate, the other species, and eventually themselves.

Population control must come FIRST, for there to be any hope at all...

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Lower Population + Better Access to Resources = Innovation
Posted by: Rusty Shackleford on Sep 25, 2009 6:06 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Got that?

Lower population means that people have more abundant resources at their disposal, and therefore, they're better fed, better educated, and have a better chance of succeeding in life, versus overcrowded schools of children, all on free lunch programs because mom and dad can't afford stuff.

This guy is a moron.
If we had a much much MUCH tinier population, each indvidual person would get a bigger slice of the pie. More pie means more nourishment. More nourishment means a sharper mind. A sharper mind means more innovation. More innovation means more of the world's problems get solved.

Versus simply crowding ourselves into extinction. We already have food riots around the world due to improper allocation of resources. Why compound that problem? I think this guy is one of those people who say they're one thing, but they're actually a complete fraud.

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let's see if I've got this straight
Posted by: hurricane hugo on Sep 25, 2009 9:01 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
humanity f-ed itself into this situation...and it can f itself out of it.

genius.

#@!

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Ah, well...
Posted by: montag2 on Sep 26, 2009 2:34 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
... the Chicago School of Economics weighs in.

I suspect what's really behind this superficial reading of the problem is the underlying belief that the prospect of bigger markets worldwide will spur innovation in the first world.

Also behind this is some considerable insecurity about economic growth. Krugman has said, apart from the occasional blip up or down, economic growth has generally tracked population growth. The rape and pillage economics so favored by the Chicago School doesn't work very well without continuing growth and continuing privatization of services in debtor-nations, which, under this guy's scenario, would represent new and larger markets, but would have to take on greater debt to meet even the most basic needs of rapidly expanding populations. Having more people to exploit is very good for the investor class, to whose interests the Chicago School has mostly devoted itself.

Sustainability will inevitably mean rethinking the way capital is allocated, because capital accumulation--particularly in the Chicago School model--has depended, up to now, so heavily on unsustainable practices and assumptions about resources which were probably never true.

Of course, if I were wholly cynical, I might think that this guy does, indeed, understand about finite resources, and that he knows that a rapidly rising population would create scarcity, would mean much higher prices for staples and commodities and much, much cheaper labor costs, which is sweet, sweet music to the ears of the rentier class, but would mean much more misery for the rest of us.

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Money money monnnay...
Posted by: particle on Sep 26, 2009 10:53 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Here's a joke:
More people = magic will happen

Fixes for environmental degradation have not kept pace with increasing population, nor have wars become less lethal and destructive for that matter.

Here's another:
Economics = science

Clap real hard if you believe in Tinkerbell.

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» RE: Money money monnnay... Posted by: quique.lomeli
This economist can't do math
Posted by: evasta7 on Sep 26, 2009 12:17 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great post. Sad that Mulligan's views justify anyone's time, energy, or attention.

I advise that any argument about overpopulation that does not address the concepts of global carrying capacity or overshoot be ignored as entirely unworthy of your attention.

For those of you who want more facts (and better math and logic) I suggest the classic "Overshoot" by Catton and also the excellent essays and posts at www.paulchefurka.ca

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Fewer people=fewer problems.
Posted by: Basenjis on Sep 26, 2009 2:32 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There were far fewer people on earth when Curie, Edison, Borlaug and all the other great thinkers, inventers, innovators and problem-solvers of the past were born. Who needs standing room only to ensure more of each of them??

More people just means more problems to solve, more complicated inventions, more innovative geniuses, and more thinkers to find a way out of the mess over-population and sheer stupidity have made of things.

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Further proof
Posted by: JefffromCA on Sep 28, 2009 8:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
that economics is a branch of science fiction. The stupid is strong with this one.

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More peopple IS NOT equal to better people
Posted by: quique.lomeli on Sep 28, 2009 10:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have to say NO.
You're wrong.
Not by there being more of us we'll achive better realms of life trough technology. As humans we do not produce better ways to do things by being too many, it that were the situation the 50 millions of poor people living in my country would be getting richer, but if anything remains the same, in some years we'll have at least 75M poor people living at México.
Poor, UNHEALTHY, CROWDED, UNEDUCATED, CUT FROM TECHNOLOGY, people do not produce better ways to live, they just bring more of the same.
PERSONAL birth control available for every woman will bring better chances for her to educate her offspring.
Better educated offspring may have a good impact on technology.
EDUCATION, KNOWLEDGE and FREEDOM will be the only way to get ourselves a brighter, cleaner future.

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I did a little research on Casey Mulligan
Posted by: dhoa1 on Sep 28, 2009 11:18 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I said to myself: "Is this guy for real?"

The answer I got from the research is, "Maybe not, he has been billed as a satirist." The trouble is his readers can't tell when he is serious and when he is joshing.

I like this quote from a letter-writer, "I just can't get over it...economocists[sic] are allowed to proclaim whatever they want, be wrong EVERY SINGLE TIME, and they still get in teevee shows, newspapers, and the lecture circuit as "experts."

"Would that every job were so easy.

"I guess it's a good idea to read every harebrained crackpot economocist[sic] under the sun, just to be safe. With a sufficient number of predictions, whether based on the Austrian school, or the Keynesian school, or the configuration of chickens' intestines, something is BOUND to conform to reality.

"A little, anyway. Eventually."

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Mullligan, you lie.
Posted by: tap17x on Sep 29, 2009 8:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No one can be so stupid as to actually believe what he says. What do you want to bet that he's a shill for the pope?

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