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NATIONAL SECURITY COUNCIL
WASHINGTON, D.C. 20506
April 24, 1974
National Security Study Memorandum 200
TO: The Secretary of Defense
The Secretary of Agriculture
The Director of Central Intelligence
The Deputy Secretary of State
Administrator, Agency for International
Development
SUBJECT: Implications of Worldwide Population Growth for U.S.
Security and Overseas Interests
The President has directed a study of the impact of world
population growth on U.S. security and overseas interests. The
study should look forward at least until the year 2000, and use
several alternative reasonable projections of population growth.
In terms of each projection, the study should assess:
- the corresponding pace of
development, especially in poorercountries;
- the demand for US exports, especially of food, and the
tradeproblems the US may face arising from competition for
resources; and
- the likelihood that population growth or imbalances will
produce disruptive foreign policies and international
instability.
The study should focus on the
international political and economic implications of population
growth rather than its ecological, sociological or other
aspects.
The study would then offer possible courses of action for the
United States in dealing with population matters abroad,
particularly in developing countries, with special attention to
these questions:
- What, if any, new initiatives
by the United States are needed to focus international
attention on the population problem?
- Can technological innovations or development reduce growth
or ameliorate its effects?
- Could the United States improve its assistance in the
populationfield and if so, in what form and through which
agencies -- bilateral, multilateral, private?
The study should take into account
the President's concern that population policy is a human
concern intimately related to the dignity of the individual and
the objective of the United States is to work closely with
others, rather than seek to impose our views on others.
The President has directed that the study be accomplished by the
NSC Under Secretaries Committee. The Chairman, Under Secretaries
Committee, is requested to forward the study together with the
Committee's action recommendations no later than May 29, 1974
for consideration by the President.
HENRY A. KISSINGER
cc: Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff
National Security Study Memorandum
200
NSSM 200
IMPLICATIONS OF WORLDWIDE POPULATION
GROWTH
FOR U.S. SECURITY AND OVERSEAS INTERESTS
December 10, 1974
CLASSIFIED BY Harry C. Blaney, III
SUBJECT TO GENERAL DECLASSIFICATION SCHEDULE OF
EXECUTIVE ORDER 11652 AUTOMATICALLY DOWN-
GRADED AT TWO YEAR INTERVALS AND DECLASSIFIED
ON DECEMBER 31, 1980.
This document can only be declassified by the White House.
Declassified/Released on 7/3/89
under provisions of E.O. 12356
by F. Graboske, National Security Council
Contents
Part 1
Part 1
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
World Demographic Trends
1. World Population growth since
World War II is quantitatively and qualitatively different from
any previous epoch in human history. The rapid reduction in
death rates, unmatched by corresponding birth rate reductions,
has brought total growth rates close to 2 percent a year,
compared with about 1 percent before World War II, under 0.5
percent in 1750-1900, and far lower rates before 1750. The
effect is to double the world's population in 35 years instead
of 100 years. Almost 80 million are now being added each year,
compared with 10 million in 1900.
2. The second new feature of population trends is the sharp
differentiation between rich and poor countries. Since 1950,
population in the former group has been growing at 0 to 1.5
percent per year, and in the latter at 2.0 to 3.5 percent
(doubling in 20 to 35 years). Some of the highest rates of
increase are in areas already densely populated and with a weak
resource base.
3. Because of the momentum of population dynamics, reductions in
birth rates affect total numbers only slowly. High birth rates
in the recent past have resulted in a high proportion in the
youngest age groups, so that there will continue to be
substantial population increases over many years even if a
two-child family should become the norm in the future. Policies
to reduce fertility will have their main effects on total
numbers only after several decades. However, if future numbers
are to be kept within reasonable bounds, it is urgent that
measures to reduce fertility be started and made effective in
the 1970's and 1980's. Moreover, programs started now to reduce
birth rates will have short run advantages for developing
countries in lowered demands on food, health and educational and
other services and in enlarged capacity to contribute to
productive investments, thus accelerating development.
4. U.N. estimates use the 3.6 billion population of 1970 as a
base (there are nearly 4 billion now) and project from about 6
billion to 8 billion people for the year 2000 with the U.S.
medium estimate at 6.4 billion. The U.S. medium projections show
a world population of 12 billion by 2075 which implies a
five-fold increase in south and southeast Asia and in Latin
American and a seven-fold increase in Africa, compared with a
doubling in east Asia and a 40% increase in the presently
developed countries (see Table I). Most demographers, including
the U.N. and the U.S. Population Council, regard the range of 10
to 13 billion as the most likely level for world population
stability, even with intensive efforts at fertility control.
(These figures assume, that sufficient food could be produced
and distributed to avoid limitation through famines.)
Adequacy of World Food Supplies
5. Growing populations will have a
serious impact on the need for food especially in the poorest,
fastest growing LDCs. While under normal weather conditions and
assuming food production growth in line with recent trends,
total world agricultural production could expand faster than
population, there will nevertheless be serious problems in food
distribution and financing, making shortages, even at today's
poor nutrition levels, probable in many of the larger more
populous LDC regions. Even today 10 to 20 million people die
each year due, directly or indirectly, to malnutrition. Even
more serious is the consequence of major crop failures which are
likely to occur from time to time.
6. The most serious consequence for the short and middle term is
the possibility of massive famines in certain parts of the
world, especially the poorest regions. World needs for food rise
by 2-1/2 percent or more per year (making a modest allowance for
improved diets and nutrition) at a time when readily available
fertilizer and well-watered land is already largely being
utilized. Therefore, additions to food production must come
mainly from higher yields. Countries with large population
growth cannot afford constantly growing imports, but for them to
raise food output steadily by 2 to 4 percent over the next
generation or two is a formidable challenge. Capital and foreign
exchange requirements for intensive agriculture are heavy, and
are aggravated by energy cost increases and fertilizer
scarcities and price rises. The institutional, technical, and
economic problems of transforming traditional agriculture are
also very difficult to overcome.
7. In addition, in some overpopulated regions, rapid population
growth presses on a fragile environment in ways that threaten
longer-term food production: through cultivation of marginal
lands, overgrazing, desertification, deforestation, and soil
erosion, with consequent destruction of land and pollution of
water, rapid siltation of reservoirs, and impairment of inland
and coastal fisheries.
Minerals and Fuel
8. Rapid population growth is not in
itself a major factor in pressure on depletable resources
(fossil fuels and other minerals), since demand for them depends
more on levels of industrial output than on numbers of people.
On the other hand, the world is increasingly dependent on
mineral supplies from developing countries, and if rapid
population frustrates their prospects for economic development
and social progress, the resulting instability may undermine the
conditions for expanded output and sustained flows of such
resources.
9. There will be serious problems for some of the poorest LDCs
with rapid population growth. They will increasingly find it
difficult to pay for needed raw materials and energy.
Fertilizer, vital for their own agricultural production, will be
difficult to obtain for the next few years. Imports for fuel and
other materials will cause grave problems which could impinge on
the U.S., both through the need to supply greater financial
support and in LDC efforts to obtain better terms of trade
through higher prices for exports.
Economic Development and Population Growth
10. Rapid population growth creates
a severe drag on rates of economic development otherwise
attainable, sometimes to the point of preventing any increase in
per capita incomes. In addition to the overall impact on per
capita incomes, rapid population growth seriously affects a vast
range of other aspects of the quality of life important to
social and economic progress in the LDCs.
11. Adverse economic factors which generally result from rapid
population growth include:
-
reduced family savings and
domestic investment;
-
increased need for large amounts
of foreign exchange for food imports;
-
intensification of severe
unemployment and underemployment;
-
the need for large expenditures
for services such as dependency support, education, and
health which would be used for more productive investment;
-
the concentration of
developmental resources on increasing food production to
ensure survival for a larger population, rather than on
improving living conditions for smaller total numbers.
12. While GNP increased per annum at
an average rate of 5 percent in LDCs over the last decade, the
population increase of 2.5 percent reduced the average annual
per capita growth rate to only 2.5 percent. In many heavily
populated areas this rate was 2 percent or less. In the LDCs
hardest hit by the oil crisis, with an aggregate population of
800 million, GNP increases may be reduced to less than 1 percent
per capita per year for the remainder of the 1970's. For the
poorest half of the populations of these countries, with average
incomes of less than $100, the prospect is for no growth or
retrogression for this period.
13. If significant progress can be made in slowing population
growth, the positive impact on growth of GNP and per capita
income will be significant. Moreover, economic and social
progress will probably contribute further to the decline in
fertility rates.
14. High birth rates appear to stem primarily from:
a. inadequate information
about and availability of means of fertility control;
b. inadequate motivation for reduced numbers of
children combined with motivation for many children
resulting from still high infant and child mortality and
need for support in old age; and
c. the slowness of change in family preferences in
response to changes in environment.
15. The universal objective of
increasing the world's standard of living dictates that economic
growth outpace population growth. In many high population growth
areas of the world, the largest proportion of GNP is consumed,
with only a small amount saved. Thus, a small proportion of GNP
is available for investment -- the "engine" of economic growth.
Most experts agree that, with fairly constant costs per
acceptor, expenditures on effective family planning services are
generally one of the most cost effective investments for an LDC
country seeking to improve overall welfare and per capita
economic growth. We cannot wait for overall modernization and
development to produce lower fertility rates naturally since
this will undoubtedly take many decades in most developing
countries, during which time rapid population growth will tend
to slow development and widen even more the gap between rich and
poor.
16. The interrelationships between development and population
growth are complex and not wholly understood. Certain aspects of
economic development and modernization appear to be more
directly related to lower birth rates than others. Thus certain
development programs may bring a faster demographic transition
to lower fertility rates than other aspects of development. The
World Population Plan of Action adopted at the World Population
Conference recommends that countries working to affect fertility
levels should give priority to development programs and health
and education strategies which have a decisive effect on
fertility. International cooperation should give priority to
assisting such national efforts.
These programs include:
(a) improved health care and
nutrition to reduce child mortality,
(b) education and improved
social status for women;
(c) increased female employment;
(d) improved old-age security;
and
(e) assistance for the rural
poor, who generally have the highest fertility, with actions
to redistribute income and resources including providing
privately owned farms.
However, one cannot proceed simply
from identification of relationships to specific large-scale
operational programs. For example, we do not yet know of
cost-effective ways to encourage increased female employment,
particularly if we are concerned about not adding to male
unemployment. We do not yet know what specific packages of
programs will be most cost effective in many situations.
17. There is need for more information on cost effectiveness of
different approaches on both the "supply" and the "demand" side
of the picture. On the supply side, intense efforts are required
to assure full availability by 1980 of birth control information
and means to all fertile individuals, especially in rural areas.
Improvement is also needed in methods of birth control most
acceptable and useable by the rural poor. On the demand side,
further experimentation and implementation action projects and
programs are needed. In particular, more research is needed on
the motivation of the poorest who often have the highest
fertility rates. Assistance programs must be more precisely
targeted to this group than in the past.
18. It may well be that desired family size will not decline to
near replacement levels until the lot of the LDC rural poor
improves to the extent that the benefits of reducing family size
appear to them to outweigh the costs. For urban people, a
rapidly growing element in the LDCs, the liabilities of having
too many children are already becoming apparent. Aid recipients
and donors must also emphasize development and improvements in
the quality of life of the poor, if significant progress is to
be made in controlling population growth. Although it was
adopted primarily for other reasons, the new emphasis of AID's
legislation on problems of the poor (which is echoed in
comparable changes in policy emphasis by other donors and by an
increasing number of LDC's) is directly relevant to the
conditions required for fertility reduction.
Political Effects of Population Factors
19. The political consequences of
current population factors in the LDCs -- rapid growth, internal
migration, high percentages of young people, slow improvement in
living standards, urban concentrations, and pressures for
foreign migration -- are damaging to the internal stability and
international relations of countries in whose advancement the
U.S. is interested, thus creating political or even national
security problems for the U.S. In a broader sense, there is a
major risk of severe damage to world economic, political, and
ecological systems and, as these systems begin to fail, to our
humanitarian values.
20. The pace of internal migration from countryside to
over-swollen cities is greatly intensified by rapid population
growth. Enormous burdens are placed on LDC governments for
public administration, sanitation, education, police, and other
services, and urban slum dwellers (though apparently not recent
migrants) may serve as a volatile, violent force which threatens
political stability.
21. Adverse socio-economic conditions generated by these and
related factors may contribute to high and increasing levels of
child abandonment, juvenile delinquency, chronic and growing
underemployment and unemployment, petty thievery, organized
brigandry, food riots, separatist movements, communal massacres,
revolutionary actions and counter-revolutionary coups. Such
conditions also detract from the environment needed to attract
the foreign capital vital to increasing levels of economic
growth in these areas. If these conditions result in
expropriation of foreign interests, such action, from an
economic viewpoint, is not in the best interests of either the
investing country or the host government.
22. In international relations, population factors are crucial
in, and often determinants of, violent conflicts in developing
areas. Conflicts that are regarded in primarily political terms
often have demographic roots. Recognition of these relationships
appears crucial to any understanding or prevention of such
hostilities.
General Goals and Requirements for Dealing
With Rapid Population Growth
23. The central question for world
population policy in the year 1974, is whether mankind is to
remain on a track toward an ultimate population of 12 to 15
billion -- implying a five to seven-fold increase in almost all
the underdeveloped world outside of China -- or whether (despite
the momentum of population growth) it can be switched over to
the course of earliest feasible population stability -- implying
ultimate totals of 8 to 9 billions and not more than a three or
four-fold increase in any major region.
24. What are the stakes? We do not know whether technological
developments will make it possible to feed over 8 much less 12
billion people in the 21st century. We cannot be entirely
certain that climatic changes in the coming decade will not
create great difficulties in feeding a growing population,
especially people in the LDCs who live under increasingly
marginal and more vulnerable conditions. There exists at least
the possibility that present developments point toward
Malthusian conditions for many regions of the world.
25. But even if survival for these much larger numbers is
possible, it will in all likelihood be bare survival, with all
efforts going in the good years to provide minimum nutrition and
utter dependence in the bad years on emergency rescue efforts
from the less populated and richer countries of the world. In
the shorter run -- between now and the year 2000 -- the
difference between the two courses can be some perceptible
material gain in the crowded poor regions, and some improvement
in the relative distribution of intra-country per capita income
between rich and poor, as against permanent poverty and the
widening of income gaps. A much more vigorous effort to slow
population growth can also mean a very great difference between
enormous tragedies of malnutrition and starvation as against
only serious chronic conditions.
Policy Recommendations
26. There is no single approach
which will "solve" the population problem. The complex social
and economic factors involved call for a comprehensive strategy
with both bilateral and multilateral elements. At the same time
actions and programs must be tailored to specific countries and
groups. Above all, LDCs themselves must play the most important
role to achieve success.
27. Coordination among the bilateral donors and multilateral
organizations is vital to any effort to moderate population
growth. Each kind of effort will be needed for worldwide
results.
28. World policy and programs in the population field should
incorporate two major objectives:
(a) actions to
accommodate continued population growth up to 6 billions by
the mid-21st century without massive starvation or total
frustration of developmental hopes; and
(b) actions to keep the ultimate level as close as
possible to 8 billions rather than permitting it to reach 10
billions, 13 billions, or more.
29. While specific goals in this
area are difficult to state, our aim should be for the world to
achieve a replacement level of fertility, (a two-child family on
the average), by about the year 2000. This will require the
present 2 percent growth rate to decline to 1.7 percent within a
decade and to 1.1 percent by 2000. Compared to the U.N medium
projection, this goal would result in 500 million fewer people
in 2000 and about 3 billion fewer in 2050. Attainment of this
goal will require greatly intensified population programs. A
basis for developing national population growth control targets
to achieve this world target is contained in the World
Population Plan of Action.
30. The World Population Plan of Action is not self-enforcing
and will require vigorous efforts by interested countries, U.N.
agencies and other international bodies to make it effective.
U.S. leadership is essential. The strategy must include the
following elements and actions:
(a) Concentration on key
countries. Assistance for population moderation should give
primary emphasis to the largest and fastest growing
developing countries where there is special U.S. political
and strategic interest. Those countries are: India,
Bangladesh, Pakistan, Nigeria, Mexico, Indonesia, Brazil,
the Philippines, Thailand, Egypt, Turkey, Ethiopia and
Colombia. Together, they account for 47 percent of the
world's current population increase. (It should be
recognized that at present AID bilateral assistance to some
of these countries may not be acceptable.) Bilateral
assistance, to the extent that funds are available, will be
given to other countries, considering such factors as
population growth, need for external assistance, long-term
U.S. interests and willingness to engage in self-help.
Multilateral programs must necessarily have a wider coverage
and the bilateral programs of other national donors will be
shaped to their particular interests. At the same time, the
U.S. will look to the multilateral agencies -- especially
the U.N. Fund for Population Activities which already has
projects in over 80 countries -- to increase population
assistance on a broader basis with increased U.S.
contributions. This is desirable in terms of U.S. interests
and necessary in political terms in the United Nations. But
progress nevertheless, must be made in the key 13 and our
limited resources should give major emphasis to them.
(b) Integration of
population factors and population programs into country
development planning. As called for by the world Population
Plan of Action, developing countries and those aiding them
should specifically take population factors into account in
national planning and include population programs in such
plans.
(c) Increased assistance
for family planning services, information and technology.
This is a vital aspect of any world population program.
(1) Family planning
information and materials based on present technology
should be made fully available as rapidly as possible to
the 85% of the populations in key LDCs not now reached,
essentially rural poor who have the highest fertility.
(2) Fundamental and
developmental research should be expanded, aimed at
simple, low-cost, effective, safe, long-lasting and
acceptable methods of fertility control.
Support by all federal agencies
for biomedical research in this field should be increased by
$60 million annually.
(d) Creating conditions
conducive to fertility decline. For its own merits and
consistent with the recommendations of the World Population
Plan of Action, priority should be given in the general aid
program to selective development policies in sectors
offering the greatest promise of increased motivation for
smaller family size. In many cases pilot programs and
experimental research will be needed as guidance for later
efforts on a larger scale. The preferential sectors include:
-
Providing minimal levels of
education, especially for women;
-
Reducing infant mortality,
including through simple low-cost health care networks;
-
Expanding wage employment,
especially for women;
-
Developing alternatives to
children as a source of old age security;
-
Increasing income of the
poorest, especially in rural areas, including providing
privately owned farms;
-
Education of new generations
on the desirability of smaller families.
While AID has information on the
relative importance of the new major socio-economic factors
that lead to lower birth rates, much more research and
experimentation need to be done to determine what cost
effective programs and policy will lead to lower birth
rates.
(e) Food and agricultural assistance is vital for any
population sensitive development strategy. The provision of
adequate food stocks for a growing population in times of
shortage is crucial. Without such a program for the LDCs
there is considerable chance that such shortage will lead to
conflict and adversely affect population goals and
developmental efforts. Specific recommendations are included
in Section IV(c) of this study.
(f) Development of a
worldwide political and popular commitment to population
stabilization is fundamental to any effective strategy. This
requires the support and commitment of key LDC leaders. This
will only take place if they clearly see the negative impact
of unrestricted population growth and believe it is possible
to deal with this question through governmental action. The
U.S. should encourage LDC leaders to take the lead in
advancing family planning and population stabilization both
within multilateral organizations and through bilateral
contacts with other LDCs. This will require that the
President and the Secretary of State treat the subject of
population growth control as a matter of paramount
importance and address it specifically in their regular
contacts with leaders of other governments, particularly
LDCs.
31. The World Population Plan of
Action and the resolutions adopted by consensus by 137 nations
at the August 1974 U.N. World Population Conference, though not
ideal, provide an excellent framework for developing a worldwide
system of population/family planning programs. We should use
them to generate U.N. agency and national leadership for an
all-out effort to lower growth rates. Constructive action by the
U.S. will further our objectives. To this end we should:
(a) Strongly support the World
Population Plan of Action and the adoption of its
appropriate provisions in national and other programs.
(b) Urge the adoption by
national programs of specific population goals including
replacement levels of fertility for DCs and LDCs by 2000.
(c) After suitable preparation
in the U.S., announce a U.S. goal to maintain our present
national average fertility no higher than replacement level
and attain near stability by 2000.
(d) Initiate an international
cooperative strategy of national research programs on human
reproduction and fertility control covering biomedical and
socio-economic factors, as proposed by the U.S. Delegation
at Bucharest.
(e) Act on our offer at
Bucharest to collaborate with other interested donors and
U.N. agencies to aid selected countries to develop low cost
preventive health and family planning services.
(f) Work directly with donor
countries and through the U.N. Fund for Population
Activities and the OECD/DAC to increase bilateral and
multilateral assistance for population programs.
32. As measures to increase
understanding of population factors by LDC leaders and to
strengthen population planning in national development plans, we
should carry out the recommendations in Part II, Section VI,
including:
(a) Consideration of population
factors and population policies in all Country Assistance
Strategy Papers (CASP) and Development Assistance Program
(DAP) multi-year strategy papers.
(b) Prepare projections of population growth individualized
for countries with analyses of development of each country
and discuss them with national leaders.
(c) Provide for greatly increased training programs for
senior officials of LDCs in the elements of demographic
economics.
(d) Arrange for familiarization programs at U.N.
Headquarters in New York for ministers of governments,
senior policy level officials and comparably influential
leaders from private life.
(e) Assure assistance to LDC leaders in integrating
population factors in national plans, particularly as they
relate to health services, education, agricultural resources
and development, employment, equitable distribution of
income and social stability.
(f) Also assure assistance to LDC leaders in relating
population policies and family planning programs to major
sectors of development: health, nutrition, agriculture,
education, social services, organized labor, women's
activities, and community development.
(g) Undertake initiatives to implement the Percy Amendment
regarding improvement in the status of women.
(h) Give emphasis in assistance to programs on development
of rural areas.
Beyond these activities which are
essentially directed at national interests, we must assure that
a broader educational concept is developed to convey an acute
understanding to national leaders of the interrelation of
national interests and world population growth.
33. We must take care that our activities should not give the
appearance to the LDCs of an industrialized country policy
directed against the LDCs. Caution must be taken that in any
approaches in this field we support in the LDCs are ones we can
support within this country. "Third World" leaders should be in
the forefront and obtain the credit for successful programs. In
this context it is important to demonstrate to LDC leaders that
such family planning programs have worked and can work within a
reasonable period of time.
34. To help assure others of our intentions we should indicate
our emphasis on the right of individuals and couples to
determine freely and responsibly the number and spacing of their
children and to have information, education and means to do so,
and our continued interest in improving the overall general
welfare. We should use the authority provided by the World
Population Plan of Action to advance the principles that 1)
responsibility in parenthood includes responsibility to the
children and the community and 2) that nations in exercising
their sovereignty to set population policies should take into
account the welfare of their neighbors and the world. To
strengthen the worldwide approach, family planning programs
should be supported by multilateral organizations wherever they
can provide the most efficient means.
35. To support such family planning and related development
assistance efforts there is need to increase public and
leadership information in this field. We recommend increased
emphasis on mass media, newer communications technology and
other population education and motivation programs by the UN and
USIA. Higher priority should be given to these information
programs in this field worldwide.
36. In order to provide the necessary resources and leadership,
support by the U.S. public and Congress will be necessary. A
significant amount of funds will be required for a number of
years. High level personal contact by the Secretary of State and
other officials on the subject at an early date with
Congressional counterparts is needed. A program for this purpose
should be developed by OES with H and AID.
37. There is an alternate view which holds that a growing number
of experts believe that the population situation is already more
serious and less amenable to solution through voluntary measures
than is generally accepted. It holds that, to prevent even more
widespread food shortage and other demographic catastrophes than
are generally anticipated, even stronger measures are required
and some fundamental, very difficult moral issues need to be
addressed. These include, for example, our own consumption
patterns, mandatory programs, tight control of our food
resources. In view of the seriousness of these issues, explicit
consideration of them should begin in the Executive Branch, the
Congress and the U.N. soon. (See the end of Section I for this
viewpoint.)
38. Implementing the actions discussed above (in paragraphs
1-36), will require a significant expansion in AID funds for
population/family planning. A number of major actions in the
area of creating conditions for fertility decline can be funded
from resources available to the sectors in question (e.g.,
education, agriculture). Other actions, including family
planning services, research and experimental activities on
factors affecting fertility, come under population funds. We
recommend increases in AID budget requests to the Congress on
the order of $35-50 million annually through FY 1980 (above the
$137.5 million requested for FY 1975). This funding would cover
both bilateral programs and contributions to multilateral
organizations. However, the level of funds needed in the future
could change significantly, depending on such factors as major
breakthroughs in fertility control technologies and LDC
receptivities to population assistance. To help develop,
monitor, and evaluate the expanded actions discussed above, AID
is likely to need additional direct hire personnel in the
population/family planning area. As a corollary to expanded AID
funding levels for population, efforts must be made to encourage
increased contributions by other donors and recipient countries
to help reduce rapid population growth.
Policy Follow-up and Coordination
39. This world wide population
strategy involves very complex and difficult questions. Its
implementation will require very careful coordination and
specific application in individual circumstances. Further work
is greatly needed in examining the mix of our assistance
strategy and its most efficient application. A number of
agencies are interested and involved. Given this, there appears
to be a need for a better and higher level mechanism to refine
and develop policy in this field and to coordinate its
implementation beyond this NSSM. The following options are
suggested for consideration:
(a) That the NSC Under
Secretaries Committee be given responsibility for policy and
executive review of this subject:
Pros:
Because of the major foreign policy implications of the
recommended population strategy a high level focus on policy
is required for the success of such a major effort.
With the very wide agency interests in this topic there is
need for an accepted and normal interagency process for
effective analysis and disinterested policy development and
implementation within the N.S.C. system.
Staffing support for implementation of the NSSM-200
follow-on exists within the USC framework including
utilization of the Office of Population of the Department of
State as well as other.
