Book
News
Population: The Ultimate Resource
The
Hindu, India's premiere newspaper has reviewed
our book, Population: The Ultimate Resource,
in its book review section dated November 14, 2000.
The review may be found at the following URL.
http://www.indiaserver.com/thehindu/2000/11/14/stories/1314017b.htm
Earlier
the book was mentioned in brief in The Telegraph
newspaper of Calcutta and the news magazine India
Today.
The
book was released by Prof. (Mrs.) Rita Simon on July
16, 2000, at a seminar
organised to discuss Population, Environment and Development
- Ideas of Julian L. Simon, at the India Habitat Centre,
Lodhi Road, New Delhi 110 003.
Population:
The Ultimate Resource
Introduction
Essays
by
Julian L. Simon
Peter T. Bauer
Deepak Lal
Nicholas Eberstadt
Sauvik Chakraverti
Edited
by Barun S. Mitra
World
Population Day should become a day for celebrations.
In this newly released book, Population: The Ultimate
Resource, an international panel of scholars
argue that people are the most valuable resource, and
the growing human population illustrate man's unprecedented
victory over death in the 20th Century. Never before
in history could the world population quadruple in the
span of just one hundred years. A society that considers
her people as the ultimate resource, and recognises
the value of freedom will discover the key to unlimited
resources, they conclude.
This
volume, published by Liberty Institute, New Delhi, is
dedicated to the memory of late Julian L. Simon,
the economist and demographer, who exposed the hollowness
of the Malthusian claim that resources are limited.
He pointed out that people are the ultimate resource.
They make all the other resources possible. The other
authors in this volume include two renowned development
economist, Lord Peter Bauer and Deepak Lal. Two political
economists whose essays appear alongside are Sauvik
Chakraverti, and Nicholas Eberstadt. Each of the essays
bring out a different aspect of the population issue.
The
book has four articles by Simon. The first is his speech
at the Institute's Freedom Workshop in 1997. Here he
outlines his basic ideas concerning population, environment
and development, and shown why historically prices of
virtually all natural resources have been falling despite
increasing consumption from a growing population. He
concludes that more people, in a free environment, produce
greater wealth, enjoy a healthier environment and have
access to abundant resources.
In
a second article Simon argues in favour of immigration.
Given the periodic outburst of sentiments against immigrants
from neighbouring countries, and migrants from countryside
to the cities, Simon's reasons for keeping the borders
open should be of interest to readers in India. He says,
"Opponents of immigration seek to persuade us that new
immigrants damage society economically, politically,
and culturally. Immigration restrictions are intended
to "protect us" in the same way as tariffs and trade
quotas. But like trade barriers, immigration restrictions
largely protect us from benefits." He reminds
us of the tragedy of the now defunct Berlin Wall where
so many lost their lives trying to escape from tyranny
at home. And in his characteristic fashion Simon says,
"This should remind us how wonderful it is that people
want to come here."
Lord
Peter Bauer, the dissident developmental economist,
shows why a growing population is not an obstacle to
economic development. He writes, “There is ample evidence
that rapid population growth has certainly not inhibited
economic progress either in the West or in the contemporary
Third World. The population of the Western world has
more than quadrupled since the middle of the eighteenth
century. Real income per head is estimated to have increased
fivefold at least. Much of the increase in incomes took
place when population increased as fast as in most of
the contemporary less developed world, or even faster.”
Deepak
Lal, another renowned development economist, finds
that population growth has had no impact on India's
economy, particularly agriculture, and that there were
other factors. To those concerned about burgeoning population
and its impact on food production, Lal says, “Apart
from the few Green Revolution States, much of the agricultural
growth in India has been induced by population growth.”
Columnist
Sauvik Chakraverti argues that population growth
causes prosperity and urbanisation and free trade are
suited to absorb the diverse potentials of the increasing
numbers. “The proof that population causes prosperity
can be condensed into four words: Urban Areas Are Rich,”
concludes Sauvik. Two graphs show very good correlation
between rates of urbanisation and economic wealth, in
India as well as internationally. On the other hand,
there is hardly any relationship between population
density and economic wellbeing. Today, Japan and India
have comparable population densities, but there is no
comparison between the two economies.
Nicholas
Eberstadt, a political economist, identifies the
ideology that has been at the root of the belief that
population needs a public policy to restrain it from
proliferating. He cautions, "To make the economic case
for an active population policy, population planners
would ultimately need to centre their arguments on estimates
of the economic value of human life. They would have
to show, in effect, what would be the "present value"
of a child born today, and also to show how that present
value would be changed by altering the size of the baby's
cohort of peers, or the cohorts following." Eberstadt
also points out that demographic change may assume a
variety of manifestations, its form in the modern era
has typically been both comparatively benign and relatively
advantageous for the purposes of economic growth.
As
we enter the new millennium, we must ask a fundamental
question. Are our fellow human beings a resource and
shape policies that protects his freedom and so that
he may realise his potential, or should we look at our
numbers and think of it as a drain on the limited resources?
This
book seeks to reopen the debate over population, and
introduce the reader to a very different perspective.
The people are the ultimate resource and not the problem.
Rather than blaming the people, we need to look at our
policies that have curbed the spirit of inquiry and
enterprise, and led to the wastage of the most precious
of all resources, the human mind. Our future and those
of our children depend on it.
The
essays have been selected and edited by Barun S. Mitra.
Additional demographic and developmental data have been
included in the book to illustrate the arguments, and
make international comparison meaningful. An appendix
also briefly outlines the evolution of population policy
in India. The book is available from Liberty Institute,
at a price of Rs 180/- (195 pages).
Articles
on population
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