USC has provided coordination and follow-up in major foreign
policy areas involving a number of agencies as is the case
in this study.
Cons:
The USC would not be within the normal policy-making
framework for development policy as would be in the case
with the DCC.
The USC is further removed from the process of budget
development and review of the AID Population Assistance
program.
(b) That when its establishment is authorized by the
President, the Development Coordination Committee, headed by
the AID Administrator be given overall responsibility:*
Pros: (Provided by AID)
It is precisely for coordination of this type of development
issue involving a variety of U.S. policies toward LDCs that
the Congress directed the establishment of the DCC.
The DCC is also the body best able to relate population
issues to other development issues, with which they are
intimately related.
The DCC has the advantage of stressing technical and
financial aspects of U.S. population policies, thereby
minimizing political complications frequently inherent in
population programs.
It is, in AID's view, the coordinating body best located to
take an overview of all the population activities now taking
place under bilateral and multilateral auspices.
Cons:
While the DCC will doubtless have substantial technical
competence, the entire range of political and other factors
bearing on our global population strategy might be more
effectively considered by a group having a broader focus
than the DCC.
The DCC is not within the N.S.C. system which provides a
more direct access to both the President and the principal
foreign policy decision-making mechanism.
The DCC might overly emphasize purely developmental aspects
of population and under emphasize other important elements.
(c) That the NSC/CIEP be asked to lead an
Interdepartmental Group for this subject to insure follow-up
interagency coordination, and further policy development.
(No participating Agency supports this option, therefore it
is only included to present a full range of possibilities).
Option (a) is
supported by State, Treasury, Defense (ISA and JCS),
Agriculture, HEW, Commerce NSC and CIA.**
Option (b) is supported by AID.
Under any of the above options,
there should be an annual review of our population policy to
examine progress, insure our programs are in keeping with the
latest information in this field, identify possible
deficiencies, and recommend additional action at the appropriate
level.***
* NOTE: AID expects the
DCC will have the following composition: The Administrator
of AID as Chairman; the Under Secretary of State for
Economic Affairs; the Under Secretary of Treasury for
Monetary Affairs; the Under Secretaries of Commerce,
Agriculture and Labor; an Associate Director of OMB; the
Executive Director of CIEP, STR; a representative of the NSC;
the Presidents of the EX-IM Bank and OPIC; and any other
agency when items of interest to them are under discussion.)
** Department of Commerce supports the option of
placing the population policy formulation mechanism under
the auspices of the USC but believes that any detailed
economic questions resulting from proposed population
policies be explored through existing domestic and
international economic policy channels.
*** AID believes these reviews undertaken only
periodically might look at selected areas or at the entire
range of population policy depending on problems and needs
which arise.
Back to Contents
CHAPTER I -
WORLD DEMOGRAPHIC TRENDS
Introduction
The present world population growth is unique. Rates of increase are
much higher than in earlier centuries, they are more widespread, and
have a greater effect on economic life, social justice, and -- quite
likely -- on public order and political stability. The significance
of population growth is enhanced because it comes at a time when the
absolute size and rate of increase of the global economy, need for
agricultural land, demand for and consumption of resources including
water, production of wastes and pollution have also escalated to
historically unique levels. Factors that only a short time ago were
considered separately now have interlocking relationships,
inter-dependence in a literal sense. The changes are not only
quantitatively greater than in the past but qualitatively different.
The growing burden is not only on resources but on administrative
and social institutions as well.
Population growth is, of course, only one of the important factors
in this new, highly integrated tangle of relationships. However, it
differs from the others because it is a determinant of the demand
sector while others relate to output and supply. (Population growth
also contributes to supply through provision of manpower; in most
developing countries, however, the problem is not a lack of but a
surfeit of hands.) It is, therefore, most pervasive, affecting what
needs to be done in regard to other factors. Whether other problems
can be solved depends, in varying degrees, on the extent to which
rapid population growth and other population variables can be
brought under control. Highlights of Current Demographic Trends
Since 1950, world population has been undergoing unprecedented
growth. This growth has four prominent features:
1. It is unique, far more rapid than
ever in history.
2. It is much more rapid in less developed than in developed
regions.
3. Concentration in towns and cities is increasing much more
rapidly than overall population growth and is far more rapid in
LDCs than in developed countries.
4. It has a tremendous built-in
momentum that will inexorably double populations of most less
developed countries by 2000 and will treble or quadruple their
populations before leveling off -- unless far greater efforts at
fertility control are made than are being made.
Therefore, if a country wants to
influence its total numbers through population policy, it must act
in the immediate future in order to make a substantial difference in
the long run.
For most of man's history, world population grew very slowly. At the
rate of growth estimated for the first 18 centuries A.D., it
required more than 1,000 years for world population to double in
size. With the beginnings of the industrial revolution and of modern
medicine and sanitation over two hundred years ago, population
growth rates began to accelerate. At the current growth rate (1.9
percent) world population will double in 37 years.
By about 1830, world population
reached 1 billion. The second billion was added in about 100
years by 1930. The third billion in 30 years by 1960. The fourth
will be reached in 1975.
Between 1750-1800 less than 4 million were being added, on the
average, to the earth's population each year. Between 1850-1900,
it was close to 8 million. By 1950 it had grown to 40 million.
By 1975 it will be about 80 million.
In the developed countries of Europe,
growth rates in the last century rarely exceeded 1.0-1.2 percent per
year, almost never 1.5 percent. Death rates were much higher than in
most LDCs today. In North America where growth rates were higher,
immigration made a significant contribution. In nearly every country
of Europe, growth rates are now below 1 percent, in many below 0.5
percent. The natural growth rate (births minus deaths) in the United
States is less than 0.6 percent. Including immigration (the world's
highest) it is less than 0.7 percent.
In less developed countries growth rates average about 2.4 percent.
For the People's Republic of China, with a massive, enforced birth
control program, the growth rate is estimated at under 2 percent.
India's is variously estimated from 2.2 percent, Brazil at 2.8
percent, Mexico at 3.4 percent, and Latin America at about 2.9
percent. African countries, with high birth as well as high death
rates, average 2.6 percent; this growth rate will increase as death
rates go down.
The world's population is now about 3.9 billion; 1.1 billion in the
developed countries (30 percent) and 2.8 billion in the less
developed countries (70 percent).
In 1950, only 28 percent of the world's population or 692 million,
lived in urban localities. Between 1950 and 1970, urban population
expanded at a rate twice as rapid as the rate of growth of total
population. In 1970, urban population increased to 36 percent of
world total and numbered 1.3 billion. By 2000, according to the UN's
medium variant projection, 3.2 billion (about half of the total) of
world inhabitants will live in cities and towns.
In developed countries, the urban population varies from 45 to 85
percent; in LDCs, it varies from close to zero in some African
states to nearly 100 percent in Hong Kong and Singapore.
In LDCs, urban population is projected to more than triple in the
remainder of this century, from 622 million in 1970 to 2,087 in
2000. Its proportion in total LDC population will thus increase from
25 percent in 1970 to 41 percent in 2000. This implies that by the
end of this century LDCs will reach half the level of urbanization
projected for DCs (82 percent) (See Table I).
The enormous built-in momentum of population growth in the less
developed countries (and to a degree in the developed countries) is,
if possible, even more important and ominous than current population
size and rates of growth. Unlike a conventional explosion,
population growth provides a continuing chain reaction. This
momentum springs from (1) high fertility levels of LDC populations
and (2) the very high percentage of maturing young people in
populations. The typical developed country, Sweden for example, may
have 25% of the population under 15 years of age. The typical
developing country has 41% to 45% or its population under 15. This
means that a tremendous number of future parents, compared to
existing parents, are already born. Even if they have fewer children
per family than their parents, the increase in population will be
very great.
Three projections (not predictions), based on three different
assumptions concerning fertility, will illustrate the generative
effect of this building momentum.
a. Present fertility
continued: If present fertility rates were to remain constant,
the 1974 population 3.9 billion would increase to 7.8 billion by
the hear 2000 and rise to a theoretical 103 billion by 2075.
b. U.N. "Medium Variant": If present birth rates in the
developing countries, averaging about 38/1000 were further
reduced to 29/1000 by 2000, the world's population in 2000 would
be 6.4 billion, with over 100 million being added each year. At
the time stability (non-growth) is reached in about 2100, world
population would exceed 12.0 billion.
c. Replacement Fertility by 2000: If replacement levels
of fertility were reached by 2000, the world's population in
2000 would be 5.9 billion and at the time of stability, about
2075, would be 8.4 billion. ("Replacement level" of fertility is
not zero population growth. It is the level of fertility when
couples are limiting their families to an average of about two
children. For most countries, where there are high percentages
of young people, even the attainment of replacement levels of
fertility means that the population will continue to grow for
additional 50-60 years to much higher numbers before leveling
off.)
It is reasonable to assume that
projection (a) is unreal since significant efforts are already being
made to slow population growth and because even the most extreme
pro-natalists do not argue that the earth could or should support
103 billion people. Famine, pestilence, war, or birth control will
stop population growth far short of this figure.
The U.N. medium variant (projection (b) has been described in a
publication of the U.N. Population Division as "a synthesis of the
results of efforts by demographers of the various countries and the
U.N. Secretariat to formulate realistic assumptions with regard to
future trends, in view of information about present conditions and
past experiences." Although by no means infallible, these
projections provide plausible working numbers and are used by U.N.
agencies (e.g., FAO, ILO) for their specialized analyses. One major
shortcoming of most projections, however, is that "information about
present conditions" quoted above is not quite up-to-date. Even in
the United States, refined fertility and mortality rates become
available only after a delay of several years.
Thus, it is possible that the rate of world population growth has
actually fallen below (or for that matter increased from) that
assumed under the U.N. medium variant. A number of less developed
countries with rising living levels (particularly with increasing
equality of income) and efficient family planning programs have
experienced marked declines in fertility. Where access to family
planning services has been restricted, fertility levels can be
expected to show little change.
It is certain that fertility rates have already fallen significantly
in Hong King, Singapore, Taiwan, Fiji, South Korea, Barbados, Chile,
Costa Rica, Trinidad and Tobago, and Mauritius (See Table 1).
Moderate declines have also been registered in West Malaysia, Sri
Lanka, and Egypt. Steady increases in the number of acceptors at
family planning facilities indicate a likelihood of some fertility
reduction in Thailand, Indonesia, the Philippines, Colombia, and
other countries which have family planning programs. On the other
hand, there is little concrete evidence of significant fertility
reduction in the populous countries of India, Bangladesh, Pakistan,
etc.1
Projection (c) is attainable if countries recognize the gravity of
their population situation and make a serious effort to do something
about it.
The differences in the size of total population projected under the
three variants become substantial in a relatively short time.
By 1985, the medium variant projects
some 342 million fewer people than the constant fertility
variant and the replacement variant is 75 million lower than the
medium variant.
By the year 2000 the difference between constant and medium
fertility variants rises to 1.4 billion and between the medium
and replacement variants, close to 500 million. By the year
2000, the span between the high and low series -- some 1.9
billion -- would amount to almost half the present world
population.
Most importantly, perhaps, by 2075 the
constant variant would have swamped the earth and the difference
between the medium and replacement variants would amount to 3.7
billion. (Table 2.) The significance of the alternative variants is
that they reflect the difference between a manageable situation and
potential chaos with widespread starvation, disease, and
disintegration for many countries.
Furthermore, after replacement level fertility is reached, family
size need not remain at an average of two children per family. Once
this level is attained, it is possible that fertility will continue
to decline below replacement level. This would hasten the time when
a stationary population is reached and would increase the difference
between the projection variants. The great momentum of population
growth can be seen even more clearly in the case of a single country
-- for example, Mexico. Its 1970 population was 50 million.
If its 1965-1970 fertility were to
continue, Mexico's population in 2070 would theoretically number 2.2
billion. If its present average of 6.1 children per family could be
reduced to an average of about 2 (replacement level fertility) by
1980-85, its population would continue to grow for about sixty years
to 110 million. If the two-child average could be reached by
1990-95, the population would stabilize in sixty more years at about
22 percent higher -- 134 million. If the two-child average cannot be
reached for 30 years (by 2000-05), the population at stabilization
would grow by an additional 24 percent to 167 million.
Similar illustrations for other countries are given below.
As Table 3. indicates, alternative rates of fertility decline would
have significant impact on the size of a country's population by
2000. They would make enormous differences in the sizes of the
stabilized populations, attained some 60 to 70 years after
replacement level fertility is reached. Therefore, it is of the
utmost urgency that governments now recognize the facts and
implications of population growth determining the ultimate
population sizes that make sense for their countries and start
vigorous programs at once to achieve their desired goals.
Back to Contents
FUTURE GROWTH
IN MAJOR REGIONS AND COUNTRIES
Throughout the projected period 1970 to 2000, less developed regions
will grow more rapidly than developed regions. The rate of growth in
LDCs will primarily depend upon the rapidity with which family
planning practices are adopted.
Differences in the growth rates of DCs and LDCs will further
aggravate the striking demographic imbalances between developed and
less developed countries. Under the U.N. medium projection variant,
by the year 2000 the population of less developed countries would
double, rising from 2.5 billion in 1970 to 5.0 billion (Table 4). In
contrast, the overall growth of the population of the developed
world during the same period would amount to about 26 percent,
increasing from 1.08 to 1.37 billion. Thus, by the year 2000 almost
80 percent of world population would reside in regions now
considered less developed and over 90 percent of the annual
increment to world population would occur there.
The paucity of reliable information on all Asian communist countries
and the highly optimistic assumptions concerning China's fertility
trends implicit in U.N. medium projections2 argue for disaggregating
the less developed countries into centrally planned economies and
countries with market economies. Such disaggregation reflects more
accurately the burden of rapidly growing populations in most LDCs.
As Table 4. shows, the population of countries with centrally
planned economies, comprising about 1/3 of the 1970 LDC total, is
projected to grow between 1970 and 2000 at a rate well below the LDC
average of 2.3 percent. Over the entire thirty-year period, their
growth rate averages 1.4 percent, in comparison with 2.7 percent for
other LDCs. Between 1970 and 1985, the annual rate of growth in
Asian communist LDCs is expected to average 1.6 percent and
subsequently to decline to an average of 1.2 percent between 1985
and 2000.
The growth rate of LDCs with market
economies, on the other hand, remains practically the same, at 2.7
and 2.6 percent, respectively. Thus, barring both large-scale birth
control efforts (greater than implied by the medium variant) or
economic or political upheavals, the next twenty-five years offer
non-communist LDCs little respite from the burdens of rapidly
increasing humanity. Of course, some LDCs will be able to
accommodate this increase with less difficulty than others.
Moreover, short of Draconian measures there is no possibility that
any LDC can stabilize its population at less than double its present
size. For many, stabilization will not be short of three times their
present size.
NATO and Eastern Europe
In the west, only France and Greece
have a policy of increasing population growth -- which the
people are successfully disregarding. (In a recent and
significant change from traditional positions, however, the
French Assembly overwhelmingly endorsed a law not only
authorizing general availability of contraceptives but also
providing that their cost be borne by the social security
system.) Other western NATO members have no policies.3 Most
provide some or substantial family planning services. All appear
headed toward lower growth rates. In two NATO member countries
(West Germany and Luxembourg), annual numbers of deaths already
exceed births, yielding a negative natural growth rate.
Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, and Czechoslovakia have active
policies to increase their population growth rates -- despite
the reluctance of their people to have larger families. Within
the USSR, fertility rates in RSFSR and the republics of Ukraine,
Latvia, and Estonia are below replacement level. This situation
has prevailed at least since 1969-1970 and, if continued, will
eventually lead to negative population growth in these
republics. In the United States, average fertility also fell
below replacement level in the past two years (1972 and 1973).
There is a striking difference, however, in the attitudes toward
this demographic development in the two countries.
While in the United States the
possibility of a stabilized (non-growing) population is
generally viewed with favor, in the USSR there is perceptible
concern over the low fertility of Slavs and Balts (mostly by
Slavs and Balts). The Soviet government, by all indications, is
studying the feasibility of increasing their sagging birth
rates. The entire matter of fertility-bolstering policies is
circumscribed by the relatively high costs of increasing
fertility (mainly through increased outlays for consumption
goods and services) and the need to avoid the appearance of
ethnic discrimination between rapidly and slowly growing
nationalities.
U.N. medium projections to the year 2000 show no significant
changes in the relative demographic position of the western
alliance countries as against eastern Europe and the USSR. The
population of the Warsaw Pact countries will remain at 65
percent of the populations of NATO member states. If Turkey is
excluded, the Warsaw Pact proportion rises somewhat from 70
percent in 1970 to 73 percent by 2000. This change is not of an
order of magnitude that in itself will have important
implications for east-west power relations. (Future growth of
manpower in NATO and Warsaw Pact nations has not been examined
in this Memorandum.)
Of greater potential political and strategic significance are
prospective changes in the populations of less developed regions
both among themselves and in relation to developed countries.
Africa
Assessment of future demographic
trends in Africa is severely impeded by lack of reliable base
data on the size, composition, fertility and mortality, and
migration of much of the continent's population. With this
important limitation in mind, the population of Africa is
projected to increase from 352 million in 1970 to 834 million in
2000, an increase of almost 2.5 times. In most African
countries, population growth rates are likely to increase
appreciably before they begin to decline. Rapid population
expansion may be particularly burdensome to the "least
developed" among Africa's LDCs including -- according to the
U.N. classification -- Ethiopia, Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda, Upper
Volta, Mali, Malawi, Niger, Burundi, Guinea, Chad, Rwanda,
Somalia, Dahomey, Lesotho, and Botswana.
As a group, they numbered 104
million in 1970 and are projected to grow at an average rate of
3.0 percent a year, to some 250 million in 2000. This rate of
growth is based on the assumption of significant reductions in
mortality. It is questionable, however, whether economic and
social conditions in the foreseeable future will permit
reductions in mortality required to produce a 3 percent growth
rate. Consequently, the population of the "least developed" of
Africa's LDCs may fall short of the 250 million figure in 2000.
African countries endowed with rich oil and other natural
resources may be in a better economic position to cope with
population expansion. Nigeria falls into this category. Already
the most populous country on the continent, with an estimated 55
million people in 1970 (see footnote to Table 4), Nigeria's
population by the end of this century is projected to number 135
million. This suggests a growing political and strategic role
for Nigeria, at least in Africa south of the Sahara.
In North Africa, Egypt's population of 33 million in 1970 is
projected to double by 2000. The large and increasing size of
Egypt's population is, and will remain for many years, an
important consideration in the formulation of many foreign and
domestic policies not only of Egypt but also of neighboring
countries.
Latin America
Rapid population growth is projected
for tropical South American which includes Brazil, Colombia,
Peru, Venezuela, Ecuador and Bolivia. Brazil, with a current
population of over 100 million, clearly dominates the continent
demographically; by the end of this century, its population is
projected to reach the 1974 U.S. level of about 212 million
people. Rapid economic growth prospects -- if they are not
diminished by demographic overgrowth -- portend a growing power
status for Brazil in Latin America and on the world scene over
the next 25 years.
The Caribbean which includes a number of countries with
promising family planning programs (Jamaica, Trinidad and
Tobago, Cuba, Barbados and also Puerto Rico) is projected to
grow at 2.2 percent a year between 1970 and 2000, a rate below
the Latin American average of 2.8 percent.
Perhaps the most significant population trend from the viewpoint
of the United States is the prospect that Mexico's population
will increase from 50 million in 1970 to over 130 million by the
year 2000. Even under most optimistic conditions, in which the
country's average fertility falls to replacement level by 2000,
Mexico's population is likely to exceed 100 million by the end
of this century.
South Asia
Somewhat slower rates are expected
for Eastern and Middle South Asia whose combined population of
1.03 billion in 1970 is projected to more than double by 2000 to
2.20 billion. In the face of continued rapid population growth
(2.5 percent), the prospects for the populous Indian subregion,
which already faces staggering economic problems, are
particularly bleak. South and Southeast Asia's population will
substantially increase relative to mainland China; it appears
doubtful, however, that this will do much to enhance their
relative power position and political influence in Asia. On the
contrary, preoccupation with the growing internal economic and
social problems resulting from huge population increases may
progressively reduce the ability of the region, especially
India, to play an effective regional and world power role.
Western South Asia, demographically dominated by Turkey and
seven oil-rich states (including Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and Kuwait)
is projected to be one of the fastest growing LDC regions, with
an annual average growth rate of 2.9 percent between 1970 and
2000. Part of this growth will be due to immigration, as for
example, into Kuwait.
The relatively low growth rate of 1.8 percent projected for East
Asian LDCs with market economics reflects highly successful
family planning programs in Taiwan, South Korea, and Hong Kong.
The People's Republic of China
(PRC)
The People's Republic of China has
by far the world's largest population and, potentially, severe
problems of population pressure, given its low standard of
living and quite intensive utilization of available farm land
resources. Its last census in 1953 recorded a population of 583
million, and PRC officials have cited a figure as high as 830
million for 1970. The Commerce Department's Bureau of Economic
Analysis projects a slightly higher population, reaching 920
million by 1974. The present population growth rate is about two
percent.
Conclusion Rapid population growth
in less developed countries has been mounting in a social milieu
of poverty, unemployment and underemployment, low educational
attainment, widespread malnutrition, and increasing costs of
food production. These countries have accumulated a formidable
"backlog" of unfinished tasks. They include economic
assimilation of some 40 percent of their people who are pressing
at, but largely remain outside the periphery of the developing
economy; the amelioration of generally low levels of living; and
in addition, accommodation of annually larger increments to the
population. The accomplishment of these tasks could be
intolerably slow if the average annual growth rate in the
remainder of this century does not slow down to well below the
2.7 percent projected, under the medium variant, for LDCs with
market economics. How rapid population growth impedes social and
economic progress is discussed in subsequent chapters.
Back to Contents
CHAPTER II -
POPULATION AND WORLD FOOD SUPPLIES
Rapid population growth and lagging food production in developing
countries, together with the sharp deterioration in the global food
situation in 1972 and 1973, have raised serious concerns about the
ability of the world to feed itself adequately over the next quarter
century and beyond.
As a result of population growth, and to some extent also of
increasing affluence, world food demand has been growing at
unprecedented rates. In 1900, the annual increase in world demand
for cereals was about 4 million tons. By 1950, it had risen to about
12 million tons per year. By 1970, the annual increase in demand was
30 million tons (on a base of over 1,200 million tons). This is
roughly equivalent to the annual wheat crop of Canada, Australia,
and Argentina combined. This annual increase in food demand is made
up of a 2% annual increase in population and a 0.5% increased demand
per capita. Part of the rising per capita demand reflects
improvement in diets of some of the peoples of the developing
countries. In the less developed countries about 400 pounds of grain
is available per person per year and is mostly eaten as cereal. The
average North American, however, uses nearly a ton of grain a year,
only 200 pounds directly and the rest in the form of meat, milk, and
eggs for which several pounds of cereal are required to produce one
pound of the animal product (e.g., five pounds of grain to produce
one pound of beef).
During the past two decades, LDCs have been able to keep food
production ahead of population, notwithstanding the unprecedentedly
high rates of population growth. The basic figures are summarized in
the following table: [calculated from data in USDA, The World
Agricultural Situation, March 1974]:
INDICES OF WORLD POPULATION AND FOOD
PRODUCTION
(excluding Peoples Republic of China)
1954=100
+--------------------+--------------------+------------------------+
|
WORLD | DEVELOPED
COUNTRIES|LESS DEVELOPED COUNTRIES|
|
Food |
Food |
Food
|
| production
| production
| production
|
|
|
|
|
| Popu-
Per | Popu-
Per | Popu-
Per |
|lation Total Capita|lation Total
Capita|lation Total Capita |
+------+--------------------+--------------------+------------------------+
| 1954 | 100 100
100 | 100 100
100 | 100 100 100
|
| 1973 | 144 170
119 | 124 170
138 | 159 171 107
|
| |
|
| Compound Annual Increase (%):
|
| | 1.9
2.8 0.9 | 1.1
2.8 1.7 | 2.5 2.9
0.4 |
+------+--------------------+--------------------+------------------------+ |
It will be noted that the relative gain
in LDC total food production was just as great as for advanced
countries, but was far less on a per capita basis because of the
sharp difference in population growth rates. Moreover, within the
LDC group were 24 countries (including Indonesia, Nigeria, the
Philippines, Zaire, Algeria, Guyana, Iraq, and Chile) in which the
rate of increase of population growth exceeded the rate of increase
in food production; and a much more populous group (including India,
Pakistan, and Bangladesh) in which the rate of increase in
production barely exceeded population growth but did not keep up
with the increase in domestic demand. [World Food Conference,
Preliminary Assessment, 8 May 1974; U.N. Document E/CONF. 65/
PREP/6, p. 33.]
General requirements have been projected for the years 1985 and
2000, based on the UN Medium Variant population estimates and
allowing for a very small improvement in diets in the LDCs.
A recent projection made by the Department of Agriculture indicates
a potential productive capacity more than adequate to meet world
cereal requirements (the staple food of the world) of a population
of 6.4 billion in the year 2000 (medium fertility variant) at
roughly current relative prices.
This overall picture offers little cause for complacency when broken
down by geographic regions. To support only a very modest
improvement in current cereal consumption levels (from 177 kilograms
per capita in 1970 to 200-206 kilograms in 2000) the projections
show an alarming increase in LDC dependency on imports. Such imports
are projected to rise from 21.4 million tons in 1970 to 102-122
million tons by the end of the century. Cereal imports would
increase to 13-15 percent of total developing country consumption as
against 8 percent in 1970. As a group, the advanced countries cannot
only meet their own needs but will also generate a substantial
surplus. For the LDCs, analyses of food production capacity foresee
the physical possibility of meeting their needs, provided that,
(a) weather conditions are
normal,
(b) yields per unit of area
continue to improve at the rates of the last decade, bringing
the average by 1985 close to present yields in the advanced
countries, and
(c) a substantially larger
annual transfer of grains can be arranged from the surplus
countries (mainly North America), either through commercial
sales or through continuous and growing food aid.
The estimates of production capacity do
not rely on major new technical breakthroughs in food production
methods, but they do require the availability and application of
greatly increased quantities of fertilizers, pesticides, irrigation
water, and other inputs to modernized agriculture, together with
continued technological advances at past rates and the institutional
and administrative reforms (including vastly expanded research and
extension services) essential to the successful application of these
inputs. They also assume normal weather conditions. Substantial
political will is required in the LDCs to give the necessary
priority to food production.
There is great uncertainty whether the conditions for achieving food
balance in the LDCs can in fact be realized. Climatic changes are
poorly understood, but a persistent atmospheric cooling trend since
1940 has been established. One respectable body of scientific
opinion believes that this portends a period of much wider annual
frosts, and possibly a long-term lowering of rainfall in the monsoon
areas of Asia and Africa. Nitrogen fertilizer will be in world short
supply into the late 1970s, at least; because of higher energy
prices, it may also be more costly in real terms than in the 1960s.
Capital investments for irrigation and infrastructure and the
organizational requirements for securing continuous improvements in
agricultural yields may well be beyond the financial and
administrative capacity of many LDCs. For some of the areas under
heaviest population pressure, there is little or no prospect for
foreign exchange earnings to cover constantly increasing imports of
food.
While it is always unwise to project the recent past into the
long-term future, the experience of 1972-73 is very sobering. The
coincidence of adverse weather in many regions in 1972 brought per
capita production in the LDCs back to the level of the early 1960s.
At the same time, world food reserves (mainly American) were almost
exhausted, and they were not rebuilt during the high production year
of 1973. A repetition under these conditions of 1972 weather
patterns would result in large-scale famine of a kind not
experienced for several decades -- a kind the world thought had been
permanently banished.
Even if massive famine can be averted, the most optimistic forecasts
of food production potential in the more populous LDCs show little
improvement in the presently inadequate levels and quality of
nutrition. As long as annual population growth continues at 2 to 3
percent or more, LDCs must make expanded food production the top
development priority, even though it may absorb a large fraction of
available capital and foreign exchange.
Moderation of population growth rates in the LDCs could make some
difference to food requirements by 1985, a substantial difference by
2000, and a vast difference in the early part of the next century.
From the viewpoint of U.S. interests, such reductions in LDC food
needs would be clearly advantageous. They would not reduce American
commercial markets for food since the reduction in LDC food
requirements that would result from slowing population growth would
affect only requests for concessional or grant food assistance, not
commercial sales. They would improve the prospects for maintaining
adequate world food reserves against climatic emergencies. They
would reduce the likelihood of periodic famines in region after
region, accompanied by food riots and chronic social and political
instability. They would improve the possibilities for long-term
development and integration into a peaceful world order.
Even taking the most optimistic view of the theoretical
possibilities of producing enough foods in the developed countries
to meet the requirements of the developing countries, the problem of
increased costs to the LDCs is already extremely serious and in its
future may be insurmountable. At current prices the anticipated
import requirements of 102-122 million tons by 2000 would raise the
cost of developing countries' imports of cereals to $16-204 billion
by that year compared with $2.5 billion in 1970. Large as they may
seem even these estimates of import requirements could be on the low
side if the developing countries are unable to achieve the
Department of Agriculture's assumed increase in the rate of growth
of production.
The FAO in its recent "Preliminary Assessment of the World Food
Situation Present and Future" has reached a similar conclusion:
What is certain is the enormity of the food import bill which might
face the developing countries . . . In addition [to cereals] the
developing countries . . . would be importing substantial amounts of
other foodstuffs. clearly the financing of international food trade
on this scale would raise very grave problems.
At least three-quarters of the projected increase in cereal imports
of developing countries would fall in the poorer countries of South
Asia and North and Central Africa. The situation in Latin America
which is projected to shift from a modest surplus to a modest
deficit area is quite different. Most of this deficit will be in
Mexico and Central America, with relatively high income and easily
exploitable transportation links to the U.S.
The problem in Latin America, therefore, appears relatively more
manageable.
It seems highly unlikely, however, that the poorer countries of Asia
and Africa will be able to finance nearly like the level of import
requirements projected by the USDA. Few of them have dynamic
export-oriented industrial sectors like Taiwan or South Korea or
rich raw material resources that will generate export earnings fast
enough to keep pace with food import needs. Accordingly, those
countries where large-scale hunger and malnutrition are already
present face the bleak prospect of little, if any, improvement in
the food intake in the years ahead barring a major foreign financial
food aid program, more rapid expansion of domestic food production,
reduced population growth or some combination of all three. Worse
yet, a series of crop disasters could transform some of them into
classic Malthusian cases with famines involving millions of people.
While foreign assistance probably will continue to be forthcoming to
meet short-term emergency situations like the threat of mass
starvation, it is more questionable whether aid donor countries will
be prepared to provide the sort of massive food aid called for by
the import projections on a long-term continuing basis.
Reduced population growth rates clearly could bring significant
relief over the longer term. Some analysts maintain that for the
post-1985 period a rapid decline in fertility will be crucial to
adequate diets worldwide. If, as noted before, fertility in the
developing countries could be made to decline to the replacement
level by the year 2000, the world's population in that year would be
5.9 billion or 500 million below the level that would be attained if
the UN medium projection were followed. Nearly all of the decline
would be in the LDCs. With such a reduction the projected import gap
of 102-122 million tons per year could be eliminated while still
permitting a modest improvement in per capita consumption. While
such a rapid reduction in fertility rates in the next 30 years is an
optimistic target, it is thought by some experts that it could be
obtained by intensified efforts if its necessity were understood by
world and national leaders. Even more modest reductions could have
significant implications by 2000 and even more over time.
Intensive programs to increase food production in developing
countries beyond the levels assumed in the U.S.D.A. projections
probably offer the best prospect for some reasonably early relief,
although this poses major technical and organizational difficulties
and will involve substantial costs. It must be realized, however,
that this will be difficult in all countries and probably impossible
in some -- or many. Even with the introduction of new inputs and
techniques it has not been possible to increase agricultural output
by as much as 3 percent per annum in many of the poorer developing
countries. Population growth in a number of these countries exceeds
that rate.
Such a program of increased food production would require the
widespread use of improved seed varieties, increased applications of
chemical fertilizers and pesticides over vast areas and better farm
management along with bringing new land under cultivation. It has
been estimated, for example, that with better varieties, pest
control, and the application of fertilizer on the Japanese scale,
Indian rice yields could theoretically at least, be raised two and
one-half times current levels. Here again very substantial foreign
assistance for imported materials may be required for at least the
early years before the program begins to take hold.
The problem is clear. The solutions, or at least the directions we
must travel to reach them are also generally agreed. What will be
required is a genuine commitment to a set of policies that will lead
the international community, both developed and developing
countries, to the achievement of the objectives spelled out above.
Back to Contents
CHAPTER
III - MINERALS AND FUEL
Population growth per se is not likely to impose serious constraints
on the global physical availability of fuel and non-fuel minerals to
the end of the century and beyond.
This favorable outlook on reserves does not rule out shortage
situations for specific minerals at particular times and places.
Careful planning with continued scientific and technological
progress (including the development of substitutes) should keep the
problems of physical availability within manageable proportions.
The major factor influencing the demand for non-agricultural raw
materials is the level of industrial activity, regional and global.
For example, the U.S., with 6% of the world's population, consumes
about a third of its resources. The demand for raw materials, unlike
food, is not a direct function of population growth. The current
scarcities and high prices for most such materials result mainly
from the boom conditions in all industrialized regions in the years
1972-73.
The important potential linkage between rapid population growth and
minerals availability is indirect rather than direct. It flows from
the negative effects of excessive population growth in economic
development and social progress, and therefore on internal
stability, in overcrowded under-developed countries. The United
States has become increasingly dependent on mineral imports from
developing countries in recent decades, and this trend is likely to
continue. The location of known reserves of higher-grade ores of
most minerals favors increasing dependence of all industrialized
regions on imports from less developed countries. The real problems
of mineral supplies lie, not in basic physical sufficiency, but in
the politico-economic issues of access, terms for exploration and
exploitation, and division of the benefits among producers,
consumers, and host country governments.
In the extreme cases where population pressures lead to endemic
famine, food riots, and breakdown of social order, those conditions
are scarcely conducive to systematic exploration for mineral
deposits or the long-term investments required for their
exploitation. Short of famine, unless some minimum of popular
aspirations for material improvement can be satisfied, and unless
the terms of access and exploitation persuade governments and
peoples that this aspect of the international economic order has
"something in it for them," concessions to foreign companies are
likely to be expropriated or subjected to arbitrary intervention.
Whether through government action, labor conflicts, sabotage, or
civil disturbance, the smooth flow of needed materials will be
jeopardized. Although population pressure is obviously not the only
factor involved, these types of frustrations are much less likely
under conditions of slow or zero population growth.
Reserves
Projections made by the
Department of Interior through the year 2000 for those fuel and
non-fuel minerals on which the U.S. depends heavily for imports5
support these conclusions on physical resources (see Annex). Proven
reserves of many of these minerals appear to be more than adequate
to meet the estimated accumulated world demand at 1972 relative
prices at least to the end of the century. While petroleum
(including natural gas), copper, zinc, and tin are probable
exceptions, the extension of economically exploitable reserves as a
result of higher prices, as well as substitution and secondary
recovery for metals, should avoid long-term supply restrictions. In
many cases, the price increases that have taken place since 1972
should be more than sufficient to bring about the necessary
extension of reserves.
These conclusions are consistent with a much more extensive study
made in 1972 for the Commission on Population Growth and the
American Future.6
As regards fossil fuels, that study foresees adequate world reserves
for at least the next quarter to half century even without major
technological breakthroughs. U.S. reserves of coal and oil shale are
adequate well into the next century, although their full
exploitation may be limited by environmental and water supply
factors. Estimates of the U.S. Geological Survey suggest recoverable
oil and gas reserves (assuming sufficiently high prices) to meet
domestic demand for another two or three decades, but there is also
respectable expert opinion supporting much lower estimates; present
oil production is below the peak of 1970 and meets only 70 percent
of current demands.7 Nevertheless, the U.S. is in a relatively
strong position on fossil fuels compared with the rest of the
industrialized world, provided that it takes the time and makes the
heavy investments needed to develop domestic alternatives to foreign
sources.
In the case of the 19 non-fuel minerals studied by the Commission it
was concluded there were sufficient proven reserves of nine to meet
cumulative world needs at current relative prices through the year
2020.8 For the ten others9 world proven reserves were considered
inadequate. However, it was judged that moderate price increases,
recycling and substitution could bridge the estimated gap between
supply and requirements.
The above projections probably understate the estimates of global
resources. "Proved Reserves," that is known supplies that will be
available at present or slightly higher relative costs 10 to 25
years from now, rarely exceed 25 years' cumulative requirements,
because industry generally is reluctant to undertake costly
exploration to meet demands which may or may not materialize in the
more distant future. Experience has shown that additional reserves
are discovered as required, at least in the case of non-fuel
minerals, and "proved reserves" have generally remained constant in
relation to consumption.
The adequacy of reserves does not of course assure that supplies
will be forthcoming in a steady stream as required. Intermediate
problems may develop as a result of business miscalculations
regarding the timing of expansion to meet requirements. With the
considerable lead time required for expanding capacity, this can
result in periods of serious shortage for certain materials and
rising prices as in the recent past. Similarly, from time to time
there will be periods of overcapacity and falling prices. Necessary
technical adjustments required for the shift to substitutes or
increased recycling also may be delayed by the required lead time or
by lack of information.
An early warning system designed to flag impending surpluses and
shortages, could be very helpful in anticipating these problems.
Such a mechanism might take the form of groups of experts working
with the UN Division of Resources. Alternatively, intergovernmental
commodity study groups might be set up for the purpose of monitoring
those commodities identified as potential problem areas.
Adequate global availability of fuel and non-fuel minerals is not of
much benefit to countries who cannot afford to pay for them. Oil
supplies currently are adequate to cover world needs, but the
quadrupling of prices in the past year has created grave financial
and payment problems for developed and developing countries alike.
If similar action to raise prices were undertaken by supplies of
other important minerals, an already bad situation would be
intensified. Success in such efforts is questionable, however; there
is no case in which the quantities involved are remotely comparable
to the cases of energy; and the scope for successful price-gouging
or cartel tactics is much smaller.
Although the U.S. is relatively well off in this regard, it
nonetheless depends heavily on mineral imports from a number of
sources which are not completely safe or stable. It may therefore be
necessary, especially in the light of our recent oil experience, to
keep this dependence within bounds, in some cases by developing
additional domestic resources and more generally by acquiring
stock-piles for economic as well as national defense emergencies.
There are also possible dangers of unreasonable prices promoted by
producer cartels and broader policy questions of U.S. support for
commodity agreements involving both producers and consumers. Such
matters, however, are in the domain of commodity policy rather than
population policy.
At least through the end of this century, changes in population
growth trends will make little difference to total levels of
requirements for fuel and other minerals. Those requirements are
related much more closely to levels of income and industrial output,
leaving the demand for minerals substantially unaffected. In the
longer run, a lower ultimate world population (say 8 to 9 billion
rather than 12 to 16 billion) would require a lower annual input of
depletable resources directly affected by population size as well as
a much lower volume of food, forest products, textiles, and other
renewable resources.
Whatever may be done to guard against interruptions of supply and to
develop domestic alternatives, the U.S. economy will require large
and increasing amounts of minerals from abroad, especially from less
developed countries.10 That fact gives the U.S. enhanced interest in
the political, economic, and social stability of the supplying
countries. Wherever a lessening of population pressures through
reduced birth rates can increase the prospects for such stability,
population policy becomes relevant to resource supplies and to the
economic interests of the United States.
ANNEX
OUTLOOK FOR RAW MATERIALS
I. Factors Affecting Raw Material Demand and Supply
Some of the key factors that must be considered in evaluating
the future raw materials situation are the stage of a country's
economic development and the responsiveness of the market to
changes in the relative prices of the raw materials.
Economic theory indicates that the pattern of consumption of raw
materials varies with the level of economic activity.
Examination of the intensity-of-use of raw materials
(incremental quantity of raw material needed to support an
additional unit of GNP) show that after a particular level of
GNP is reached, the intensity of use of raw materials starts to
decline. Possible explanations for this decline are:
1. In industrialized countries,
the services component of GNP expands relative to the
non-services components as economic growth occurs.
2. Technological progress, on the whole, tends to lower the
intensity-of-use through greater efficiency in the use of
raw materials and development of alloys.
3. Economic growth continues to be characterized by
substitution of one material by another and substitution of
synthetics for natural materials.11
Most developed countries have
reached this point of declining intensity-of-use.12 For other
countries that have not reached this stage of economic
development, their population usually goes through a stage of
rapid growth prior to industrialization. This is due to the
relative ease in the application of improved health care
policies and the resulting decline in their death rates, while
birth rates remain high. Then the country's economy does begin
to industrialize and grow more rapidly, the initial rapid rise
in industrial production results in an increasing
intensity-of-use of raw materials, until industrial production
reached the level where the intensity-of-use begins to decline.
As was discussed above, changes in the relative prices of raw
materials change the amount of economically recoverable
reserves. Thus, the relative price level, smoothness of the
adjustment process, and availability of capital for needed
investment can also be expected to significantly influence raw
materials' market conditions. In addition, technological
improvement in mining and metallurgy permits lower grade ores to
be exploited without corresponding increases in costs.
The following table presents the 1972 net imports and the ratio
of imports to total demand for nine commodities. The net imports
of these nine commodities represented 99 percent of the total
trade deficit in minerals.
+--------------------------+--------------+------------------+
| | 1972 | Ratio of Imports |
| Commodity | Net Imports | to Total Demand |
| | ($Millions)* | |
+--------------------------+--------------+------------------+
| Aluminum | 48.38 | .286 |
| Copper | 206.4 | .160 |
| Iron | 424.5 | .049 |
| Lead | 102.9 | .239 |
| Nickel | 477.1 | .704 |
| Tin | 220.2 | .943 |
| Titanium | 256.5 | .469 |
| Zinc | 294.8 | .517 |
| Petroleum | 5,494.5 | .246 |
| (including natural gas) | | |
+--------------------------+--------------+------------------+
|
The primary sources of these US
imports during the period 1969-1972 were:
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
| Commodity
Source & %
|
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
| Aluminum
- Canada 76%
|
| Copper
- Canada 31%, Peru 27%, Chile 22%
|
| Iron
- Canada 50%, Venezuela 31%
|
| Lead
- Canada 29%, Peru 21%, Australia 21% |
| Nickel
- Canada 82%, Norway 8%
|
| Tin
- Malaysia 64%, Thailand 27%
|
| Titanium
- Japan 73%, USSR 19%
|
| Zinc (Ore) -
Canada 60%, Mexico 24%
|
| Zinc (Metal) - Canada 48%,
Australia 10%
|
| Pertroleum (crude) - Canada 42%
|
| Petroleum (crude) - Venezuela 17%
|
+-------------------------------------------------------------+ |
II. World Reserves
The following table shows
estimates of the world reserve position for these commodities.
As mentioned earlier, the quantity of economically recoverable
reserves increases with higher prices. The following tables,
based on Bureau of Mines information, provide estimates of
reserves at various prices. (All prices are in constant 1972
dollars.)
Aluminum (Bauxite)
Price (per pound primary aluminum)
Price A Price B Price C Price D
.23 .29 .33 .36
Reserves (billion short tons, aluminum content)
World 3.58 3.76 4.15 5.21
U.S. .01 .02 .04 .09
Copper
Price (per pound refined copper)
.51 .60 .75
Reserves (million short tons)
World 370 418 507
U.S. 83 93 115
Gold
Price (per troy ounce)
58.60 90 100 150
Reserves (million troy ounce)
World 1,000 1,221 1,588 1,850
U.S. 82 120 200 240
Iron
Price (per short ton of primary iron contained in ore)
17.80 20.80 23.80
Reserves (billion short tons iron content)
World 96.7 129.0 206.0
U.S. 2.0 2.7 18.0
Lead
Price (per pound primary lead metal)
.15 .18 .20
Reserves (million short tons, lead content)
World 96.0 129.0 144.0
U.S. 36.0 51.0 56.0
Nickel
Price (per pound of primary metal)
1.53 1.75 2.00 2.25
Reserves (millions short tons)
World 46.2 60.5 78.0 99.5
U.S. .2 .2 .5 .5
Tin
Price (per pound primary tin metal)
1.77 2.00 2.50 3.00
Reserves (thousands of long tons - tin content)
World 4,180 5,500 7,530 9,290
U.S. 5 9 100 200
Titanium
Price (per pound titanium in pigment)
.45 .55 .60
Reserves (thousands short tons titanium content)
World 158,000 222,000 327,000
U.S. 32,400 45,000 60,000
Zinc
Price (per pound, prime western zinc delivered)
.18 .25 .30
Reserves (million short tons, zinc content)
World 131 193 260
U.S. 30 40 50
|
|
Petroleum:
Data necessary to quantify reserve-price relationships are
not available. For planning purposes, however, the Bureau of
Mines used the rough assumption that a 100% increase in price
would increase reserves by 10%. The average 1972 U.S. price was
$3.39/bbl. with proven world reserves of 666.9 billion bbls. and
U.S. reserves of 36.3 billion barrels. Using the Bureau of Mines
assumption, therefore, a doubling in world price (a U.S. price
of $6.78/bbl.) would imply world reserves of 733.5 billion bbls.
and U.S. reserves of 39.9 billion barrels.
Natural Gas:
Price (wellhead price per thousand cubic feet)
.186 .34 .44 .55
Reserves (trillion cubic feet)
World 1,156 6,130 10,240 15,599
U.S. 266 580 900 2,349
|
|
It should be noted that these statistics represent a shift in
1972 relative prices and assume constant 1972 technology. The
development of new technology or a more dramatic shift in
relative prices can have a significant impact on the supply of
economically recoverable reserves. Aluminum is a case in point.
It is the most abundant metallic element in the earth's crust
and the supply of this resource is almost entirely determined by
the price. Current demand and technology limit economically
recoverable reserves to bauxite sources. Alternate sources of
aluminum exist (e.g., alunite) and if improved technology is
developed making these alternate sources commercially viable,
supply constraints will not likely be encountered.
The above estimated reserve figures, while representing
approximate orders of magnitude, are adequate to meet projected
accumulated world demand (also very rough orders of magnitude)
through the year 2000. In some cases, modest price increases
above the 1972 level may be required to attract the necessary
capital investment.
Back to Contents
Chapter IV - Economic
Development and Population Growth
I. Population Growth
Rapid population growth adversely
affects every aspect of economic and social progress in
developing countries. It absorbs large amounts of resources
needed for more productive investment in development. It
requires greater expenditures for health, education and other
social services, particularly in urban areas. It increases the
dependency load per worker so that a high fraction of the output
of the productive age group is needed to support dependents. It
reduces family savings and domestic investment. It increases
existing severe pressures on limited agricultural land in
countries where the world's "poverty problem" is concentrated.
It creates a need for use of large amounts of scarce foreign
exchange for food imports (or the loss of food surpluses for
export). Finally, it intensifies the already severe unemployment
and underemployment problems of many developing countries where
not enough productive jobs are created to absorb the annual
increments to the labor force.
Even in countries with good resource/population ratios, rapid
population growth causes problems for several reasons: First,
large capital investments generally are required to exploit
unused resources. Second, some countries already have high and
growing unemployment and lack the means to train new entrants to
their labor force. Third, there are long delays between starting
effective family planning programs and reducing fertility, and
even longer delays between reductions in fertility and
population stabilization. Hence there is substantial danger of
vastly overshooting population targets if population growth is
not moderated in the near future.
During the past decade, the developing countries have raised
their GNP at a rate of 5 percent per annum as against 4.8
percent in developed countries. But at the same time the LDCs
experienced an average annual population growth rate of 2.5
percent. Thus their per capita income growth rate was only 2.5
percent and in some of the more highly populated areas the
increase in per capita incomes was less than 2 percent. This
stands in stark contrast to 3.6 percent in the rich countries.
Moreover, the low rate means that there is very little change in
those countries whose per capita incomes are $200 or less per
annum. The problem has been further exacerbated in recent months
by the dramatic increases in oil and fertilizer prices. The
World Bank has estimated that the incomes of the 800 million
inhabitants of the countries hardest hit by the oil crisis will
grow at less than 1% per capita per year of the remainder of the
1970s. Taking account of inequalities in income distribution,
there will be well over 500 million people, with average incomes
of less than $100 per capita, who will experience either no
growth or negative growth in that period.
Moderation of population growth offers benefits in terms of
resources saved for investment and/or higher per capita
consumption. If resource requirements to support fewer children
are reduced and the funds now allocated for construction of
schools, houses, hospitals and other essential facilities are
invested in productive activities, the impact on the growth of
GNP and per capita income may be significant. In addition,
economic and social progress resulting from population control
will further contribute to the decline in fertility rates. The
relationship is reciprocal, and can take the form of either a
vicious or a virtuous circle.
This raises the question of how much more efficient expenditures
for population control might be than in raising production
through direct investments in additional irrigation and power
projects and factories. While most economists today do not agree
with the assumptions that went into early overly optimistic
estimates of returns to population expenditures, there is
general agreement that up to the point when cost per acceptor
rises rapidly, family planning expenditures are generally
considered the best investment a country can make in its own
future.
II. Impact of Population Growth on
Economic Development
In most, if not all, developing countries high fertility rates
impose substantial economic costs and restrain economic growth.
The main adverse macroeconomic effects may be analyzed in three
general categories: (1) the saving effect, (2) "child quality"
versus "child quantity", and (3) "capital deepening" versus
"capital widening." These three categories are not mutually
exclusive, but they highlight different familial and social
perspectives. In addition, there are often longer-run adverse
effects on agricultural output and the balance of payments.
(1) The saving effect. A high
fertility economy has perforce a larger "burden of
dependency" than a low fertility economy, because a larger
proportion of the population consists of children too young
to work. There are more non-working people to feed, house
and rear, and there is a smaller surplus above minimum
consumption available for savings and investment. It follows
that a lower fertility rate can free resources from
consumption; if saved and invested, these resources could
contribute to economic growth. (There is much controversy on
this; empirical studies of the savings effect have produced
varying results.)
(2) Child quality versus quantity. Parents make investment
decisions, in a sense, about their children. Healthier and
better-educated children tend to be economically more
productive, both as children and later as adults. In
addition to the more-or-less conscious trade-offs parents
can make about more education and better health per child,
there are certain biologic adverse effects suffered by high
birth order children such as higher mortality and limited
brain growth due to higher incidence of malnutrition. It
must be emphasized, however, that discussion of trade-offs
between child quality and child quantity will probably
remain academic with regard to countries where child
mortality remains high. When parents cannot expect most
children to survive to old age, they probably will continue
to "over-compensate", using high fertility as a form of
hedge to insure that they will have some living offspring
able to support the parents in the distant future.
(3) Capital deepening versus widening. From the family's
viewpoint high fertility is likely to reduce welfare per
child; for the economy one may view high fertility as too
rapid a growth in labor force relative to capital stock.
Society's capital stock includes facilities such as schools
and other educational inputs in addition to capital
investments that raise workers' outputs in agriculture and
manufacturing. For any given rate of capital accumulation, a
lower population growth rate can help increase the amount of
capital and education per worker, helping thereby to
increase output and income per capita. The problem of
migration to cities and the derived demand for urban
infrastructure can also be analyzed as problems of capital
widening, which draw resources away from growth-generating
investments.
In a number of the more populous
countries a fourth aspect of rapid growth in numbers has emerged
in recent years which has profound long-run consequences.
Agricultural output was able to keep pace or exceed population
growth over the many decades of population rise prior to the
middle of this century, primarily through steady expansion of
acreage under cultivation. More recently, only marginal unused
land has been available in India, Thailand, Java, Bangladesh,
and other areas.
As a result (a) land holdings have
declined in size, and (b) land shortage has led to deforestation
and overgrazing, with consequent soil erosion and severe water
pollution and increased urban migration. Areas that once earned
foreign exchange through the export of food surpluses are now in
deficit or face early transition to dependence on food imports.
Although the scope for raising agricultural productivity is very
great in many of these areas, the available technologies for
doing so require much higher capital costs per acre and much
larger foreign exchange outlays for "modern" inputs (chemical
fertilizer, pesticides, petroleum fuels, etc.) than was the case
with the traditional technologies. Thus the population growth
problem can be seen as an important long-run, or structural,
contributor to current LDC balance of payments problems and to
deterioration of their basic ecological infrastructure.
Finally, high fertility appears to exacerbate the
maldistribution of income which is a fundamental economic and
social problem in much of the developing world. Higher income
families tend to have fewer children, spend more on the health
and education of these children, have more wealth to pass on to
these children in contrast to the several disadvantages that
face the children of the poor. The latter tend to be more
numerous, receiving less of an investment per child in their
"human capital", leaving the children with economic, educational
and social constraints similar to those which restrict the
opportunities of the parents. In short, high fertility
contributes to the intergenerational continuity of
maldistributions of income and related social and political
problems.
III. The Effect of Development on
Population Growth
The determinants of population growth are not well understood,
especially for low income societies. Historical data show that
declining fertility in Europe and North America has been
associated with declining mortality and increasing urbanization,
and generally with "modernization." Fertility declined
substantially in the West without the benefit of sophisticated
contraceptives. This movement from high fertility and high
mortality to low fertility and low mortality is known as the
"demographic transition". In many low income countries mortality
has declined markedly since World War II (in large part from
reduction in epidemic illness and famine), but fertility has
remained high. Apart from a few pockets of low fertility in East
Asia and the Caribbean, a significant demographic transition has
not occurred in the third world. (The Chinese, however, make
remarkable claims about their success in reducing birth rates,
and qualified observers are persuaded that they have had unusual
success even though specific demographic information is
lacking.)
There is considerable, incontestable evidence in many developing
countries that a larger (though not fully known) number of
couples would like to have fewer children than possible
generally there -- and that there is a large unsatisfied demand
by these couples for family planning services. It is also now
widely believed that something more that family planning
services will be needed to motivate other couples to want
smaller families and all couples to want replacement levels
essential to the progress and growth of their countries.
There is also evidence, although it is not conclusive, that
certain aspects of economic development and modernization are
more directly related to lowered birth rates than others, and
that selective developmental policies may bring about a
demographic transition at substantially lower per capita income
levels than in Europe, North America, and Japan.13 Such
selective policies would focus on improved health care and
nutrition directed toward reduced infant and child mortality;
universal schooling and adult literacy, especially for women;
increasing the legal age of marriage; greater opportunities for
female employment in the money economy; improved old-age social
security arrangements; and agricultural modernization focussed
on small farmers.
It is important that this focus be
made in development programs because, given today's high
population densities, high birth rates, and low income levels in
much of Asia, Africa, and Latin America, if the demographic
transition has to await overall development and modernization,
the vicious circle of poverty, people, and unemployment may
never be broken.
The causes of high birth rates in low income societies are
generally explained in terms of three factors:
a. Inadequacy of
information and means. Actual family size in many societies
is higher than desired family size owing to ignorance of
acceptable birth control methods or unavailability of birth
control devices and services. The importance of this factor
is evidenced by many sociological investigations on "desired
family size" versus actual size, and by the substantial
rates of acceptance for contraceptives when systematic
family planning services are introduced. This factor has
been a basic assumption in the family planning programs of
official bilateral and multilateral programs in many
countries over the past decade. Whatever the actual weight
of this factor, which clearly varies from country to country
and which shifts with changes in economic and social
conditions, there remains without question a significant
demand for family planning services.
b. Inadequacy of motivation for reduced numbers of
children. Especially in the rural areas of underdeveloped
countries, which account for the major share of today's
population growth, parents often want large numbers of
children (especially boys)
(i) to ensure that some will
survive against the odds of high child mortality,
(ii) to provide support for
the parents in their old age, and
(iii) to provide low cost
farm labor.
While these elements are present
among rural populace, continued urbanization may reduce the
need for sons in the longer term. The absence of educational
and employment opportunities for young women intensifies
these same motivations by encouraging early marriage and
early and frequent maternity. This factor suggests the
crucial importance of selective development policies as a
means of accelerating the reduction of fertility.
c. The "time lag". Family preferences and social
institutions that favor high fertility change slowly. Even
though mortality and economic conditions have improved
significantly since World War II in LDCs, family
expectations, social norms, and parental practice are slow
to respond to these altered conditions. This factor leads to
the need for large scale programs of information, education,
and persuasion directed at lower fertility.
The three elements are undoubtedly
intermixed in varying proportions in all underdeveloped
countries with high birth rates. In most LDCs, many couples
would reduce their completed family size if appropriate birth
control methods were more easily available. The extent of this
reduction, however, may still leave their completed family size
at higher than mere replacement levels -- i.e., at levels
implying continued but less rapid population growth. Many other
couples would not reduce their desired family size merely if
better contraceptives were available, either because they see
large families as economically beneficial, or because of
cultural factors, or because they misread their own economic
interests.
Therefore, family planning supply (contraceptive technology and
delivery systems) and demand (the motivation for reduced
fertility) would not be viewed as mutually exclusive
alternatives; they are complementary and may be mutually
reinforcing. The selected point of focus mentioned earlier --
old age security programs, maternal and child health programs,
increased female education, increasing the legal age of
marriage, financial incentives to "acceptors", personnel, -- are
important, yet better information is required as to which
measures are most cost-effective and feasible in a given
situation and how their cost-effectiveness compares to supply
programs.
One additional interesting area is receiving increasing
attention: the distribution of the benefits of development.
Experience in several countries suggests that the extent to
which the poor, with the highest fertility rates, reduce their
fertility will depend on the extent to which they participate in
development. In this view the average level of economic
development and the average amount of modernization are less
important determinants of population growth than is the specific
structure of development. This line of investigation suggests
that social development activities need to be more precisely
targeted than in the past to reach the lowest income people, to
counteract their desire for high fertility as a means of
alleviating certain adverse conditions.
IV. Employment and Social Problems
Employment, aside from its role in production of goods and
services, is an important source of income and of status or
recognition to workers and their families. The inability of
large segments of the economically active population in
developing countries to find jobs offering a minimum acceptable
standard of living is reflected in a widening of income
disparities and a deepening sense of economic, political and
social frustration.
The most economically significant employment problems in LDCs
contributed to by excessive population growth are low worker
productivity in production of traditional goods and services
produced, the changing aspirations of the work force, the
existing distribution of income, wealth and power, and the
natural resource endowment of a country.
The political and social problems of urban overcrowding are
directly related to population growth. In addition to the
still-high fertility in urban areas of many LDC's, population
pressures on the land, which increases migration to the cities,
adds to the pressures on urban job markets and political
stability, and strains, the capacity to provide schools, health
facilities, and water supplies.
It should be recognized that lower fertility will relieve only a
portion of these strains and that its most beneficial effects
will be felt only over a period of decades. Most of the
potential migrants from countryside to city over the coming 15
to 20 years have already been born. Lower birth rates do provide
some immediate relief to health and sanitation and welfare
services, and medium-term relief to pressures on educational
systems. The largest effects on employment, migration, and
living standards, however, will be felt only after 25 or 30
years. The time lags inherent in all aspects of population
dynamics only reinforce the urgency of adopting effective
policies in the years immediately ahead if the formidable
problems of the present decade are not to become utterly
unmanageable in the 1990s and beyond the year 2000.
Back to Contents
Chapter V --
Implications of Population Pressures for National Security
It seems well understood that the impact of population factors on
the subjects already considered -- development, food requirements,
resources, environment -- adversely affects the welfare and progress
of countries in which we have a friendly interest and thus
indirectly adversely affects broad U.S. interests as well.
The effects of population factors on the political stability of
these countries and their implications for internal and
international order or disorder, destructive social unrest, violence
and disruptive foreign activities are less well understood and need
more analysis. Nevertheless, some strategists and experts believe
that these effects may ultimately be the most important of those
arising from population factors, most harmful to the countries where
they occur and seriously affecting U.S. interests. Other experts
within the U.S. Government disagree with this conclusion.
A recent study14 of forty-five local conflicts involving Third World
countries examined the ways in which population factors affect the
initiation and course of a conflict in different situations. The
study reached two major conclusions:
1. ". . . population factors are
indeed critical in, and often determinants of, violent conflict
in developing areas. Segmental (religious, social, racial)
differences, migration, rapid population growth, differential
levels of knowledge and skills, rural/urban differences,
population pressure and the spacial location of population in
relation to resources -- in this rough order of importance --
all appear to be important contributions to conflict and
violence...
2. Clearly, conflicts which are regarded in primarily political
terms often have demographic roots: Recognition of these
relationships appears crucial to any understanding or prevention
of such hostilities."
It does not appear that the population
factors act alone or, often, directly to cause the disruptive
effects. They act through intervening elements -- variables. They
also add to other causative factors turning what might have been
only a difficult situation into one with disruptive results.
This action is seldom simple. Professor Philip Hauser of the
University of Chicago has suggested the concept of "population
complosion" to describe the situation in many developing countries
when,
(a) more and more people are
born into or move into and are compressed in the same living
space under
(b) conditions and
irritations of different races, colors, religions, languages, or
cultural backgrounds, often with differential rates of
population growth among these groups, and
(c) with the frustrations of
failure to achieve their aspirations for better standards of
living for themselves or their children.
To these may be added pressures for and
actual international migration. These population factors appear to
have a multiplying effect on other factors involved in situations of
incipient violence. Population density, the "overpopulation" most
often thought of in this connection, is much less important.
These population factors contribute to socio-economic variables
including breakdowns in social structures, underemployment and
unemployment, poverty, deprived people in city slums, lowered
opportunities for education for the masses, few job opportunities
for those who do obtain education, interracial, religious, and
regional rivalries, and sharply increased financial, planning, and
administrative burdens on governmental systems at all levels.
These adverse conditions appear to contribute frequently to harmful
developments of a political nature: Juvenile delinquency, thievery
and other crimes, organized brigandry, kidnapping and terrorism,
food riots, other outbreaks of violence; guerilla warfare, communal
violence, separatist movements, revolutionary movements and
counter-revolutionary coups. All of these bear upon the weakening or
collapse of local, state, or national government functions.
Beyond national boundaries, population factors appear to have had
operative roles in some past politically disturbing legal or illegal
mass migrations, border incidents, and wars. If current increased
population pressures continue they may have greater potential for
future disruption in foreign relations.
Perhaps most important, in the last decade population factors have
impacted more severely than before on availabilities of agricultural
land and resources, industrialization, pollution and the
environment. All this is occurring at a time when international
communications have created rising expectations which are being
frustrated by slow development and inequalities of distribution.
Since population factors work with other factors and act through
intervening linkages, research as to their effects of a political
nature is difficult and "proof" even more so. This does not mean,
however, that the causality does not exist. It means only that U.S.
policy decisions must take into account the less precise and
programmatic character of our knowledge of these linkages.
Although general hypotheses are hard to draw, some seem reasonably
sustainable:
1. Population growth and
inadequate resources.
Where population size is greater
than available resources, or is expanding more rapidly than the
available resources, there is a tendency toward internal
disorders and violence and, sometimes, disruptive international
policies or violence. The higher the rate of growth, the more
salient a factor population increase appears to be. A sense of
increasing crowding, real or perceived, seems to generate such
tendencies, especially if it seems to thwart obtaining desired
personal or national goals.
2. Populations with a high proportion of growth.
The young people, who are in much
higher proportions in many LDCs, are likely to be more volatile,
unstable, prone to extremes, alienation and violence than an
older population. These young people can more readily be
persuaded to attack the legal institutions of the government or
real property of the "establishment," "imperialists,"
multinational corporations, or other -- often foreign --
influences blamed for their troubles.
3. Population factors with social cleavages.
When adverse population factors of
growth, movement, density, excess, or pressure coincide with
racial, religious, color, linguistic, cultural, or other social
cleavages, there will develop the most potentially explosive
situations for internal disorder, perhaps with external effects.
When such factors exist together with the reality or sense of
relative deprivation among different groups within the same
country or in relation to other countries or peoples, the
probability of violence increases significantly.
4. Population movements and international migrations.
Population movements within
countries appear to have a large role in disorders. Migrations
into neighboring countries (especially those richer or more
sparsely settled), whether legal or illegal, can provoke
negative political reactions or force.
There may be increased propensities for
violence arising simply from technological developments making it
easier -- e.g., international proliferation and more ready
accessibility to sub-national groups of nuclear and other lethal
weaponry. These possibilities make the disruptive population factors
discussed above even more dangerous.
Some Effects of Current Population
Pressures
In the 1960s and 1970s, there have been a series of episodes in
which population factors have apparently had a role -- directly or
indirectly -- affecting countries in which we have an interest.
El Salvador-Honduras War.
An example was the 1969 war between
El Salvador and Honduras. Dubbed the "Soccer War", it was
sparked by a riot during a soccer match, its underlying cause
was tension resulting from the large scale migration of
Salvadorans from their rapidly growing, densely populated
country to relatively uninhabited areas of Honduras. The
Hondurans resented the presence of migrants and in 1969 began to
enforce an already extant land tenancy law to expel them. El
Salvador was angered by the treatment given its citizens.
Flaring tempers on both sides over this issue created a
situation which ultimately led to a military clash.
Nigeria.
The Nigerian civil war seriously
retarded the progress of Africa's most populous nations and
caused political repercussions and pressures in the United
States. It was fundamentally a matter of tribal relationships.
Irritations among the tribes caused in part by rapidly
increasing numbers of people, in a situation of inadequate
opportunity for most of them, magnified the tribal issues and
may have helped precipitate the war. The migration of the Ibos
from Eastern Nigeria, looking for employment, led to competition
with local peoples of other tribes and contributed to tribal
rioting. This unstable situation was intensified by the fact
that in the 1963 population census returns were falsified to
inflate the Western region's population and hence its
representation in the Federal Government. The Ibos of the
Eastern region, with the oil resources of the country, felt
their resources would be unjustly drawn on and attempted to
establish their independence.
Pakistan-India-Bangladesh 1970-71.
This religious and nationalistic
conflict contains several points where a population factor at a
crucial time may have had a causal effect in turning events away
from peaceful solutions to violence. The Central Government in
West Pakistan resorted to military suppression of the East Wing
after the election in which the Awami League had an overwhelming
victory in East Pakistan. This election had followed two sets of
circumstances. The first was a growing discontent in East
Pakistan at the slow rate of economic and social progress being
made and the Bengali feeling that West Pakistan was dealing
unequally and unfairly with East Pakistan in the distribution of
national revenues.
The first population factor was the
75 million Bengalis whom the 45 million West Pakistanis sought
to continue to dominate. Some observers believe that as a recent
population factor the rapid rate of population growth in East
Pakistan seriously diminished the per capita improvement from
the revenues made available and contributed significantly to the
discontent. A special aspect of the population explosion in East
Pakistan (second population factor) was the fact that the dense
occupation of all good agricultural land forced hundreds of
thousands of people to move into the obviously unsafe lowlands
along the southern coast. They became victims of the hurricane
in 1970. An estimated 300,000 died. The Government was unable to
deal with a disaster affecting so many people. The leaders and
people of East Pakistan reacted vigorously to this failure of
the Government to bring help.
It seems quite likely that these situations in which population
factors played an important role led to the overwhelming victory
of the Awami League that led the Government to resort to force
in East Pakistan with the massacres and rapes that followed.
Other experts believe the effects of the latter two factors were
of marginal influence in the Awami League's victory.
It further seems possible that much of the violence was
stimulated or magnified by population pressures. Two groups of
Moslems had been competing for jobs and land in East Bengal
since the 1947 partition. "Biharis" are a small minority of
non-Bengali Moslems who chose to resettle in East Pakistan at
that time. Their integration into Bengali society was
undoubtedly inhibited by the deteriorating living conditions of
the majority Bengalis. With the Pakistan army crackdown in
March, 1971, the Biharis cooperated with the authorities, and
reportedly were able thereby to improve their economic
conditions at the expense of the persecuted Bengalis. When the
tables were turned after independence, it was the Biharis who
were persecuted and whose property and jobs were seized. It
seems likely that both these outbursts of violence were induced
or enlarged by the population "complosion" factor.
The violence in East Pakistan against the Bengalis and
particularly the Hindu minority who bore the brunt of Army
repression led to the next population factor, the mass migration
during one year of nine or ten million refugees into West Bengal
in India. This placed a tremendous burden on the already weak
Indian economy. As one Indian leader in the India Family
Planning Program said, "The influx of nine million people wiped
out the savings of some nine million births which had been
averted over a period of eight years of the family planning
program."
There were other factors in India's invasion of East Bengal, but
it is possible that the necessity of returning these nine or ten
million refugees to east Bengal -- getting them out of India --
may have played a part in the Indian decision to invade.
Certainly, in a broader sense, the threat posed by this serious,
spreading instability on India's eastern frontier -- an
instability in which population factors were a major underlying
cause -- a key reason for the Indian decision.
The political arrangements in the Subcontinent have changed, but
all of the underlying population factors which influenced the
dramatic acts of violence that took place in 1970-71 still
exist, in worsening dimensions, to influence future events.
Additional illustrations.
Population factors also appear to
have had indirect causal relations, in varying degrees, on the
killings in Indonesia in 1965-6, the communal slaughter in
Rwanda in 1961-2 and 1963-4 and in Burundi in 1972, the coup in
Uganda in 1972, and the insurrection in Sri Lanka in 1971.
Some Potential Effects of Future Population
Pressures
Between the end of World War II and 1975 the world's population will
have increased about one and a half billion -- nearly one billion of
that from 1960 to the present. The rate of growth is increasing and
between two and a half and three and a half billion will be added by
the year 2000, depending partly on the effectiveness of population
growth control programs. This increase of the next 25 years will, of
course, pyramid on the great number added with such rapidity in the
last 25. The population factors which contributed to the political
pressures and instabilities of the last decades will be multiplied.
PRC - The demographic factors of the PRC are referred to on page 79
above. The Government of the PRC has made a major effort to feed its
growing population.
Cultivated farm land, at 107 million hectares, has not increased
significantly over the past 25 years, although farm output has
substantially kept pace with population growth through improved
yields secured by land improvement, irrigation extension,
intensified cropping, and rapid expansion in the supply of
fertilizers.
In 1973 the PRC adopted new, forceful population control measures.
In the urban areas Peking claimed its birth control measures had
secured a two-child family and a one percent annual population
growth, and it proposes to extend this development throughout the
rural areas by 1980.
The political implications of China's future population growth are
obviously important but are not dealt with here.
Israel and the Arab States.
If a peace settlement can be
reached, the central issue will be how to make it last. Egypt
with about 37 million today is growing at 2.8% per year. It will
approximate 48 million by 1985, 75 million by 1995, and more
than 85 million by 2000. It is doubtful that Egypt's economic
progress can greatly exceed its population growth. With Israel
starting at today's population of 3.3 million, the disparity
between its population and those of the Arab States will rapidly
increase. Inside Israel, unless Jewish immigration continues,
the gap between the size of the Arab and Jewish populations will
diminish. Together with the traditional animosities -- which
will remain the prime determinants of Arab-Israeli conflict --
these population factors make the potential for peace and for
U.S. interests in the area ominous.
India-Bangladesh.
The Subcontinent will be for years
the major focus of world concern over population growth. India's
population is now approximately 580 million, adding a million by
each full moon. Embassy New Delhi (New Delhi 2115, June 17,
1974) reports:
"There seems no way of turning
off the faucet this side of 1 billion Indians, which means
India must continue to court economic and social disaster.
It is not clear how the shaky and slow-growing Indian
economy can bear the enormous expenditures on health,
housing, employment, and education, which must be made if
the society is even to maintain its current low levels."
Death rates have recently increased
in parts of India and episodes like the recent smallpox epidemic
have led Embassy New Delhi to add:
"A future failure of the India
food crop could cause widespread death and suffering which
could not be overcome by the GOI or foreign assistance. The
rise in the death rate in several rural areas suggests that
Malthusian pressures are already being felt."
And further:
"Increasing political
disturbances should be expected in the future, fed by the
pressures of rising population in urban areas, food
shortages, and growing scarcities in household commodities.
The GOI has not been very successful in alleviating
unemployment in the cities. The recent disturbances in
Gujarat and Bihar seem to be only the beginning of chronic
and serious political disorders occurring throughout India."
There will probably be a weakening,
possibly a breakdown, of the control of the central government
over some of the states and local areas. The democratic system
will be taxed and may be in danger of giving way to a form of
dictatorship, benevolent or otherwise. The existence of India as
a democratic buttress in Asia will be threatened.
Bangladesh, with appalling population density, rapid population
growth, and extensive poverty will suffer even more. Its
population has increased 40% since the census 13 years ago and
is growing at least 3% per year. The present 75 million, or so,
unless slowed by famine, disease, or massive birth control, will
double in 23 years and exceed 170 million by 2000.
Requirements for food and other basic necessities of life are
growing at a faster rate than existing resources and
administrative systems are providing them. In the rural areas,
the size of the average farm is being reduced and there is
increasing landlessness. More and more people are migrating to
urban areas. The government admits a 30% rate of unemployment
and underemployment. Already, Embassy Dacca reports (Dacca 3424,
June 19, 1974) there are important economic-population causes
for the landlessness that is rapidly increasing and contributing
to violent crimes of murder and armed robbery that terrorize the
ordinary citizen.
"Some of the vast army of unemployed
and landless, and those strapped by the escalating cost of basic
commodities, have doubtless turned to crime."
Three paragraphs of Embassy Dacca's
report sharply outline the effect on U.S. political interests we
may anticipate from population factors in Bangladesh and other
countries that, if present trends are not changed, will be in
conditions similar to Bangladesh in only a few years.
"Of concern to the U.S. are
several probable outcomes as the basic political, economic
and social situation worsens over the coming decades.
Already afflicted with a crisis mentality by which they look
to wealthy foreign countries to shore up their faltering
economy, the BDG will continue to escalate its demands on
the U.S. both bilaterally and internationally to enlarge its
assistance, both of commodities and financing. Bangladesh is
now a fairly solid supporter of third world positions,
advocating better distribution of the world's wealth and
extensive trade concessions to poor nations. As its problems
grow and its ability to gain assistance fails to keep pace,
Bangladesh's positions on international issues likely will
become radicalized, inevitably in opposition to U.S.
interests on major issues as it seeks to align itself with
others to force adequate aid.
"U.S. interests in Bangladesh center on the development of
an economically and politically stable country which will
not threaten the stability of its neighbors in the
Subcontinent nor invite the intrusion of outside powers.
Surrounded on three sides by India and sharing a short
border with Burma, Bangladesh, if it descends into chaos,
will threaten the stability of these nations as well.
Already Bengalis are illegally migrating into the frontier
provinces of Assam and Tripura, politically sensitive areas
of India, and into adjacent Burma. Should expanded
out-migration and socio-political collapse in Bangladesh
threaten its own stability, India may be forced to consider
intervention, although it is difficult to see in what way
the Indians could cope with the situation.
"Bangladesh is a case study of the effects of few resources
and burgeoning population not only on national and regional
stability but also on the future world order. In a sense, if
we and other richer elements of the world community do not
meet the test of formulating a policy to help Bangladesh
awaken from its economic and demographic nightmare, we will
not be prepared in future decades to deal with the
consequences of similar problems in other countries which
have far more political and economic consequences to U.S.
interests."
Africa -- Sahel Countries.
The current tragedy of the Sahel
countries, to which U.S. aid in past years has been minimal, has
suddenly cost us an immense effort in food supplies at a time
when we are already hard pressed to supply other countries, and
domestic food prices are causing strong political repercussions
in the U.S. The costs to us and other donor countries for aid to
help restore the devastated land will run into hundreds of
millions. Yet little attention is given to the fact that even
before the adverse effect of the continued drought, it was
population growth and added migration of herdsmen to the edge of
the desert that led to cutting the trees and cropping the grass,
inviting the desert to sweep forward. Control of population
growth and migration must be a part of any program for
improvement of lasting value.
Panama.
The troublesome problem of
jurisdiction over the Canal Zone is primarily due to Panamanian
feelings of national pride and a desire to achieve sovereignty
over its entire territory. One Panamanian agreement in pursuing
its treaty goals is that U.S. control over the Canal Zone
prevents the natural expansion of Panama City, an expansion
needed as a result of demographic pressures. In 1908, at the
time of the construction of the Canal, the population of the
Zone was about 40,000. Today it is close to the same figure,
45,000. On the other hand, Panama City, which had some 20,000
people in 1908, has received growing migration from rural areas
and now has over 500,000. A new treaty which would give Panama
jurisdiction over land now in the Zone would help alleviate the
problems caused by this growth of Panama City.
Mexico and the U.S.
Closest to home, the combined
population growth of Mexico and the U.S. Southwest presages
major difficulties for the future. Mexico's population is
growing at some 3.5% per year and will double in 20 years with
concomitant increases in demands for food, housing, education,
and employment. By 1995, the present 57 million will have
increased to some 115 million and, unless their recently
established family planning program has great success, by 2000
will exceed 130 million. More important, the numbers of young
people entering the job market each year will expand even more
quickly. These growing numbers will increase the pressure of
illegal emigration to the U.S., and make the issue an even more
serious source of friction in our political relations with
Mexico.
On our side, the Bureau of the Census estimates that as more and
more Americans move to the Southwestern States the present
40,000,000 population may approximate 61,000,000 by 1995. The
domestic use of Colorado River water may again have increased
the salinity level in Mexico and reopened that political issue.
Amembassy Mexico City (Mexico 4953, June 14, 1974) summarized
the influences of population factors on U.S. interests as
follows:
"An indefinite continuation of
Mexico's high population growth rate would increasingly act
as a brake on economic (and social) improvement. The
consequences would be noted in various ways. Mexico could
well take more radical positions in the international scene.
Illegal migration to the U.S. would increase. In a country
where unemployment and under-employment is already high, the
entry of increasing numbers into the work force would only
intensify the pressure to seek employment in the U.S. by
whatever means. Yet another consequence would be increased
demand for food imports from the U.S., especially if the
rate of growth of agricultural production continues to lag
behind the population growth rate. Finally, one cannot
dismiss the spectre of future domestic instability as a long
term consequence, should the economy, now strong, falter."
UNCTAD, the Special UNGA, and the
UN.
The developing countries, after
several years of unorganized maneuvering and erratic attacks
have now formed tight groupings in the Special Committee for
Latin American Coordination, the Organization of African States,
and the Seventy-Seven. As illustrated in the Declaration of
Santiago and the recent Special General Assembly, these
groupings at times appear to reflect a common desire to launch
economic attacks against the United States and, to a lesser
degree, the European developed countries. A factor which is
common to all of them, which retards their development, burdens
their foreign exchange, subjects them to world prices for food,
fertilizer, and necessities of life and pushes them into
disadvantageous trade relations is their excessively rapid
population growth. Until they are able to overcome this problem,
it is likely that their manifestations of antagonism toward the
United States in international bodies will increase.
Global Factors
In industrial nations, population
growth increases demand for industrial output. This over time
tends to deplete national raw materials resources and calls
increasingly on sources of marginal profitability and foreign
supplies. To obtain raw materials, industrial nations seek to
locate and develop external sources of supply. The potential for
collisions of interest among the developing countries is obvious
and has already begun. It is visible and vexing in claims for
territorial waters and national sovereignty over mineral
resources. It may become intense in rivalries over exploring and
exploiting the resources of the ocean floor.
In developing countries, the burden of population factors, added
to others, will weaken unstable governments, often only
marginally effective in good times, and open the way for
extremist regimes. Countries suffering under such burdens will
be more susceptible to radicalization. Their vulnerability also
might invite foreign intervention by stronger nations bent on
acquiring political and economic advantage. The tensions within
the Have-not nations are likely to intensify, and the conflicts
between them and the Haves may escalate.
Past experience gives little assistance to predicting the course
of these developments because the speed of today's population
growth, migrations, and urbanization far exceeds anything the
world has seen before. Moreover, the consequences of such
population factors can no longer be evaded by moving to new
hunting or grazing lands, by conquering new territory, by
discovering or colonizing new continents, or by emigration in
large numbers.
The world has ample warning that we all must make more rapid
efforts at social and economic development to avoid or mitigate
these gloomy prospects. We should be warned also that we all
must move as rapidly as possible toward stabilizing national and
world population growth.
Back to Contents
CHAPTER VI -
WORLD POPULATION CONFERENCE
From the standpoint of policy and program, the focal point of the
World Population Conference (WPC) at Bucharest, Romania, in August
1974, was the World Population Plan of Action (WPPA). The U.S. had
contributed many substantive points to the draft Plan. We had
particularly emphasized the incorporation of population factors in
national planning of developing countries' population programs for
assuring the availability of means of family planning to persons of
reproductive age, voluntary but specific goals for the reduction of
population growth and time frames for action.
As the WPPA reached the WPC it was organized as a demographic
document. It also related population factors to family welfare,
social and economic development, and fertility reduction. Population
policies and programs were recognized as an essential element, but
only one element of economic and social development programs. The
sovereignty of nations in determining their own population policies
and programs was repeatedly recognized. The general impression after
five regional consultative meetings on the Plan was that it had
general support.
There was general consternation, therefore, when at the beginning of
the conference the Plan was subjected to a slashing, five-pronged
attack led by Algeria, with the backing of several African
countries; Argentina, supported by Uruguay, Brazil, Peru and, more
limitedly, some other Latin American countries; the Eastern European
group (less Romania); the PRC and the Holy See. Although the attacks
were not identical, they embraced three central elements relevant to
U.S. policy and action in this field:
1.Repeated references to the
importance (or as some said, the pre-condition) of economic and
social development for the reduction of high fertility. Led by
Algeria and Argentina, many emphasized the "new international
economic order" as central to economic and social development.
2.Efforts to reduce the references to population
programs, minimize their importance and delete all references to
quantitative or time goals.
3.Additional references to national sovereignty in
setting population policies and programs.
The Plan of Action
Despite the initial attack
and continuing efforts to change the conceptual basis of the world
Population Plan of Action, the Conference adopted by acclamation
(only the Holy See stating a general reservation) a complete World
Population Plan of Action. It is less urgent in tone than the draft
submitted by the U.N. Secretariat but in several ways more complete
and with greater potential than that draft. The final action
followed a vigorous debate with hotly contested positions and
forty-seven votes. Nevertheless, there was general satisfaction
among the participants at the success of their efforts.
a. Principles and Aims
The Plan of Action lays down several important principles,
some for the first time in a U.N. document.
1. Among the first-time
statements is the assertion that the sovereign right of each
nation to set its own population policies is "to be
exercised ... taking into account universal solidarity in
order to improve the quality of life of the peoples of the
world." (Para 13) This new provision opens the way toward
increasing responsibility by nations toward other nations in
establishing their national population policies.
2. The conceptual relationship between population and
development is stated in Para 13(c):
Population and development
are interrelated: population variables influence
development variables and are also influenced by them;
the formulation of a World Population Plan of Action
reflects the international community's awareness of the
importance of population trends for socio-economic
development, and the socio-economic nature of the
recommendations contained in this Plan of Action
reflects its awareness of the crucial role that
development plays in affecting population trends.
3. A basic right of couples and
individuals is recognized by Para 13(f), for the first time
in a single declarative sentence:
All couples and individuals
have the basic human right to decide freely and
responsibly the number and spacing of their children and
to have the information, education and means to do so;
4. Also for the first time, a
U.N. document links the responsibility of child-bearers to
the community [Para 13(f) continued]:
The responsibility of
couples and individuals in the exercise of this right
takes into account the needs of their living and future
children, and their responsibilities towards the
community.
It is now possible to build on this newly-stated
principle as the right of couples first recognized in
the Tehran Human Rights Declaration of 1968 has been
built on.
5. A flat declaration of the
right of women is included in Para 13(h):
Women have the right to
complete integration in the development process
particularly by means of an equal participation in
educational, social, economic, cultural and political
life. In addition, the necessary measures should be
taken to facilitate this integration with family
responsibilities which should be fully shared by both
partners.
6. The need for international
action is accepted in Para 13(k):
The growing interdependence
of countries makes the adoption of measures at the
international level increasingly important for the
solution of problems of development and population
problems.
7. The "primary aim" of the Plan
of Action is asserted to be "to expand and deepen the
capacities of countries to deal effectively with their
national and subnational population problems and to promote
an appropriate international response to their needs by
increasing international activity in research, the exchange
of information, and the provision of assistance on request."
b. Recommendations
The Plan of Action includes recommendations for: population
goals and policies; population growth; mortality and morbidity;
reproduction; family formation and the status of women;
population distribution and internal migration; international
migration; population structure; socio-economic policies; data
collection and analysis; research; development and evolution of
population policies; the role of national governments and of
international cooperation; and monitoring, review and appraisal.
A score of these recommendations are the most important:
1. Governments should integrate
population measures and programs into comprehensive social
and economic plans and programs and their integration should
be reflected in the goals, instrumentalities and
organizations for planning within the countries. A unit
dealing with population aspects should be created and placed
at a high level of the national administrative structure.
(Para 94)
2. Countries which consider their population growth hampers
attainment of their goals should consider adopting
population policies -- through a low level of birth and
death rates. (Para 17, 18)
3. Highest priority should be given to reduction in
mortality and morbidity and increase of life expectancy and
programs for this purpose should reach rural areas and
underprivileged groups. (Para 20-25)
4. Countries are urged to encourage appropriate education
concerning responsible parenthood and make available to
persons who so desire advice and means of achieving it.
[Para 29(b)]
5. Family planning and related services should aim at
prevention of unwanted pregnancies and also at elimination
of involuntary sterility or subfecundity to enable couples
to achieve their desired number of children. [Para 29 (c)]
6. Adequately trained auxiliary personnel, social workers
and non-government channels should be used to help provide
family planning services. [Para 29(e)]
7. Governments with family planning programs should consider
coordinating them with health and other services designed to
raise the quality of life.
8. Countries wishing to affect fertility levels should give
priority to development programs and health and education
strategies which have a decisive effect upon demographic
trends, including fertility. [Para 31] International
cooperation should give priority to assisting such national
efforts. Such programs may include reduction in infant and
child mortality, increased education, particularly for
females, improvement in the status of women, land reform and
support in old age. [Para 32]
9. Countries which consider their birth rates detrimental to
their national purposes are invited to set quantitative
goals and implement policies to achieve them by 1985. [Para
37]
10. Developed countries are urged to develop appropriate
policies in population, consumption and investment, bearing
in mind the need for fundamental improvement in
international equity.
11. Because the family is the basic unit of society,
governments should assist families as far as possible
through legislation and services. [Para 39]
12. Governments should ensure full participation of women in
the educational, economic, social and political life of
their countries on an equal basis with men. [Para 40] (A new
provision, added at Bucharest.)
13. A series of recommendations are made to stabilize
migration within countries, particularly policies to reduce
the undesirable consequences of excessively rapid
urbanization and to develop opportunities in rural areas and
small towns, recognizing the right of individuals to move
freely within their national boundaries. [Para 44-50]
14. Agreements should be concluded to regulate the
international migration of workers and to assure
non-discriminatory treatment and social services for these
workers and their families; also other measures to decrease
the brain drain from developing countries. [Para 51-62]
15. To assure needed information concerning population
trends, population censuses should be taken at regular
intervals and information concerning births and deaths be
made available at least annually. [Para 72-77]
16. Research should be intensified to develop knowledge
concerning the social, economic and political
interrelationships with population trends; effective means
of reducing infant and childhood mortality; methods for
integrating population goals into national plans, means of
improving the motivation of people, analysis of population
policies in relation to socio-economic development, laws and
institution; methods of fertility regulation to meet the
varied requirement of individuals and communities, including
methods requiring no medical supervision; the interrelations
of health, nutrition and reproductive biology; and
utilization of social services, including family planning
services. [Para 78-80]
17. Training of management on population dynamics and
administration, on an interdisciplinary basis, should be
provided for medical, paramedical, traditional health
personnel, program administrators, senior government
officials, labor, community and social leaders. Education
and information programs should be undertaken to bring
population information to all areas of countries. [Paras
81-92]
18. An important role of governments is to determine and
assess the population problems and needs of their countries
in the light of their political, social, cultural, religious
and economic conditions; such an undertaking should be
carried out systematically and periodically so as to provide
informed, rational and dynamic decision-making in matters of
population and development. [Para 97]
20. The Plan of Action should be closely coordinated with
the International Development Strategy for the Second United
Nations Development Decade, reviewed in depth at five year
intervals, and modified as appropriate. [Paras 106-108]
The Plan of Action hedges in presenting
specific statements of quantitative goals or a time frame for the
reduction of fertility. These concepts are included, however, in the
combination of Paras 16 and 36, together with goals [Para 37] and
the review [Para 106]. Para 16 states that, according to the U.N low
variant projections, it is estimated that as a result of social and
economic development and population policies as reported by
countries in the Second United Nations Inquiry on Population and
Development, population growth rates in the developing countries as
a whole may decline from the present level of 2.4% per annum to
about 2% by 1985; and below 0.7% per annum in the developed
countries. In this case the worldwide rate of population growth
would decline from 2% to about 1.7%.
Para 36 says that these projections and
those for mortality decline are consistent with declines in the
birth rate of the developing countries as a whole from the present
level of 38 per thousand to 30 per thousand by 1985. Para 36 goes on
to say that "To achieve by 1985 these levels of fertility would
require substantial national efforts, by those countries concerned,
in the field of socio-economic development and population policies,
supported, upon request, by adequate international assistance." Para
37 then follows with the statement that countries which consider
their birth rates detrimental to their national purposes are invited
to consider setting quantitative goals and implementing policies
that may lead to the attainment of such goals by 1985. Para 106
recommends a comprehensive review and appraisal of population trends
and policies discussed in the Plan of Action should be undertaken
every five years and modified, wherever needed, by ECOSOC.
Usefulness of the Plan of Action
The World Population Plan of
Action, despite its wordiness and often hesitant tone, contains all
the necessary provisions for effective population growth control
programs at national and international levels. It lacks only plain
statements of quantitative goals with time frames for their
accomplishment. These will have to be added by individual national
action and development as rapidly as possible in further U.N.
documents.
The basis for suitable goals exists in
paragraphs 16, 36, 37, and 106, referred to above. The U.N. low
variant projection used in these paragraphs is close to the goals
proposed by the United States and other ECAFE nations:
For developed countries -
For developing countries -
For the world -
The dangerous situation evidenced by the
current food situation and projections for the future make it
essential to press for the realization of these goals. The beliefs,
ideologies and misconceptions displayed by many nations at Bucharest
indicate more forcefully than ever the need for extensive education
of the leaders of many governments, especially in Africa and some in
Latin America.
Approaches leaders of individual
countries must be designed in the light of their current beliefs and
to meet their special concerns. These might include:
1. Projections of population growth
individualized for countries and with analyses of relations of
population factors to social and economic development of each
country.
2. Familiarization programs at U.N. Headquarters in New York for
ministers of governments, senior policy level officials and
comparably influential leaders from private life.
3. Greatly increased training programs for senior officials in
the elements of demographic economics.
4. Assistance in integrating population factors in national
plans, particularly as they relate to health services,
education, agricultural resources and development, employment,
equitable distribution of income and social stability.
5. Assistance in relating population policies and family
planning programs to major sectors of development: health,
nutrition, agriculture, education, social services, organized
labor, women's activities, community development.
6. Initiatives to implement the Percy amendment regarding
improvement in the status of women.
7. Emphasis in assistance and development programs on
development of rural areas.
All these activities and others
particularly productive are consistent with the Plan of Action and
may be based upon it.
Beyond these activities, essentially directed at national interests,
a broader educational concept is needed to convey an acute
understanding of the interrelation of national interests and world
population growth.
Back to Contents
PART 2
Policy Recommendations
I. Introduction - A
U.S. Global Population Strategy
There is no simple single approach to the population problem which
will provide a "technological fix." As the previous analysis makes
clear the problem of population growth has social, economic and
technological aspects all of which must be understood and dealt with
for a world population policy to succeed. With this in mind, the
following broad recommended strategy provides a framework for the
development of specific individual programs which must be tailored
to the needs and particularities of each country and of different
sectors of the population within a country. Essentially all its
recommendations made below are supported by the World Population
Plan of action drafted at the World Population Conference.
A. Basic Global Strategy
The following basic elements are necessary parts of a
comprehensive approach to the population problem which must
include both bilateral and multilateral components to achieve
success. Thus, USG population assistance programs will need to
be coordinated with those of the major multilateral
institutions, voluntary organizations, and other bilateral
donors.
The common strategy for dealing with rapid population growth
should encourage constructive actions to lower fertility since
population growth over the years will seriously negate
reasonable prospects for the sound social and economic
development of the peoples involved.
While the time horizon in this NSSM is the year 2000 we must
recognize that in most countries, especially the LDCs,
population stability cannot be achieved until the next century.
There are too many powerful socio-economic factors operating on
family size decisions and too much momentum built into the
dynamics of population growth to permit a quick and dramatic
reversal of current trends. There is also even less cause for
optimism on the rapidity of socio-economic progress that would
generate rapid fertility reduction in the poor LDCs than on the
feasibility of extending family planning services to those in
their populations who may wish to take advantage of them. Thus,
at this point we cannot know with certainty when world
population can feasibly be stabilized, nor can we state with
assurance the limits of the world's ecological "carrying
capability". But we can be certain of the desirable direction of
change and can state as a plausible objective the target of
achieving replacement fertility rates by the year 2000.
Over the past few years, U.S. government-funded population
programs have played a major role in arousing interest in family
planning in many countries, and in launching and accelerating
the growth of national family planning programs. In most
countries, there has been an initial rapid growth in
contraceptive "acceptors" up to perhaps 10% of fertile couples
in a few LDCs. The acceleration of previous trends of fertility
decline is attributable, at least in part, to family planning
programs.
However, there is growing appreciation that the problem is more
long term and complex than first appeared and that a short term
burst of activity or moral fervor will not solve it. The danger
in this realization is that the U.S. might abandon its
commitment to assisting in the world's population problem,
rather than facing up to it for the long-run difficult problem
that it is.
From year to year we are learning more about what kind of
fertility reduction is feasible in differing LDC situations.
Given the laws of compound growth, even comparatively small
reductions in fertility over the next decade will make a
significant difference in total numbers by the year 2000, and a
far more significant one by the year 2050.
The proposed strategy calls for a coordinated approach to
respond to the important U.S. foreign policy interest in the
influence of population growth on the world's political,
economic and ecological systems. What is unusual about
population is that this foreign policy interest must have a time
horizon far beyond that of most other objectives. While there
are strong short-run reasons for population programs, because of
such factors as food supply, pressures on social service
budgets, urban migration and social and political instability,
the major impact of the benefits - or avoidance of catastrophe -
that could be accomplished by a strengthened U.S. commitment in
the population area will be felt less by those of us in the U.S.
and other countries today than by our children and
grandchildren.
B. Priorities in U.S. and
Multilateral Population Assistance
One issue in any global population strategy is the degree of
emphasis in allocation of program resources among countries. The
options available range from heavy concentration on a few vital
large countries to a geographically diverse program essentially
involving all countries willing to accept such assistance. All
agencies believe the following policy provides the proper
overall balance.
In order to assist the development of major countries and to
maximize progress toward population stability, primary emphasis
would be placed on the largest and fastest growing developing
countries where the imbalance between growing numbers and
development potential most seriously risks instability, unrest,
and international tensions. These countries are: India,
Bangladesh, Pakistan, Nigeria, Mexico, Indonesia, Brazil, The
Philippines, Thailand, Egypt, Turkey, Ethiopia, and Colombia.
Out of a total 73.3 million worldwide average increase in
population from 1970-75 these countries contributed 34.3 million
or 47%. This group of priority countries includes some with
virtually no government interest in family planning and others
with active government family planning programs which require
and would welcome enlarged technical and financial assistance.
These countries should be given the highest priority within
AID's population program in terms of resource allocations and/or
leadership efforts to encourage action by other donors and
organizations.
However, other countries would not be ignored. AID would provide
population assistance and/or undertake leadership efforts with
respect to other, lower priority countries to the extent that
the availability of funds and staff permits, taking into account
of such factors as : long run U.S. political interests; impact
of rapid population growth on its development potential; the
country's relative contribution to world population growth; its
financial capacity to cope with the problem; potential impact on
domestic unrest and international frictions (which can apply to
small as well as large countries); its significance as a test or
demonstration case; and opportunities for expenditures that
appear particularly cost-effective (e.g. it has been suggested
that there may be particularly cost-effective opportunities for
supporting family planning to reduce the lag between mortality
and fertility declines in countries where death rates are still
declining rapidly); national commitment to an effective program.
For both the high priority countries and the lower priority ones
to which funds and staff permit aid, the form and content of our
assistance or leadership efforts would vary from country to
country, depending on each nation's particular interests, needs,
and receptivity to various forms of assistance. For example, if
these countries are receptive to U.S. assistance through
bilateral or central AID funding, we should provide such
assistance at levels commensurate with the recipient's
capability to finance needed actions with its own funds, the
contributions of other donors and organizations, and the
effectiveness with which funds can be used.
In countries where U.S. assistance is limited either by the
nature of political or diplomatic relations with those countries
or by lack of strong government desire. In population reduction
programs, external technical and financial assistance (if
desired by the countries) would have to come from other donors
and/or from private and international organizations, many of
which receive contributions from AID. The USG would, however,
maintain an interest (e.g. through Embassies) in such countries'
population problems and programs (if any) to reduce population
growth rates. Moreover, particularly in the case of high
priority countries, we should be alert to opportunities for
expanding our assistance efforts and for demonstrating to their
leaders the consequences of rapid population growth and the
benefits of actions to reduce fertility.
In countries to which other forms of U.S. assistance are
provided but not population assistance, AID will monitor
progress toward achievement of development objectives, taking
into account the extent to which these are hindered by rapid
population growth, and will look for opportunities to encourage
initiation of or improvement in population policies and
programs.
In addition, the U.S. strategy should support in these LDC
countries general activities (e.g. bio-medical research or
fertility control methods) capable of achieving major
breakthroughs in key problems which hinder reductions in
population growth.
C. Instruments and Modalities for
Population Assistance
Bilateral population assistance is the largest and most
invisible "instrument" for carrying out U.S. policy in this
area. Other instruments include: support for and coordination
with population programs of multilateral organizations and
voluntary agencies; encouragement of multilateral country
consortia and consultative groups to emphasize family planning
in reviews of overall recipient progress and aid requests; and
formal and informal presentation of views at international
gatherings, such as food and population conferences. Specific
country strategies must be worked out for each of the highest
priority countries, and for the lower priority ones. These
strategies will take account of such factors as: national
attitudes and sensitivities on family planning; which
"instruments" will be most acceptable, opportunities for
effective use of assistance; and need of external capital or
operating assistance.
For example, in Mexico our strategy would focus on working
primarily through private agencies and multilateral
organizations to encourage more government attention to the need
for control of population growth; in Bangladesh we might provide
large-scale technical and financial assistance, depending on the
soundness of specific program requests; in Indonesia we would
respond to assistance requests but would seek to have Indonesia
meet as much of program costs from its own resources (i.e.
surplus oil earnings) as possible. In general we would not
provide large-scale bilateral assistance in the more developed
LDCs, such as Brazil or Mexico. Although these countries are in
the top priority list our approach must take account of the fact
that their problems relate often to government policies and
decisions and not to larger scale need for concessional
assistance.
Within the overall array of U.S. foreign assistance programs,
preferential treatment in allocation of funds and manpower
should be given to cost-effective programs to reduce population
growth; including both family planning activities and supportive
activities in other sectors.
While some have argued for use of explicit "leverage" to "force"
better population programs on LDC governments, there are several
practical constraints on our efforts to achieve program
improvements. Attempts to use "leverage" for far less sensitive
issues have generally caused political frictions and often
backfired. Successful family planning requires strong local
dedication and commitment that cannot over the long run be
enforced from the outside. There is also the danger that some
LDC leaders will see developed country pressures for family
planning as a form of economic or racial imperialism; this could
well create a serious backlash.
Short of "leverage", there are many opportunities, bilaterally
and multilaterally, for U.S. representations to discuss and urge
the need for stronger family planning programs. There is also
some established precedent for taking account of family planning
performance in appraisal of assistance requirements by AID and
consultative groups. Since population growth is a major
determinant of increases in food demand, allocation of scarce PL
480 resources should take account of what steps a country is
taking in population control as well as food production. In
these sensitive relationships, however, it is important in style
as well as substance to avoid the appearance of coercion.
D. Provision and Development of
Family Planning Services, Information and Technology
Past experience suggests that easily available family planning
services are a vital and effective element in reducing fertility
rates in the LDCs.
Two main advances are required for providing safe and effective
fertility control techniques in the developing countries:
1. Expansion and further
development of efficient low-cost systems to assure the full
availability of existing family planning services, materials
and information to the 85% of LDC populations not now
effectively reached. In developing countries willing to
create special delivery systems for family planning services
this may be the most effective method. In others the most
efficient and acceptable method is to combine family
planning with health or nutrition in multi-purpose delivery
systems.
2. Improving the effectiveness of present means of fertility
control, and developing new technologies which are simple,
low cost, effective, safe, long-lasting and acceptable to
potential users. This involves both basic developmental
research and operations research to judge the utility of new
or modified approaches under LDC conditions.
Both of these goals should be given
very high priority with necessary additional funding consistent
with current or adjusted divisions of labor among other donors
and organizations involved in these areas of population
assistance.
E. Creating Conditions Conducive to
Fertility Decline
It is clear that the availability of contraceptive services and
information is not a complete answer to the population problem.
In view of the importance of socio-economic factors in
determining desired family size, overall assistance strategy
should increasingly concentrate on selective policies which will
contribute to population decline as well as other goals. This
strategy reflects the complementarity between population control
and other U.S. development objectives, particularly those
relating to AID's Congressional mandate to focus on problems of
the "poor majority" in LDC's.
We know that certain kinds of development policies -- e.g.,
those which provide the poor with a major share in development
benefits -- both promote fertility reductions and accomplish
other major development objectives. There are other policies
which appear to also promote fertility reduction but which may
conflict with non-population objectives (e.g., consider the
effect of bringing a large number of women into the labor force
in countries and occupations where unemployment is already high
and rising).
However, AID knows only approximately the relative priorities
among the factors that affect fertility and is even further away
from knowing what specific cost-effective steps governments can
take to affect these factors.
Nevertheless, with what limited information we have, the urgency
of moving forward toward lower fertility rates, even without
complete knowledge of the socio-economic forces involved,
suggests a three-pronged strategy:
1. High priority to large-scale
implementation of programs affecting the determinants of
fertility in those cases where there is probable
cost-effectiveness, taking account of potential impact on
population growth rates; other development benefits to be
gained; ethical considerations; feasibility in light of LDC
bureaucratic and political concerns and problems; and
timeframe for accomplishing objectives.
2. High priority to experimentation and pilot projects in
areas where there is evidence of a close relationship to
fertility reduction but where there are serious questions
about cost-effectiveness relating either to other
development impact (e.g., the female employment example
cited above) or to program design (e.g., what cost-effective
steps can be taken to promote female employment or
literacy).
3. High priority to comparative research and evaluation on
the relative impact on desired family size of the
socio-economic determinants of fertility in general and on
what policy scope exists for affecting these determinants.
In all three cases emphasis should
be given to moving action as much as possible to LDC
institutions and individuals rather than to involving U.S.
researchers on a large scale.
Activities in all three categories would receive very high
priority in allocation of AID funds. The largest amounts
required should be in the first category and would generally not
come from population funds. However, since such activities
(e.g., in rural development and basic education) coincide with
other AID sectoral priorities, sound project requests from LDC's
will be placed close to the top in AID's funding priorities
(assuming that they do not conflict with other major development
and other foreign policy objectives).
The following areas appear to contain significant promise in
effecting fertility declines, and are discussed in subsequent
sections.
-
providing minimal levels of
education especially for women;
-
reducing infant and child
mortality;
-
expanding opportunities for wage
employment especially for women;
-
developing alternatives to
"social security" support provided by children to aging
parents;
-
pursuing development strategies
that skew income growth toward the poor, especially rural
development focusing on rural poverty;
-
concentrating on the education
and indoctrination of the rising generation of children
regarding the desirability of smaller family size.
The World Population Plan of Action
includes a provision (paragraph 31) that countries trying for
effective fertility levels should give priority to development
programs and health and education strategies which have a
decisive effect upon demographic trends, including fertility. It
calls for international information to give priority to
assisting such national efforts. Programs suggested (paragraph
32) are essentially the same as those listed above.
Food is another of special concern in any population strategy.
Adequate food stocks need to be created to provide for periods
of severe shortages and LDC food production efforts must be
reenforced to meet increased demand resulting from population
and income growth. U.S. agricultural production goals should
take account of the normal import requirements of LDC's (as well
as developed countries) and of likely occasional crop failures
in major parts of the LDC world. Without improved food security,
there will be pressure leading to possible conflict and the
desire for large families for "insurance" purposes, thus
undermining other development and population control efforts.
F. Development of World-Wide
Political and Popular Commitment to Population Stabilization and
Its Associated Improvement of Individual Quality of Life.
A fundamental element in any overall strategy to deal with the
population problem is obtaining the support and commitment of
key leaders in the developing countries. This is only possible
if they can clearly see the negative impact of unrestricted
population growth in their countries and the benefits of
reducing birth rates - and if they believe it is possible to
cope with the population problem through instruments of public
policy. Since most high officials are in office for relatively
short periods, they have to see early benefits or the value of
longer term statesmanship. In each specific case, individual
leaders will have to approach their population problems within
the context of their country's values, resources, and existing
priorities.
Therefore, it is vital that leaders of major LDCs themselves
take the lead in advancing family planning and population
stabilization, not only within the U.N. and other international
organizations but also through bilateral contacts with leaders
of other LDCs. Reducing population growth in LDCs should not be
advocated exclusively by the developed countries. The U.S.
should encourage such a role as opportunities appear in its high
level contact with LDC leaders.
The most recent forum for such an effort was the August 1974
U.N. World Population Conference. It was an ideal context to
focus concerted world attention on the problem. The debate views
and highlights of the World Population Plan of action are
reviewed in Chapter VI.
The U.S. strengthened its credibility as an advocate of lower
population growth rates by explaining that, while it did not
have a single written action population policy, it did have
legislation, Executive Branch policies and court decisions that
amounted to a national policy and that our national fertility
level was already below replacement and seemed likely to attain
a stable population by 2000.
The U.S. also proposed to join with other developed countries in
an international collaborative effort of research in human
reproduction and fertility control covering bio-medical and
socio-economic factors.
The U.S. further offered to collaborate with other interested
donor countries and organizations (e.g., WHO, UNFPA, World Bank,
UNICEF) to encourage further action by LDC governments and other
institutions to provide low-cost, basic preventive health
services, including maternal and child health and family
planning services, reaching out into the remote rural areas.
The U.S. delegation also said the U.S. would request from the
Congress increased U.S. bilateral assistance to
population-family planning programs, and additional amounts for
essential functional activities and our contribution to the
UNFPA if countries showed an interest in such assistance.
Each of these commitments is important and should be pursued by
the U.S. Government.
It is vital that the effort to develop and strengthen a
commitment on the part of the LDC leaders not be seen by them as
an industrialized country policy to keep their strength down or
to reserve resources for use by the "rich" countries.
Development of such a perception could create a serious backlash
adverse to the cause of population stability. Thus the U.S. and
other "rich" countries should take care that policies they
advocate for the LDC's would be acceptable within their own
countries. (This may require public debate and affirmation of
our intended policies.) The "political" leadership role in
developing countries should, of course, be taken whenever
possible by their own leaders.
The U.S. can help to minimize charges of an imperialist
motivation behind its support of population activities by
repeatedly asserting that such support derives from a concern
with:
(a) the right of the
individual couple to determine freely and responsibly their
number and spacing of children and to have information,
education, and 1means to do so; and
(b) the fundamental social and economic development
of poor countries in which rapid population growth is both a
contributing cause and a consequence of widespread poverty.
Furthermore, the U.S. should also
take steps to convey the message that the control of world
population growth is in the mutual interest of the developed and
developing countries alike.
Family planning programs should be supported by multilateral
organizations wherever they can provide the most efficient and
acceptable means. Where U.S. bilateral assistance is necessary
or preferred, it should be provided in collaboration with host
country institutions -- as is the case now. Credit should go to
local leaders for the success of projects. The success and
acceptability of family planning assistance will depend in large
measure on the degree to which it contributes to the ability of
the host government to serve and obtain the support of its
people.
In many countries today, decision-makers are wary of instituting
population programs, not because they are unconcerned about
rapid population growth, but because they lack confidence that
such programs will succeed. By actively working to demonstrate
to such leaders that national population and family planning
programs have achieved progress in a wide variety of poor
countries, the U.S. could help persuade the leaders of many
countries that the investment of funds in national family
planning programs is likely to yield high returns even in the
short and medium term. Several examples of success exist
already, although regrettably they tend to come from LDCs that
are untypically well off in terms of income growth and/or social
services or are islands or city states.
We should also appeal to potential leaders among the younger
generations in developing countries, focusing on the
implications of continued rapid population growth for their
countries in the next 10-20 years, when they may assume national
leadership roles.
Beyond seeking to reach and influence national leaders, improved
world-wide support for population-related efforts should be
sought through increased emphasis on mass media and other
population education and motivation programs by the U.N., USIA,
and USAID. We should give higher priorities in our information
programs world-wide for this area and consider expansion of
collaborative arrangements with multilateral institutions in
population education programs.
Another challenge will be in obtaining the further understanding
and support of the U.S. public and Congress for the necessary
added funds for such an effort, given the competing demands for
resources. If an effective program is to be mounted by the U.S.,
we will need to contribute significant new amounts of funds.
Thus there is need to reinforce the positive attitudes of those
in Congress who presently support U.S. activity in the
population field and to enlist their support in persuading
others. Public debate is needed now.
Personal approaches by the President, the Secretary of State,
other members of the Cabinet, and their principal deputies would
be helpful in this effort. Congress and the public must be
clearly informed that the Executive Branch is seriously worried
about the problem and that it deserves their further attention.
Congressional representatives at the World Population Conference
can help.
An Alternative View
The above basic strategy assumes that the current forms of
assistance programs in both population and economic and social
development areas will be able to solve the problem. There is
however, another view, which is shared by a growing number of
experts. It believes that the outlook is much harsher and far less
tractable than commonly perceived. This holds that the severity of
the population problem in this century which is already claiming the
lives of more than 10 million people yearly, is such as to make
likely continued widespread food shortage and other demographic
catastrophes, and, in the words of C.P. Snow, we shall be watching
people starve on television.
The conclusion of this view is that mandatory programs may be needed
and that we should be considering these possibilities now.
This school of thought believes the following types of questions
need to be addressed:
-
Should the U.S. make an all out
commitment to major limitation of world population with all the
financial and international as well as domestic political costs
that would entail?
-
Should the U.S. set even higher
agricultural production goals which would enable it to provide
additional major food resources to other countries? Should they
be nationally or internationally controlled?
-
On what basis should such food
resources then be provided? Would food be considered an
instrument of national power? Will we be forced to make choices
as to whom we can reasonably assist, and if so, should
population efforts be a criterion for such assistance?
-
Is the U.S. prepared to accept food
rationing to help people who can't/won't control their
population growth?
-
Should the U.S. seek to change its
own food consumption patterns toward more efficient uses of
protein?
-
Are mandatory population control
measures appropriate for the U.S. and/or for others?
-
Should the U.S. initiate a major
research effort to address the growing problems of fresh water
supply, ecological damage, and adverse climate?
While definitive answers to those
questions are not possible in this study given its time limitations
and its implications for domestic policy, nevertheless they are
needed if one accepts the drastic and persistent character of the
population growth problem. Should the choice be made that the
recommendations and the options given below are not adequate to meet
this problem, consideration should be given to a further study and
additional action in this field as outlined above.
Conclusion
The overall strategy above provides a general approach through which
the difficulties and dangers of population growth and related
problems can be approached in a balanced and comprehensive basis. No
single effort will do the job. Only a concerted and major effort in
a number of carefully selected directions can provide the hope of
success in reducing population growth and its unwanted dangers to
world economic will-being and political stability. There are no
"quick-fixes" in this field.
Below are specific program recommendations which are designed to
implement this strategy. Some will require few new resources; many
call for major efforts and significant new resources. We cannot
simply buy population growth moderation for nearly 4 billion people
"on the cheap."
Back to Contents
II. Action to
Create Conditions for Fertility Decline: Population and a
Development Assistance Strategy
II. A. General Strategy and Resource
Allocations for AID Assistance
Discussion:
1. Past Program Actions
Since inception of the program in 1965, AID has
obligated nearly $625 million for population activities.
These funds have been used primarily to
(1) draw attention to the
population problem,
(2) encourage multilateral
and other donor support for the worldwide population
effort, and
(3) help create and maintain
the means for attacking the problem, including the
development of LDC capabilities to do so.
In pursuing these objectives,
AID's population resources were focussed on areas of need
where action was feasible and likely to be effective. AID
has provided assistance to population programs in some 70
LDCs, on a bilateral basis and/or indirectly through private
organizations and other channels. AID currently provides
bilateral assistance to 36 of these countries. State and AID
played an important role in establishing the United Nations
Fund for Population Activities (UNFPA) to spearhead
multilateral effort in population as a complement to the
bilateral actions of AID and other donor countries.
Since the Fund's establishment,
AID has been the largest single contributor. Moreover, with
assistance from AID a number of private family planning
organizations (e.g., Pathfinder Fund, International Planned
Parenthood Foundation, Population Council) have
significantly expanded their worldwide population programs.
Such organizations are still the main supporters of family
planning action in many developing countries.
AID actions have been a major catalyst in stimulating the
flow of funds into LDC population programs - from almost
nothing ten years ago, the amounts being spent from all
sources in 1974 for programs in the developing countries of
Africa, Latin America, and Asia (excluding China) will total
between $400 and $500 million. About half of this will be
contributed by the developed countries bilaterally or
through multilateral agencies, and the balance will come
from the budgets of the developing countries themselves.
AID's contribution is about one-quarter of the total - AID
obligated $112.4 million for population programs in FY 1974
and plans for FY 1975 program of $137.5 million.
While world resources for population activities will
continue to grow, they are unlikely to expand as rapidly as
needed. (One rough estimate is that five times the current
amount, or about $2.5 billion in constant dollars, will be
required annually by 1985 to provide the 2.5 billion people
in the developing world, excluding China, with full-scale
family planning programs). In view of these limited
resources AID's efforts (in both fiscal and manpower terms)
and through its leadership the efforts of others, must be
focussed to the extent possible on high priority needs in
countries where the population problem is the most acute.
Accordingly, AID last year began
a process of developing geographic and functional program
priorities for use in allocating funds and staff, and in
arranging and adjusting divisions of labor with other donors
and organizations active in the worldwide population effort.
Although this study has not yet been completed, a general
outline of a U.S. population assistance strategy can be
developed from the results of the priorities studied to
date. The geographic and functional parameters of the
strategy are discussed under 2. and 3. below. The
implications for population resource allocations are
presented under 4.
2. Geographic Priorities in U.S. Population Assistance
The U.S. strategy should be to encourage and support,
through bilateral, multilateral and other channels,
constructive actions to lower fertility rates in selected
developing countries. Within this overall strategy and in
view of funding and manpower limitations, the U.S. should
emphasize assistance to those countries where the population
problem is the most serious.
There are three major factors to consider in judging the
seriousness of the problem:
The first is the country's
contribution to the world's population problem, which is
determined by the size of its population, its population
growth rate, and its progress in the "demographic
transition" from high birth and high death rates to low
ones.
The second is the extent to which population growth
impinges on the country's economic development and its
financial capacity to cope with its population problem.
The third factor is the extent to which an imbalance
between growing numbers of people and a country's
capability to handle the problem could lead to serious
instability, international tensions, or conflicts.
Although many countries may experience adverse
consequences from such imbalances, the troublemaking
regional or international conditions might not be as
serious in some places as they are in others.
Based on the first two criteria,
AID has developed a preliminary rank ordering of nearly 100
developing countries which, after review and refinement,
will be used as a guide in AID's own funding and manpower
resource allocations and in encouraging action through AID
leadership efforts on the part of other population
assistance instrumentalities. Applying these three criteria
to this rank ordering, there are 13 countries where we
currently judge the problem and risks to be the most
serious.
They are: Bangladesh, India,
Pakistan, Indonesia, Philippines, Thailand, Egypt, Turkey,
Ethiopia, Nigeria, Brazil, Mexico, and Colombia. Out of a
total 67 million worldwide increase in population in 1972
these countries contributed about 45%. These countries range
from those with virtually no government interest in family
planning to those with active government family planning
programs which require and would welcome enlarged technical
and financial assistance.
These countries should be given the highest priority within
AID's population program in terms of resource allocations
and/or leadership efforts to encourage action by other
donors and organizations. The form and content of our
assistance or leadership efforts would vary from
country-to-country (as discussed in 3. below), depending on
each country's needs, its receptivity to various forms of
assistance, its capability to finance needed actions, the
effectiveness with which funds can be used, and current or
adjusted divisions of labor among the other donors and
organizations providing population assistance to the
country. AID's population actions would also need to be
consistent with the overall U.S. development policy toward
each country.
While the countries cited above would be given highest
priority, other countries would not be ignored. AID would
provide population assistance and/or undertake leadership
efforts with respect to other countries to the extent that
the availability of funds and staff permits, taking account
of such factors as: a country's placement in AID's priority
listing of LDCs; its potential impact on domestic unrest and
international frictions (which can apply to small as well as
large countries); its significance as a test or
demonstration case; and opportunities for expenditures that
appear particularly cost-effective (e.g. its has been
suggested that there may be particularly cost-effective
opportunities for supporting family planning to reduce the
lag between mortality and fertility declines in countries
where death rates are still declining rapidly).
3. Mode and Content of U.S. Population Assistance
In moving from geographic emphases to strategies for the
mode and functional content of population assistance to both
the higher and lower priority countries which are to be
assisted, various factors need to be considered:
(1) the extent of a
country's understanding of its population problem and
interest in responding to it;
(2) the specific actions
needed to cope with the problem;
(3) the country's need for
external financial assistance to deal with the problem;
(4) its receptivity to
various forms of assistance.
Some of the countries in the
high priority group cited above (e.g. Bangladesh, Pakistan,
Indonesia, Philippines, Thailand) and some lower priority
countries have recognized that rapid population growth is a
problem, are taking actions of their own to deal with it,
and are receptive to assistance from the U.S. (through
bilateral or central AID funding) and other donors, as well
as to multilateral support for their efforts. In these cases
AID should continue to provide such assistance based on each
country's functional needs, the effectiveness with which
funds can be used in these areas, and current or adjusted
divisions of labor among other donors and organizations
providing assistance to the country.
Furthermore, our assistance
strategies for these countries should consider their
capabilities to finance needed population actions. Countries
which have relatively large surpluses of export earning and
foreign exchange reserves are unlikely to require
large-scale external financial assistance and should be
encouraged to finance their own commodity imports as well as
local costs. In such cases our strategy should be to
concentrate on needed technical assistance and on attempting
to play a catalytic role in encouraging better programs and
additional host country financing for dealing with the
population problem.
In other high and lower priority countries U.S. assistance
is limited either by the nature of political or diplomatic
relations with those countries (e.g. India, Egypt), or by
the lack of strong government interest in population
reduction programs (e.g. Nigeria, Ethiopia, Mexico, Brazil).
In such cases, external technical and financial assistance,
if desired by the countries, would have to come from other
donors and/or from private and international organizations
(many of which receive contributions from AID).
The USG would, however, maintain
an interest (e.g. through Embassies) in such countries'
population problems and programs (if any) to reduce
population growth rates. Moreover, particularly in the case
of high priority countries to which U.S. population
assistance is now limited for one reason or another, we
should be alert to opportunities for expanding our
assistance efforts and for demonstrating to their leaders
the consequences of rapid population growth and the benefits
of actions to reduce fertility.
In countries to which other forms of U.S. assistance are
provided but not population assistance, AID will monitor
progress toward achievement of development objectives,
taking into account the extent to which these are hindered
by rapid population growth, and will look for opportunities
to encourage initiation of or improvement in population
policies and programs.
In addition, the U.S. strategy should support general
activities capable of achieving major breakthroughs in key
problems which hinder attainment of fertility control
objectives. For example, the development of more effective,
simpler contraceptive methods through bio-medical research
will benefit all countries which face the problem of rapid
population growth; improvements in methods for measuring
demographic changes will assist a number of LDCs in
determining current population growth rates and evaluating
the impact over time of population/family planning
activities.
4. Resource Allocations for U.S. Population Assistance
AID funds obligated for population/family planning
assistance rose steadily since inception of the program ($10
million in the FY 1965-67 period) to nearly $125 million in
FY 1972. In FY 1973, however, funds available for population
remained at the $125 million level; in FY 1974 they actually
declined slightly, to $112.5 million because of a ceiling on
population obligations inserted in the legislation by the
House Appropriations Committee. With this plateau in AID
population obligations, worldwide resources have not been
adequate to meet all identified, sensible funding needs, and
we therefore see opportunities for significant expansion of
the program.
Some major actions in the area of creating conditions for
fertility decline, as described in Section IIB, can be
funded from AID resources available for the sectors in
question (e.g., education, agriculture). Other actions come
under the purview of population ("Title X") funds. In this
latter category, increases in projected budget requests to
the Congress on the order of $35-50 million annually through
FY 1980 -- above the $137.5 million requested by FY 1975 --
appear appropriate at this time. Such increases must be
accompanied by expanding contributions to the worldwide
population effort from other donors and organizations and
from the LDCs themselves, if significant progress is to be
made. The USG should take advantage of appropriate
opportunities to stimulate such contributions from others.
Title X Funding for
Population
+----------------------------------------------------+
| Year
Amount ($ million) |
+----------------------------------------------------+
| FY 1972 - Actual Obligations
123.3
|
| FY 1973 - Actual Obligations
125.6
|
| FY 1974 - Actual Obligations
112.4
|
| FY 1975 - Request to Congress
137.5
|
| FY 1976 - Projection
170
|
| FY 1977 - Projection
210
|
| FY 1978 - Projection
250
|
| FY 1979 - Projection
300
|
| FY 1980 - Projection
350
|
+----------------------------------------------------+ |
These Title X funding projections for FY 1976-80 are general
magnitudes based on preliminary estimates of expansion or
initiation of population programs in developing countries
and growing requirements for outside assistance as discussed
in greater detail in other sections of this paper. These
estimates contemplated very substantial increases in
self-help and assistance from other donor countries.
Our objective should be to assure that developing countries
make family planning information, educational and means
available to all their peoples by 1980. Our efforts should
include:
-
Increased A.I.D. bilateral
and centrally-funded programs, consistent with the
geographic priorities cited above.
-
Expanded contributions to
multilateral and private organizations that can work
effectively in the population area.
-
Further research on the
relative impact of various socio-economic factors on
desired family size, and experimental efforts to test
the feasibility of larger-scale efforts to affect some
of these factors.
-
Additional bio-medical
research to improve the existing means of fertility
control and to develop new ones which are safe,
effective, inexpensive, and attractive to both men and
women.
-
Innovative approaches to
providing family planning services, such as the
utilization of commercial channels for distribution of
contraceptives, and the development of low-cost systems
for delivering effective health and family planning
services to the 85% of LDC populations not now reached
by such services.
-
Expanded efforts to increase
the awareness of LDC leaders and publics regarding the
consequences of rapid population growth and to stimulate
further LDC commitment to actions to reduce fertility.
We believe expansions in the
range of 35-50 million annually over the next five years are
realistic, in light of potential LDC needs and prospects for
increased contributions from other population assistance
instrumentalities, as well as constraints on the speed with
which AID (and other donors) population funds can be
expanded and effectively utilized. These include negative or
ambivalent host government attitudes toward population
reduction programs; the need for complementary financial and
manpower inputs by recipient governments, which must come at
the expense of other programs they consider to be high
priority; and the need to assure that new projects involve
sensible, effective actions that are likely to reduce
fertility.
We must avoid inadequately
planned or implemented programs that lead to extremely high
costs per acceptor. In effect, we are closer to "absorptive
capacity" in terms of year-to-year increases in population
programs than we are, for example, in annual expansions in
food, fertilizer or generalized resource transfers.
It would be premature to make detailed funding
recommendations by countries and functional categories in
light of our inability to predict what changes -- such as in
host country attitudes to U.S. population assistance and in
fertility control technologies -- may occur which would
significantly alter funding needs in particular geographic
or functional areas. For example, AID is currently precluded
from providing bilateral assistance to India and Egypt, two
significant countries in the highest priority group, due to
the nature of U.S. political and diplomatic relations with
these countries.
However, if these relationships
were to change and bilateral aid could be provided, we would
want to consider providing appropriate population assistance
to these countries. In other cases, changing U.S.-LDC
relationships might preclude further aid to some countries.
Factors such as these could both change the mix and affect
overall magnitudes of funds needed for population
assistance. Therefore, proposed program mixes and funding
levels by geographic and functional categories should
continue to be examined on an annual basis during the
regular USG program and budget review processes which lead
to the presentation of funding requests to the Congress.
Recognizing that changing opportunities for action could
substantially affect AID's resource requirements for
population assistance, we anticipate that, if funds are
provided by the Congress at the levels projected, we would
be able to cover necessary actions related to the highest
priority countries and also those related to lower priority
countries, moving reasonably far down the list. At this
point, however, AID believes it would not be desirable to
make priority judgments on which activities would not be
funded if Congress did not provide the levels projected. If
cuts were made in these levels we would have to make
judgments based on such factors as the priority rankings of
countries, then-existing LDC needs, and divisions of labor
with other actors in the population assistance area.
If AID's population assistance program is to expand at the
general magnitudes cited above, additional direct hire staff
will likely be needed. While the expansion in program action
would be primarily through grants and contracts with LDC or
U.S. institutions, or through contributions to international
organizations, increases in direct hire staff would be
necessary to review project proposals, monitor their
implementation through such instrumentalities, and evaluate
their progress against pre-established goals. Specific
direct hire manpower requirements should continue to be
considered during the annual program and budget reviews,
along with details of program mix and funding levels by
country and functional category, in order to correlate
staffing needs with projected program actions for a
particular year.
Recommendations
1. The U.S. strategy should be
to encourage and support, through bilateral, multilateral
and other channels, constructive action to lower fertility
rates in selected developing countries. The U.S. should
apply each of the relevant provisions of its World
Population Plan of Action and use it to influence and
support actions by developing countries.
2. Within this overall strategy, the U.S. should give
highest priority, in terms of resource allocation (along
with donors) to efforts to encourage assistance from others
to those countries cited above where the population problem
is most serious, and provide assistance to other countries
as funds and staff permit.
3. AID's further development of population program
priorities, both geographic and functional, should be
consistent with the general strategy discussed above, with
the other recommendations of this paper and with the World
Population Plan of Action. The strategies should be
coordinated with the population activities of other donors
countries and agencies using the WPPA as leverage to obtain
suitable action.
4. AID's budget requests over the next five years should
include a major expansion of bilateral population and family
planning programs (as appropriate for each country or
region), of functional activities as necessary, and of
contributions through multilateral channels, consistent with
the general funding magnitudes discussed above. The proposed
budgets should emphasize the country and functional
priorities outlined in the recommendations of this study and
as detailed in AID's geographic and functional strategy
papers.
II. B. Functional Assistance Programs to
Create Conditions for Fertility Decline
Introduction
Discussion
It is clear that the availability of contraceptive services and
information, important as that is, is not the only element
required to address the population problems of the LDCs.
Substantial evidence shows that many families in LDCs
(especially the poor) consciously prefer to have numerous
children for a variety of economic and social reasons. For
example, small children can make economic contributions on
family farms, children can be important sources of support for
old parents where no alternative form of social security exists,
and children may be a source of status for women who have few
alternatives in male-dominated societies.
The desire for large families diminishes as income rises.
Developed countries and the more developed areas in LDCs have
lower fertility than less developed areas.
Similarly, family planning programs
produce more acceptors and have a greater impact on fertility in
developed areas than they do in less developed areas. Thus,
investments in development are important in lowering fertility
rates. We know that the major socio-economic determinants of
fertility are strongly interrelated. A change in any one of them
is likely to produce a change in the others as well. Clearly
development per se is a powerful determinant of fertility.
However, since it is unlikely that most LDCs will develop
sufficiently during the next 25-30 years, it is crucial to
identify those sectors that most directly and powerfully affect
fertility.
In this context, population should be viewed as a variable which
interacts, to differing degrees, with a wide range of
development programs, and the U.S. strategy should continue to
stress the importance of taking population into account in
"non-family planning" activities. This is particularly important
with the increasing focus in the U.S. development program on
food and nutrition, health and population, and education and
human resources; assistance programs have less chance of success
as long as the numbers to be fed, educated, and employed are
increasing rapidly.
Thus, to assist in achieving LDC fertility reduction, not only
should family planning be high up on the priority list for U.S.
foreign assistance, but high priority in allocation of funds
should be given to programs in other sectors that contribute in
a cost-effective manner in reduction in population growth.
There is a growing, but still quite small, body of research to
determine the socio-economic aspects of development that most
directly and powerfully affect fertility. Although the limited
analysis to date cannot be considered definitive, there is
general agreement that the five following factors (in addition
to increases in per capita income) tend to be strongly
associated with fertility declines: education, especially the
education of women; reductions in infant mortality; wage
employment opportunities for women; social security and other
substitutes for the economic value of children; and relative
equality in income distribution and rural development. There are
a number of other factors identified from research, historical
analysis, and experimentation that also affect fertility,
including delaying the average age of marriage, and direct
payments (financial incentive) to family planning acceptors.
There are, however, a number of questions which must be
addressed before one can move from identification of factors
associated with fertility decline to large-scale programs that
will induce fertility decline in a cost-effective manner. For
example, in the case of female education, we need to consider
such questions as:
-
Did the female education cause
fertility to decline or did the development process in some
situations cause parents both to see less economic need for
large families and to indulge in the "luxury" of educating
their daughters?
-
If more female education does in
fact cause fertility declines, will poor high-fertility
parents see much advantage in sending their daughters to
school?
-
If so, how much does it cost to
educate a girl to the point where her fertility will be
reduced (which occurs at about the fourth-grade level)?
-
What specific programs in female
education are most cost-effective (e.g., primary school,
non-formal literacy training, or vocational or
pre-vocational training)?
-
What, in rough quantitative
terms, are the non-population benefits of an additional
dollar spent on female education in a given situation in
comparison to other non-population investment alternatives?
-
What are the population benefits
of a dollar spent on female education in comparison with
other population-related investments, such as in
contraceptive supplies or in maternal and child health care
systems?
-
And finally, what is the total
population plus non-population benefit of investment in a
given specific program in female education in comparison
with the total population plus non-population benefits of
alternate feasible investment opportunities?
As a recent research proposal from
Harvard's Department of Population Studies puts this problem:
"Recent studies have identified
more specific factors underlying fertility declines,
especially, the spread of educational attainment and the
broadening of non-traditional roles for women. In situations
of rapid population growth, however, these run counter to
powerful market forces. Even when efforts are made to
provide educational opportunities for most of the school age
population, low levels of development and restricted
employment opportunities for academically educated youth
lead to high dropout rates and non-attendance..."
Fortunately, the situation is by no
means as ambiguous for all of the likely factors affecting
fertility. For example, laws that raise the minimum marriage
age, where politically feasible and at least partially
enforceable, can over time have a modest effect on fertility at
negligible cost. Similarly, there have been some controversial,
but remarkably successful, experiments in India in which
financial incentives, along with other motivational devices,
were used to get large numbers of men to accept vasectomies. In
addition, there appear to be some major activities, such as
programs aimed to improve the productive capacity of the rural
poor, which can be well justified even without reference to
population benefits, but which appear to have major population
benefits as well.
The strategy suggested by the above considerations is that the
volume and type of programs aimed at the "determinants of
fertility" should be directly related to our estimate of the
total benefits (including non-population benefits) of a dollar
invested in a given proposed program and to our confidence in
the reliability of that estimate. There is room for honest
disagreement among researchers and policy-makers about the
benefits, or feasibility, of a given program. Hopefully, over
time, with more research, experimentation and evaluation, areas
of disagreement and ambiguity will be clarified, and donors and
recipients will have better information both on what policies
and programs tend to work under what circumstances and how to go
about analyzing a given country situation to find the best
feasible steps that should be taken.
Recommendations:
1. AID should implement the
strategy set out in the World Population Plan of Action,
especially paragraphs 31 and 32 and Section I ("Introduction
- a U.S. Global Population Strategy") above, which calls for
high priority in funding to three categories of programs in
areas affecting fertility (family-size) decisions:
a. Operational programs
where there is proven cost-effectiveness, generally
where there are also significant benefits for
non-population objectives;
b. Experimental programs where research indicates close
relationships to fertility reduction but
cost-effectiveness has not yet been demonstrated in
terms of specific steps to be taken (i.e., program
design); and
c. Research and evaluation on the relative impact on
desired family size of the socio-economic determinants
of fertility, and on what policy scope exists for
affecting these determinants.
2. Research, experimentation and
evaluation of ongoing programs should focus on answering the
questions (such as those raised above, relating to female
education) that determine what steps can and should be taken
in other sectors that will in a cost-effective manner speed
up the rate of fertility decline. In addition to the five
areas discussed in Section II. B 1-5 below, the research
should also cover the full range of factors affecting
fertility, such as laws and norms respecting age of
marriage, and financial incentives. Work of this sort should
be undertaken in individual key countries to determine the
motivational factors required there to develop a preference
for small family size. High priority must be given to
testing feasibility and replicability on a wide scale.
3. AID should encourage other
donors in LDC governments to carry out parallel strategies
of research, experimentation, and (cost-effective
well-evaluated) large-scale operations programs on factors
affecting fertility. Work in this area should be
coordinated, and results shared.
4. AID should help develop capacity in a few existing U.S.
and LDC institutions to serve as major centers for research
and policy development in the areas of fertility-affecting
social or economic measures, direct incentives, household
behavior research, and evaluation techniques for
motivational approaches. The centers should provide
technical assistance, serve as a forum for discussion, and
generally provide the "critical mass" of effort and
visibility which has been lacking in this area to date.
Emphasis should be given to maximum involvement of LDC
institutions and individuals.
The following sections discuss
research experimental and operational programs to be undertaken
in the five promising areas mentioned above.
II. B. 1. Providing Minimal Levels
of Education, Especially for Women
Discussion
There is fairly convincing evidence that female education
especially of 4th grade and above correlates strongly with
reduced desired family size, although it is unclear the extent
to which the female education causes reductions in desired
family size or whether it is a faster pace of development which
leads both to increased demand for female education and to
reduction in desired family size. There is also a relatively
widely held theory -- though not statistically validated -- that
improved levels of literacy contribute to reduction in desired
family size both through greater knowledge of family planning
information and increasing motivational factors related to
reductions in family size. Unfortunately, AID's experience with
mass literacy programs over the past 15 years has yielded the
sobering conclusion that such programs generally failed (i.e.
were not cost-effective) unless the population sees practical
benefits to themselves from learning how to read -- e.g., a
requirement for literacy to acquire easier access to information
about new agricultural technologies or to jobs that require
literacy.
Now, however, AID has recently revised its education strategy,
in line with the mandate of its legislation, to place emphasis
on the spread of education to poor people, particularly in rural
areas, and relatively less on higher levels of education. This
approach is focused on use of formal and "non-formal" education
(i.e., organized education outside the schoolroom setting) to
assist in meeting the human resource requirements of the
development process, including such things as rural literacy
programs aimed at agriculture, family planning, or other
development goals.
Recommendations
1. Integrated basic education
(including applied literacy) and family planning programs
should be developed whenever they appear to be effective, of
high priority, and acceptable to the individual country. AID
should continue its emphasis on basic education, for women
as well as men.
2. A major effort should be made in LDCs seeking to reduce
birth rates to assure at least an elementary school
education for virtually all children, girls as well as boys,
as soon as the country can afford it (which would be quite
soon for all but the poorest countries). Simplified,
practical education programs should be developed. These
programs should, where feasible, include specific curricula
to motivate the next generation toward a two-child family
average to assure that level of fertility in two or three
decades. AID should encourage and respond to requests for
assistance in extending basic education and in introducing
family planning into curricula. Expenditures for such
emphasis on increased practical education should come from
general AID funds, not population funds.
II. B. 2. Reducing Infant and Child
Mortality
Discussion:
High infant and child mortality
rates, evident in many developing countries, lead parents to
be concerned about the number of their children who are
likely to survive. Parents may overcompensate for possible
child losses by having additional children. Research to date
clearly indicates not only that high fertility and high
birth rates are closely correlated but that in most
circumstances low net population growth rates can only be
achieved when child mortality is low as well. Policies and
programs which significantly reduce infant and child
mortality below present levels will lead couples to have
fewer children. However, we must recognize that there is a
lag of at least several years before parents (and cultures
and subcultures) become confident that their children are
more likely to survive and to adjust their fertility
behavior accordingly.
Considerable reduction in infant and child mortality is
possible through improvement in nutrition, inoculations
against diseases, and other public health measures if means
can be devised for extending such services to neglected LDC
populations on a low-cost basis. It often makes sense to
combine such activities with family planning services in
integrated delivery systems in order to maximize the use of
scarce LDC financial and health manpowder (sic.) resources
(See Section IV). In addition, providing selected health
care for both mothers and their children can enhance the
acceptability of family planning by showing concern for the
whole condition of the mother and her children and not just
for the single factor of fertility.
The two major cost-effective problems in maternal-child
health care are that clinical health care delivery systems
have not in the past accounted for much of the reduction in
infant mortality and that, as in the U.S., local medical
communities tend to favor relatively expensive quality
health care, even at the cost of leaving large numbers of
people (in the LDC's generally over two-thirds of the
people) virtually uncovered by modern health services.
Although we do not have all the answers on how to develop
inexpensive, integrated delivery systems, we need to proceed
with operational programs to respond to ODC requests if they
are likely to be cost-effective based on experience to date,
and to experiment on a large scale with innovative ways of
tackling the outstanding problems. Evaluation mechanisms for
measuring the impact of various courses of action are an
essential part of this effort in order to provide feedback
for current and future projects and to improve the state of
the art in this field.
Currently, efforts to develop low-cost health and family
planning services for neglected populations in the LDC's are
impeded because of the lack of international commitment and
resources to the health side. For example:
A. The World Bank
could supply low-interest credits to LDCs for the
development of low-cost health-related services to
neglected populations but has not yet made a policy
decision to do so. The Bank has a population and health
program and the program's leaders have been quite
sympathetic with the above objective. The Bank's staff
has prepared a policy paper on this subject for the
Board but prospects for it are not good. Currently, the
paper will be discussed by the Bank Board at its
November 1974 meeting.
Apparently there is some
reticence within the Bank's Board and in parts of the
staff about making a strong initiative in this area. In
part, the Bank argues that there are not proven models
of effective, low-cost health systems in which the Bank
can invest. The Bank also argues that other sectors such
as agriculture, should receive higher priority in the
competition for scarce resources. In addition, arguments
are made in some quarters of the Bank that the Bank
ought to restrict itself to "hard loan projects" and not
get into the "soft" area.
A current reading from the Bank's staff suggests that
unless there is some change in the thinking of the Bank
Board, the Bank's policy will be simply to keep trying
to help in the population and health areas but not to
take any large initiative in the low-cost delivery
system area.
The Bank stance is regrettable because the Bank could
play a very useful role in this area helping to fund
low-cost physical structures and other elements of
low-cost health systems, including rural health clinics
where needed. It could also help in providing low-cost
loans for training, and in seeking and testing new
approaches to reaching those who do not now have access
to health and family planning services. This would not
be at all inconsistent with our and the Bank's frankly
admitting that we do not have all the "answer" or
cost-effective models for low-cost health delivery
systems. Rather they, we and other donors could work
together on experimentally oriented, operational
programs to develop models for the wide variety of
situations faced by LDCs.
Involvement of the Bank in this area would open up new
possibilities for collaboration. Grant funds, whether
from the U.S. or UNFPA, could be used to handle the
parts of the action that require short lead times such
as immediate provision of supplies, certain kinds of
training and rapid deployment of technical assistance.
Simultaneously, for parts of the action that require
longer lead times, such as building clinics, World Bank
loans could be employed. The Bank's lending processes
could be synchronized to bring such building activity to
a readiness condition at the time the training programs
have moved along far enough to permit manning of the
facilities. The emphasis should be on meeting low-cost
rather than high-cost infrastructure requirements.
Obviously, in addition to building, we assume the Bank
could fund other local-cost elements of expansion of
health systems such as longer-term training programs.
AID is currently trying to work out improved
consultation procedures with the Bank staff in the hope
of achieving better collaborative efforts within the
Bank's current commitment of resources in the population
and health areas. With a greater commitment of Bank
resources and improved consultation with AID and UNFPA,
a much greater dent could be made on the overall
problem.
B. The World Health Organization (WHO) and its
counterpart for Latin America, the Pan American Health
Organization (PAHO), currently provide technical
assistance in the development and implementation of
health projects which are in turn financed by
international funding mechanisms such as UNDP and the
International Financial Institutions.
However, funds available for
health actions through these organizations are limited
at present. Higher priority by the international funding
agencies to health actions could expand the
opportunities for useful collaborations among donor
institutions and countries to develop low-cost
integrated health and family planning delivery systems
for LDC populations that do not now have access to such
services.
Recommendations:
The U.S. should encourage heightened international interest in
and commitment of resources to developing delivery mechanisms
for providing integrated health and family planning services to
neglected populations at costs which host countries can support
within a reasonable period of time. Efforts would include:
1. Encouraging the World Bank
and other international funding mechanisms, through the U.S.
representatives on the boards of these organizations, to
take a broader initiative in the development of inexpensive
service delivery mechanisms in countries wishing to expand
such systems.
2. Indicating U.S. willingness (as the U.S. did at the World
Population Conference) to join with other donors and
organizations to encourage and support further action by LDC
governments and other institutions in the low-cost delivery
systems area.
A. As offered at Bucharest,
the U.S. should join donor countries, WHO, UNFPA, UNICEF
and the World Bank to create a consortium to offer
assistance to the more needy developing countries to
establish their own low-cost preventive and curative
public health systems reaching into all areas of their
countries and capable of national support within a
reasonable period. Such systems would include family
planning services as an ordinary part of their overall
services.
B. The WHO should be asked to take the leadership in
such an arrangement and is ready to do so. Apparently at
least half of the potential donor countries and the
EEC's technical assistance program are favorably
inclined. So is the UNFPA and UNICEF. The U.S., through
its representation on the World Bank Board, should
encourage a broader World Bank initiative in this field,
particularly to assist in the development of
inexpensive, basic health service infrastructures in
countries wishing to undertake the development of such
systems.
II. B. 3. Expanding Wage Employment
Opportunities, Especially for Women
Discussion
Employment is the key to access to income, which opens the
way to improved health, education, nutrition, and reduced family
size. Reliable job opportunities enable parents to limit their
family size and invest in the welfare of the children they have.
The status and utilization of women in LDC societies is
particularly important in reducing family size. For women,
employment outside the home offers an alternative to early
marriage and childbearing, and an incentive to have fewer
children after marriage. The woman who must stay home to take
care of her children must forego the income she could earn
outside the home. Research indicates that female wage employment
outside the home is related to fertility reduction. Programs to
increase the women's labor force participation must, however,
take account of the overall demand for labor; this would be a
particular problem in occupations where there is already
widespread unemployment among males. But other occupations where
women have a comparative advantage can be encouraged.
Improving the legal and social status of women gives women a
greater voice in decision-making about their lives, including
family size, and can provide alternative opportunities to
childbearing, thereby reducing the benefits of having children.
The U.S. Delegation to the Bucharest Conference emphasized the
importance of improving the general status of women and of
developing employment opportunities for women outside the home
and off the farm. It was joined by all countries in adopting a
strong statement on this vital issue. See Chapter VI for a
fuller discussion of the conference.
Recommendation:
1. AID should communicate with
and seek opportunities to assist national economic
development programs to increase the role of women in the
development process.
2. AID should review its education/training programs (such
as U.S. participant training, in-country and third-country
training) to see that such activities provide equal access
to women.
3. AID should enlarge pre-vocational and vocational training
to involve women more directly in learning skills which can
enhance their income and status in the community (e.g.
paramedical skills related to provision of family planning
services).
4. AID should encourage the development and placement of LDC
women as decision-makers in development programs,
particularly those programs designed to increase the role of
women as producers of goods and services, and otherwise to
improve women's welfare (e.g. national credit and finance
programs, and national health and family planning programs).
5. AID should encourage, where possible, women's active
participation in the labor movement in order to promote
equal pay for equal work, equal benefits, and equal
employment opportunities.
6. AID should continue to review its programs and projects
for their impact on LDC women, and adjust them as necessary
to foster greater participation of women - particularly
those in the lowest classes - in the development process.
II. B. 4. Developing Alternatives to the
Social Security Role Provided By Children to Aging Parents
Discussion:
In most LDCs the almost total absence of government or other
institutional forms of social security for old people forces
dependence on children for old age survival. The need for such
support appears to be one of the important motivations for
having numerous children. Several proposals have been made, and
a few pilot experiments are being conducted, to test the impact
of financial incentives designed to provide old age support (or,
more tangentially, to increase the earning power of fewer
children by financing education costs parents would otherwise
bear). Proposals have been made for son-insurance (provided to
the parents if they have no more than three children), and for
deferred payments of retirement benefits (again tied to
specified limits on family size), where the payment of the
incentive is delayed.
The intent is not only to tie the
incentive to actual fertility, but to impose the financial cost
on the government or private sector entity only after the
benefits of the avoided births have accrued to the economy and
the financing entity. Schemes of varying administrative
complexity have been developed to take account of management
problems in LDCs. The economic and equity core of these
long-term incentive proposals is simple: the government offers
to return to the contracting couple a portion of the economic
dividend they generate by avoiding births, as a direct trade-off
for the personal financial benefits they forego by having fewer
children.
Further research and experimentation in this area needs to take
into account the impact of growing urbanization in LDCs on
traditional rural values and outlooks such as the desire for
children as old-age insurance.
Recommendation:
AID should take a positive stance with respect to exploration of
social security type incentives as described above. AID should
encourage governments to consider such measures, and should
provide financial and technical assistance where appropriate.
The recommendation made earlier to establish an "intermediary"
institutional capacity which could provide LDC governments with
substantial assistance in this area, among several areas on the
"demand" side of the problem, would add considerably to AID's
ability to carry out this recommendation.
II. B. 5. Pursuing Development
Strategies that Skew Income Growth Toward the Poor, Especially
Rural Development Focusing on Rural Poverty
Income distribution and rural development: The higher a family's
income, the fewer children it will probably have, except at the
very top of the income scale. Similarly, the more evenly
distributed the income in a society, the lower the overall
fertility rate seems to be since better income distribution
means that the poor, who have the highest fertility, have higher
income. Thus a development strategy which emphasizes the rural
poor, who are the largest and poorest group in most LDCs would
be providing income increases to those with the highest
fertility levels. No LDC is likely to achieve population
stability unless the rural poor participate in income increases
and fertility declines.
Agriculture and rural development is already, along with
population, the U.S. Government's highest priority in provision
of assistance to LDCs. For FY 1975, about 60% of the $1.13
billion AID requested in the five functional areas of the
foreign assistance legislation is in agriculture and rural
development. The $255 million increase in the FY 1975 level
authorized in the two year FY 1974 authorization bill is
virtually all for agriculture and rural development.
AID's primary goal in agriculture and rural development is
concentration in food output and increases in the rural quality
of life; the major strategy element is concentration on
increasing the output of small farmers, through assistance in
provision of improved technologies, agricultural inputs,
institutional supports, etc.
This strategy addresses three U.S. interests: First, it
increases agricultural output in the LDCs, and speeds up the
average pace of their development, which, as has been noted,
leads to increased acceptance of family planning. Second, the
emphasis on small farmers and other elements of the rural poor
spreads the benefits of development as broadly as is feasible
among lower income groups. As noted above spreading the benefits
of development to the poor, who tend to have the highest
fertility rates, is an important step in getting them to reduce
their family size. In addition, the concentration on small
farmer production (vs., for example, highly mechanized,
large-scale agriculture) can increase on and off farm rural job
opportunities and decrease the flow to the cities. While
fertility levels in rural areas are higher than in the cities,
continued rapid migration into the cities at levels greater than
the cities' job markets or services can sustain adds an
important destabilizing element to development efforts and goals
of many countries. Indeed, urban areas in some LDCs are already
the scene of urban unrest and high crime rates.
Recommendation
AID should continue its efforts to focus not just on agriculture
and rural development but specifically on small farmers and on
labor-intensive means of stimulating agricultural output and on
other aspects of improving the quality of life of the rural
poor, so that agriculture and rural development assistance, in
addition to its importance for increased food production and
other purposes, can have maximum impact on reducing population
growth.
II. B. 6. Concentration on
Education and Indoctrination of The Rising Generation of
Children Regarding the Desirability of Smaller Family Size
Discussion:
Present efforts at reducing birth rates in LDCs, including
AID and UNFPA assistance, are directed largely at adults now in
their reproductive years. Only nominal attention is given to
population education or sex education in schools and in most
countries none is given in the very early grades which are the
only attainment of 2/3-3/4 of the children. It should be
obvious, however, that efforts at birth control directed toward
adults will with even maximum success result in acceptance of
contraception for the reduction of births only to the level of
the desired family size -- which knowledge, attitude and
practice studies in many countries indicate is an average of
four or more children.
The great necessity is to convince the masses of the population
that it is to their individual and national interest to have, on
the average, only three and then only two children. There is
little likelihood that this result can be accomplished very
widely against the background of the cultural heritage of
today's adults, even the young adults, among the masses in most
LDCs. Without diminishing in any way the effort to reach these
adults, the obvious increased focus of attention should be to
change the attitudes of the next generation, those who are now
in elementary school or younger. If this could be done, it would
indeed be possible to attain a level of fertility approaching
replacement in 20 years and actually reaching it in 30.
Because a large percentage of children from high-fertility,
low-income groups do not attend school, it will be necessary to
develop means to reach them for this and other educational
purposes through informal educational programs. As the
discussion earlier of the determinants of family size
(fertility) pointed out, it is also important to make
significant progress in other areas, such as better health care
and improvements in income distribution, before desired family
size can be expected to fall sharply. If it makes economic sense
for poor parents to have large families twenty years from now,
there is no evidence as to whether population education or
indoctrination will have sufficient impact alone to dissuade
them.
Recommendation
1. That U.S. agencies stress the
importance of education of the next generation of parents,
starting in elementary schools, toward a two-child family ideal.
2. That AID stimulate specific efforts to develop means of
educating children of elementary school age to the ideal of the
two-child family and that UNESCO be asked to take the lead
through formal and informal education. General Recommendation
for UN Agencies
As to each of the above six categories State and AID should make
specific efforts to have the relevant UN agency, WHO, ILO, FAO,
UNESCO, UNICEF, and the UNFPA take its proper role of leadership
in the UN family with increased program effort, citing the World
Population Plan of Action.
II. C. Food for Peace Program and
Population
Discussion:
One of the most fundamental aspects of the impact of
population growth on the political and economic well-being of
the globe is its relationship to food. Here the problem of the
interrelationship of population, national resources,
environment, productivity and political and economic stability
come together when shortages of this basic human need occur.
USDA projections indicate that the quantity of grain imports
needed by the LDCs in the 1980s will grow significantly, both in
overall and per capita terms. In addition, these countries will
face year-to-year fluctuations in production due to the
influence of weather and other factors.
This is not to say that the LDCs need face starvation in the
next two decades, for the same projections indicate an even
greater increase in production of grains in the developed
nations. It should be pointed out, however, that these
projections assume that such major problems as the vast increase
in the need for fresh water, the ecological effects of the vast
increase in the application of fertilizer, pesticides, and
irrigation, and the apparent adverse trend in the global
climate, are solved. At present, there are no solutions to these
problems in sight.
The major challenge will be to increase food production in the
LDCs themselves and to liberalize the system in which grain is
transferred commercially from producer to consumer countries. We
also see food aid as an important way of meeting part of the
chronic shortfall and emergency needs caused by year-to-year
variation at least through the end of this decade. Many outside
experts predict just such difficulties even if major efforts are
undertaken to expand world agricultural output, especially in
the LDCs themselves but also in the U.S. and in other major feed
grain producers. In the longer run, LDCs must both decrease
population growth and increase agricultural production
significantly. At some point the "excess capacity" of the food
exporting countries will run out. Some countries have already
moved from a net food exporter to a net importer of food.
There are major interagency studies now progressing in the food
area and this report cannot go deeply into this field. It can
only point to serious problems as they relate to population and
suggest minimum requirements and goals in the food area. In
particular, we believe that population growth may have very
serious negative consequences on food production in the LDCs
including over-expectations of the capacity of the land to
produce, downgrading the ecological economics of marginal areas,
and overharvesting the seas. All of these conditions may affect
the viability of the world's economy and thereby its prospects
for peace and security.
Recommendations:
Since NSC/CIEP studies are already underway we refer the reader
to them. However the following, we believe, are minimum
requirements for any strategy which wishes to avoid instability
and conflict brought on by population growth and food scarcity:
(1) High priority for U.S.
bilateral and multilateral LDC Agricultural Assistance;
including efforts by the LDCs to improve food production and
distribution with necessary institutional adjustments and
economic policies to stimulate efficient production. This
must include a significant increase in financial and
technical aid to promote more efficient production and
distribution in the LDCs.
(2) Development of national food stocks15 (including those
needed for emergency relief) within an internationally
agreed framework sufficient to provide an adequate level of
world food security;
(3) Expansion of production of the input elements of food
production (i.e., fertilizer, availability of water and high
yield seed stocks) and increased incentives for expanded
agricultural productivity. In this context a reduction in
the real cost of energy (especially fuel) either through
expansion in availability through new sources or decline in
the relative price of oil or both would be of great
importance;
(4) Significant expansion of U.S. and other producer country
food crops within the context of a liberalized and efficient
world trade system that will assure food availability to the
LDCs in case of severe shortage. New international trade
arrangements for agricultural products, open enough to
permit maximum production by efficient producers and
flexible enough to dampen wide price fluctuations in years
when weather conditions result in either significant
shortfalls or surpluses. We believe this objective can be
achieved by trade liberalization and an internationally
coordinated food reserve program without resorting to
price-oriented agreements, which have undesirable effects on
both production and distribution;
(5) The maintenance of an adequate food aid program with a
clearer focus on its use as a means to make up real food
deficits, pending the development of their own food
resources, in countries unable to feed themselves rather
than as primarily an economic development or foreign policy
instrument; and
(6) A strengthened research effort, including long term, to
develop new seed and farming technologies, primarily to
increase yields but also to permit more extensive
cultivation techniques, particularly in LDCs.
Back to Contents
III.
International Organizations and other Multilateral Population
Programs
A. UN Organization and Specialized
Agencies
Discussion
In the mid-sixties the UN member countries slowly began to
agree on a greater involvement of the United Nations in
population matters. In 1967 the Secretary-General created a
Trust Fund to finance work in the population field. In 1969 the
Fund was renamed the United Nations Fund for Population
Activities (UNFPA) and placed under the overall supervision of
the United Nations Development Program. During this period,
also, the mandates of the Specialized Agencies were modified to
permit greater involvement by these agencies in population
activities.
UNFPA's role was clarified by an ECOSOC resolution in 1973: (a)
to build up the knowledge and capacity to respond to the needs
in the population and family planning fields; (b) to promote
awareness in both developed and developing countries of the
social, economic, and environmental implications of population
problems; (c) to extend assistance to developing countries; and
(d) to promote population programs and to coordinate projects
supported by the UNFPA.
Most of the projects financed by UNFPA are implemented with the
assistance of organizations of the Untied Nations system,
including the regional Economic Commission, United Nations
Children's Fund (UNICEF), International Labour Organization (ILO),
Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), United Nations
Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), the
World Health Organization (WHO). Collaborative arrangements have
been made with the International Development Association (IDA),
an affiliate of the World Bank, and with the World Food
Programme.
Increasingly the UNFPA is moving toward comprehensive country
programs negotiated directly with governments. This permits the
governments to select the implementing (executing) agency which
may be a member of the UN system or a non-government
organization or company. With the development of the country
program approach it is planned to level off UNFPA funding to the
specialized agencies.
UNFPA has received $122 million in voluntary contributions from
65 governments, of which $42 million was raised in 1973. The
Work Plan of UNFPA for 1974-77 sets a $280 million goal for
fund-raising, as follows:
-
1974 - $54 million
-
1975 - $64 million
-
1976 - $76 million
-
1977 - $86 million
Through 1971 the U.S. had
contributed approximately half of all the funds contributed to
UNFPA. In 1972 we reduced our matching contribution to 48
percent of other donations, and for 1973 we further reduced our
contribution to 45%. In 1973 requests for UNFPA assistance had
begun to exceed available resources. This trend has accelerated
and demand for UNFPA resources is now strongly outrunning
supply. Documented need for UNFPA assistance during the years
1974-77 is $350 million, but because the UNFPA could anticipate
that only $280 million will be available it has been necessary
to phase the balance to at least 1978.
Recommendations
The U.S. should continue its support of multilateral efforts in
the population field by:
a) increasing, subject to
congressional appropriation action, the absolute
contribution to the UNFPA in light of
1) mounting demands for
UNFPA Assistance,
2) improving UNFPA capacity
to administer projects,
3) the extent to which UNFPA
funding aims at U.S. objectives and will substitute for
U.S. funding,
4) the prospect that without
increased U.S. contributions the UNFPA will be unable to
raise sufficient funds for its budget in 1975 and
beyond;
b) initiating or participating
in an effort to increase the resources from other donors
made available to international agencies that can work
effectively in the population area as both to increase
overall population efforts and, in the UNFPA, to further
reduce the U.S. percentage share of total contributions; and
c) supporting the coordinating role which UNFPA plays among
donor and recipient countries, and among UN and other
organizations in the population field, including the World
Bank.
B. Encouraging Private Organizations
Discussion:
The cooperation of private organizations and groups on a
national, regional and world-wide level is essential to the
success of a comprehensive population strategy. These groups
provide important intellectual contributions and policy support,
as well as the delivery of family planning and health services
and information. In some countries, the private and voluntary
organizations are the only means of providing family planning
services and materials.
Recommendations:
AID should continue to provide support to those private U.S. and
international organizations whose work contributes to reducing
rapid population growth, and to develop with them, where
appropriate, geographic and functional divisions of labor in
population assistance.
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IV. Provision
and Development of Family Planning Services, Information and
Technology
In addition to creating the climate for fertility decline, as
described in a previous section, it is essential to provide safe and
effective techniques for controlling fertility.
There are two main elements in this task: (a) improving the
effectiveness of the existing means of fertility control and
developing new ones; and (b) developing low-cost systems for the
delivery of family planning technologies, information and related
services to the 85% of LDC populations not now reached.
Legislation and policies affecting what the U.S. Government does
relative to abortion in the above areas is discussed at the end of
this section.
IV. A. Research to Improve Fertility
Control Technology
Discussion
The effort to reduce population growth requires a variety of
birth control methods which are safe, effective, inexpensive and
attractive to both men and women. The developing countries in
particular need methods which do not require physicians and
which are suitable for use in primitive, remote rural areas or
urban slums by people with relatively low motivation.
Experiences in family planning have clearly demonstrated the
crucial impact of improved technology on fertility control.
None of the currently available methods of fertility control is
completely effective and free of adverse reactions and
objectionable characteristics. The ideal of a contraceptive,
perfect in all these respects, may never be realized. A great
deal of effort and money will be necessary to improve fertility
control methods. The research to achieve this aim can be divided
into two categories:
1. Short-term approaches: These
include applied and developmental work which is required to
perfect further and evaluate the safety and role of methods
demonstrated to be effective in family planning programs in
the developing countries.
Other work is directed toward new methods based on well
established knowledge about the physiology of reproduction.
Although short term pay-offs are possible, successful
development of some methods may take 5 years and up to $15
million for a single method.
2. Long-term approaches: The limited state of fundamental
knowledge of many reproductive processes requires that a
strong research effort of a more basic nature be maintained
to elucidate these processes and provide leads for
contraceptive development research. For example, new
knowledge of male reproductive processes is needed before
research to develop a male "pill" can come to fruition.
Costs and duration of the required research are high and
difficult to quantify.
With expenditures of about $30
million annually, a broad program of basic and applied
bio-medical research on human reproduction and contraceptive
development is carried out by the Center for Population Research
of the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development.
The Agency for International Development annually funds about $5
million of principally applied research on new means of
fertility control suitable for use in developing countries.
Smaller sums are spent by other agencies of the U.S. Government.
Coordination of the federal research effort is facilitated by
the activities of the Interagency Committee on Population
Research. This committee prepares an annual listing and analyses
of all government supported population research programs. The
listing is published in the Inventory of Federal Population
Research.
A variety of studies have been undertaken by non-governmental
experts including the U.S. Commission on Population Growth and
the American Future. Most of these studies indicate that the
United States effort in population research is insufficient.
Opinions differ on how much more can be spent wisely and
effectively but an additional $25-50 million annually for
bio-medical research constitutes a conservative estimate.
Recommendations:
A stepwise increase over the next 3 years to a total of about
$100 million annually for fertility and contraceptive research
is recommended. This is an increase of $60 million over the
current $40 million expended annually by the major Federal
Agencies for bio-medical research. Of this increase $40 million
would be spent on short-term, goal directed research. The
current expenditure of $20 million in long-term approaches
consisting largely of basic bio-medical research would be
doubled.
This increased effort would require
significantly increased staffing of the federal agencies which
support this work. Areas recommended for further research are:
1. Short-term approaches: These
approaches include improvement and field testing of existing
technology and development of new technology. It is expected
that some of these approaches would be ready for use within
five years. Specific short term approaches worthy of
increased effort are as follows:
a. Oral contraceptives have
become popular and widely used; yet the optimal steroid
hormone combinations and doses for LDC populations need
further definition. Field studies in several settings
are required. Approx. Increased Cost: $3 million
annually.
b. Intra-uterine devices of differing size, shape, and
bioactivity should be developed and tested to determine
the optimum levels of effectiveness, safety, and
acceptability. Approx. Increased Cost: $3 million
annually.
c. Improved methods for ovulation prediction will be
important to those couples who wish to practice rhythm
with more assurance of effectiveness than they now have.
Approx. Increased Cost: $3 million annually.
d. Sterilization of men and women has received
wide-spread acceptance in several areas when a simple,
quick, and safe procedure is readily available. Female
sterilization has been improved by technical advances
with laparoscopes, culdoscopes, and greatly simplifies
abdominal surgical techniques. Further improvements by
the use of tubal clips, trans-cervical approaches, and
simpler techniques can be developed. For men several
current techniques hold promise but require more
refinement and evaluation. Approx. Increased Cost $6
million annually.
e. Injectable contraceptives for women which are
effective for three months or more and are administered
by para-professionals undoubtedly will be a significant
improvement. Currently available methods of this type
are limited by their side effects and potential hazards.
There are reasons to believe that these problems can be
overcome with additional research. Approx. Increased
Cost: $5 million annually.
f. Leuteolytic and anti-progesterone approaches to
fertility control including use of prostaglandins are
theoretically attractive but considerable work remains
to be done. Approx. Increased Cost: $7 million annually.
g. Non-Clinical Methods. Additional research on
non-clinical methods including foams, creams, and
condoms is needed. These methods can be used without
medical supervision. Approx. Increased Cost; $5 million
annually.
h. Field studies. Clinical trials of new methods in use
settings are essential to test their worth in developing
countries and to select the best of several possible
methods in a given setting. Approx. Increased Cost: $8
million annually.
2. Long-term approaches:
Increased research toward better understanding of human
reproductive physiology will lead to better methods of
fertility control for use in five to fifteen years. A great
deal has yet to be learned about basic aspects of male and
female fertility and how regulation can be effected. For
example, an effective and safe male contraceptive is needed,
in particular an injection which will be effective for
specified periods of time.
Fundamental research must be
done but there are reasons to believe that the development
of an injectable male contraceptive is feasible. Another
method which should be developed is an injection which will
assure a woman of regular periods. The drug would be given
by para-professionals once a month or as needed to
regularize the menstrual cycle. Recent scientific advances
indicate that this method can be developed. Approx.
Increased Cost: $20 million annually.
IV. B. Development of Low-cost
Delivery Systems
Discussion
Exclusive of China, only 10-15% of LDC populations are
currently effectively reached by family planning activities. If
efforts to reduce rapid population growth are to be successful
it is essential that the neglected 85-90% of LDC populations
have access to convenient, reliable family planning services.
Moreover, these people -- largely in rural but also in urban
areas -- not only tend to have the highest fertility, they
simultaneously suffer the poorest health, the worst nutritional
levels, and the highest infant mortality rates.
Family planning services in LDCs are currently provided by the
following means:
1. Government-run clinics or
centers which offer family planning services alone;
2. Government-run clinics or centers which offer family
planning as part of a broader based health service;
3. Government-run programs that emphasize door to door
contact by family planning workers who deliver
contraceptives to those desiring them and/or make referrals
to clinics;
4. Clinics or centers run by private organizations (e.g.,
family planning associations);
5. Commercial channels which in many countries sell condoms,
oral contraceptives, and sometimes spermicidal foam over the
counter;
6. Private physicians.
Two of these means in particular
hold promise for allowing significant expansion of services to
the neglected poor:
1. Integrated Delivery
Systems.
This approach involves the
provision of family planning in conjunction with health
and/or nutrition services, primarily through government-run
programs. There are simple logistical reasons which argue
for providing these services on an integrated basis. Very
few of the LDCs have the resources, both in financial and
manpower terms, to enable them to deploy individual types of
services to the neglected 85% of their populations. By
combining a variety of services in one delivery mechanism
they can attain maximum impact with the scarce resources
available.
In addition, the provision of family planning in the context
of broader health services can help make family planning
more acceptable to LDC leaders and individuals who, for a
variety of reasons (some ideological, some simply
humanitarian) object to family planning. Family planning in
the health context shows a concern for the well-being of the
family as a whole and not just for a couple's reproductive
function.
Finally, providing integrated family planning and health
services on a broad basis would help the U.S. contend with
the ideological charge that the U.S. is more interested in
curbing the numbers of LDC people than it is in their future
and well-being. While it can be argued, and argued
effectively, that limitation of numbers may well be one of
the most critical factors in enhancing development potential
and improving the chances for well-being, we should
recognize that those who argue along ideological lines have
made a great deal of the fact that the U.S. contribution to
development programs and health programs has steadily
shrunk, whereas funding for population programs has steadily
increased. While many explanations may be brought forward to
explain these trends, the fact is that they have been an
ideological liability to the U.S. in its crucial developing
relationships with the LDCs. A.I.D. currently spends about
$35 million annually in bilateral programs on the provision
of family planning services through integrated delivery
systems.
Any action to expand such
systems must aim at the deployment of truly low-cost
services. Health-related services which involve costly
physical structures, high skill requirements, and expensive
supply methods will not produce the desired deployment in
any reasonable time. The basic test of low-cost methods will
be whether the LDC governments concerned can assume
responsibility for the financial, administrative, manpower
and other elements of these service extensions. Utilizing
existing indigenous structures and personnel (including
traditional medical practitioners who in some countries have
shown a strong interest in family planning) and service
methods that involve simply-trained personnel, can help keep
costs within LDC resource capabilities.
2. Commercial Channels.
In an increasing number of LDCs,
contraceptives (such as condoms, foam and the Pill) are
being made available without prescription requirements
through commercial channels such as drugstores.16 The
commercial approach offers a practical, low-cost means of
providing family planning services, since it utilizes an
existing distribution system and does not involve financing
the further expansion of public clinical delivery
facilities. Both A.I.D. and private organizations like the
IPPF are currently testing commercial distribution schemes
in various LDCs to obtain further information on the
feasibility, costs, and degree of family planning acceptance
achieved through this approach. A.I.D. is currently spending
about $2 million annually in this area.
In order to stimulate LDC provision
of adequate family planning services, whether alone or in
conjunction with health services, A.I.D. has subsidized
contraceptive purchases for a number of years. In FY 1973
requests from A.I.D. bilateral and grantee programs for
contraceptive supplies -- in particular for oral contraceptives
and condoms -- increased markedly, and have continued to
accelerate in FY 1974. Additional rapid expansion in demand is
expected over the next several years as the accumulated
population/family planning efforts of the past decade gain
momentum.
While it is useful to subsidize provision of contraceptives in
the short term in order to expand and stimulate LDC family
planning programs, in the long term it will not be possible to
fully fund demands for commodities, as well as other necessary
family planning actions, within A.I.D. and other donor budgets.
These costs must ultimately be borne by LDC governments and/or
individual consumers. Therefore, A.I.D. will increasingly focus
on developing contraceptive production and procurement
capacities by the LDCs themselves. A.I.D. must, however, be
prepared to continue supplying large quantities of
contraceptives over the next several years to avoid a
detrimental hiatus in program supply lines while efforts are
made to expand LDC production and procurement actions. A.I.D.
should also encourage other donors and multilateral
organizations to assume a greater share of the effort, in regard
both to the short-term actions to subsidize contraceptive
supplies and the longer-term actions to develop LDC capacities
for commodity production and procurement.
Recommendations:
1. A.I.D. should aim its
population assistance program to help achieve adequate
coverage of couples having the highest fertility who do not
now have access to family planning services.
2. The service delivery approaches which seem to hold
greatest promise of reaching these people should be
vigorously pursued. For example:
a. The U.S. should indicate
its willingness to join with other donors and
organizations to encourage further action by LDC
governments and other institutions to provide low-cost
family planning and health services to groups in their
populations who are not now reached by such services. In
accordance with Title X of the AID Legislation and
current policy, A.I.D. should be prepared to provide
substantial assistance in this area in response to sound
requests.
b. The services provided must take account of the
capacities of the LDC governments or institutions to
absorb full responsibility, over reasonable timeframes,
for financing and managing the level of services
involved.
c. A.I.D. and other donor assistance efforts should
utilize to the extent possible indigenous structures and
personnel in delivering services, and should aim at the
rapid development of local (community) action and
sustaining capabilities.
d. A.I.D. should continue to support experimentation
with commercial distribution of contraceptives and
application of useful findings in order to further
explore the feasibility and replicability of this
approach. Efforts in this area by other donors and
organizations should be encouraged. Approx. U.S. Cost:
$5-10 million annually.
3. In conjunction with other
donors and organizations, A.I.D. should actively encourage
the development of LDC capabilities for production and
procurement of needed family planning contraceptives. 17
IV. C. Utilization of Mass Media
and Satellite Communications Systems for Family Planning
1. Utilization of Mass Media for Dissemination of Family
Planning Services and Information
The potential of education and its various media is
primarily a function of (a) target populations where
socio-economic conditions would permit reasonable people to
change their behavior with the receipt of information about
family planning and (b) the adequate development of the
substantive motivating context of the message. While dramatic
limitations in the availability of any family planning related
message are most severe in rural areas of developing countries,
even more serious gaps exist in the understanding of the
implicit incentives in the system for large families and the
potential of the informational message to alter those
conditions.
Nevertheless, progress in the technology for mass media
communications has led to the suggestion that the priority need
might lie in the utilization of this technology, particularly
with large and illiterate rural populations. While there are
on-going efforts they have not yet reached their full potential.
Nor have the principal U.S. agencies concerned yet integrated or
given sufficient priority to family planning information and
population programs generally.
Yet A.I.D.'s work suggests that radio, posters, printed
material, and various types of personal contacts by
health/family planning workers tend to be more cost-effective
than television except in those areas (generally urban) where a
TV system is already in place which reaches more than just the
middle and upper classes. There is great scope for use of mass
media, particularly in the initial stages of making people aware
of the benefits of family planning and of services available; in
this way mass media can effectively complement necessary
interpersonal communications.
In almost every country of the world there are channels of
communication (media) available, such, as print media, radio,
posters, and personal contacts, which already reach the vast
majority of the population. For example, studies in India - with
only 30% literacy, show that most of the population is aware of
the government's family planning program. If response is low it
is not because of lack of media to transmit information.
A.I.D. believes that the best bet in media strategy is to
encourage intensive use of media already available, or available
at relatively low cost. For example, radio is a medium which in
some countries already reaches a sizeable percentage of the
rural population; a recent A.I.D. financed study by Stanford
indicates that radio is as effective as television, costs
one-fifth as much, and offers more opportunities for programming
for local needs and for local feedback.
Recommendations
USAID and USIA should encourage other population donors and
organizations to develop comprehensive information and
educational programs dealing with population and family planning
consistent with the geographic and functional population
emphasis discussed in other sections. Such programs should make
use of the results of AID's extensive experience in this field
and should include consideration of social, cultural and
economic factors in population control as well as strictly
technical and educational ones.
2. Use of U.S. broadcast
satellites for dissemination of family planning and health
information to key LDC countries
Discussion:
One key factor in the effective use of existing contraceptive
techniques has been the problem of education. In particular,
this problem is most severe in rural areas of the developing
countries. There is need to develop a cost-effective
communications system designed for rural areas which, together
with local direct governmental efforts, can provide
comprehensive health information and in particular, family
planning guidance. One new supporting technology which has been
under development is the broadcast satellite. NASA and Fairchild
have now developed an ATS (Applied Technology Satellite), now in
orbit, which has the capability of beaming educational
television programs to isolated areas via small inexpensive
community receivers.
NASA's sixth Applications Technology Satellite was launched into
geosynchronous orbit over the Galapagos Islands on May 30, 1974.
It will be utilized for a year in that position to deliver
health and educational services to millions of Americans in
remote regions of the Rocky Mountain States, Alaska and
Appalachia. During this period it will be made available for a
short time to Brazil in order to demonstrate how such a
broadcast satellite may be used to provide signals to 500
schools in their existing educational television network 1400
miles northeast of Rio de Janeiro in Rio Grande do Norte.
In mid-1975, ATS-6 will be moved to a point over the Indian
Ocean to begin beaming educational television to India. India is
now developing its broadcast program materials. Signals picked
up from one of two Indian ground transmitters will be
rebroadcast to individual stations in 2500 villages and to
ground relay installations serving networks comprising 3000
more. This operation over India will last one year, after which
time India hopes to have its own broadcast satellite in
preparation.
Eventually it will be possible to broadcast directly to
individual TV sets in remote rural areas. Such a "direct
broadcast satellite," which is still under development, could
one day go directly into individual TV receivers. At present,
broadcast satellite signals go to ground receiving stations and
are relayed to individual television sets on a local or regional
basis. The latter can be used in towns, villages and schools.
The hope is that these new technologies will provide a
substantial input in family planning programs, where the primary
constraint lies in informational services. The fact, however, is
that information and education does not appear to be the primary
constraint in the development of effective family planning
programs. AID itself has learned from costly intensive inputs
that a supply oriented approach to family planning is not and
cannot be fully effective until the demand side - incentives and
motivations - are both understood and accounted for.
Leaving this vast problem aside, AID has much relevant
experience in the numerous problems encountered in the use of
modern communications media for mass rural education. First,
there is widespread LDC sensitivity to satellite broadcast,
expressed most vigorously in the Outer Space Committee of the
UN. Many countries don't want broadcasts of neighboring
countries over their own territory and fear unwanted propaganda
and subversion by hostile broadcasters. NASA experience suggests
that the U.S. #notemust tread very softly when discussing
assistance in program content. International restrictions may be
placed on the types of proposed broadcasts and it remains
technically difficult to restrict broadcast area coverage to
national boundaries. To the extent programs are developed
jointly and are appreciated and wanted by receiving countries,
some relaxation in their position might occur.
Agreement is nearly universal among practitioners of educational
technology that the technology is years ahead of software or
content development. Thus cost per person reached tend to be
very high. In addition, given the current technology, audiences
are limited to those who are willing to walk to the village TV
set and listen to public service messages and studies show
declining audiences over time with large audiences primarily for
popular entertainment. In addition, keeping village receivers in
repair is a difficult problem. The high cost of program
development remains a serious constraint, particularly since
there is so little experience in validifying program content for
wide general audiences.
With these factors it is clear that one needs to proceed slowly
in utilization of this technology for the LDCs in the population
field.
Recommendations:
1. The work of existing networks
on population, education, ITV, and broadcast satellites
should be brought together to better consolidate relative
priorities for research, experimentation and programming in
family planning. Wider distribution of the broad AID
experience in these areas would probably be justified. This
is particularly true since specific studies have already
been done on the experimental ATS-6 programs in the U.S.,
Brazil, and India and each clearly documents the very
experimental character and high costs of the effort. Thus at
this point it is clearly inconsistent with U.S. or LDC
population goals to allocate large additional sums for a
technology which is experimental.
2. Limited donor and recipient family planning funds
available for education/motivation must be allocated on a
cost-effectiveness basis. Satellite TV may have
opportunities for cost-effectiveness primarily where the
decision has already been taken -- on other than family
planning grounds -- to undertake very large-scale rural TV
systems. Where applicable in such countries satellite
technology should be used when cost-effective. Research
should give special attention to costs and efficiency
relative to alternative media.
3. Where the need for education is established and an
effective format has been developed, we recommend more
effective exploitation of existing and conventional media:
radio, printed material, posters, etc., as discussed under
part I above.
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V. Action to Develop
World-Wide Political and Popular Commitment to Population Stability
Discussion:
A far larger, high-level effort is needed to develop a greater
commitment of leaders of both developed and developing countries to
undertake efforts, commensurate with the need, to bring population
growth under control.
In the United States, we do not yet have a domestic population
policy despite widespread recognition that we should -- supported by
the recommendations of the remarkable Report of the Commission on
Population Growth and the American Future.
Although world population growth is widely recognized within the
Government as a current danger of the highest magnitude calling for
urgent measures, it does not rank high on the agendas of
conversations with leaders of other nations.
Nevertheless, the United States Government and private organizations
give more attention to the subject than any donor countries except,
perhaps, Sweden, Norway and Denmark. France makes no meaningful
contribution either financially or verbally. The USSR no longer
opposes efforts of U.S. agencies but gives no support.
In the LDCs, although 31 countries, including China, have national
population growth control programs and 16 more include family
planning in their national health services -- at least in some
degree -- the commitment by the leadership in some of these
countries is neither high nor wide. These programs will have only
modest success until there is much stronger and wider acceptance of
their real importance by leadership groups. Such acceptance and
support will be essential to assure that the population information,
education and service programs have vital moral backing,
administrative capacity, technical skills and government financing.
Recommendations:
1. Executive Branch
a. The President and the
Secretary of State should make a point of discussing our
national concern about world population growth in meetings
with national leaders where it would be relevant.
b. The Executive Branch should give special attention to
briefing the Congress on population matters to stimulate
support and leadership which the Congress has exercised in
the past. A program for this purpose should be developed by
S/PM with H and AID.
2. World Population Conference
a. In addition to the specific
recommendations for action listed in the preceding sections,
U.S. agencies should use the prestige of the World
Population Plan of Action to advance all of the relevant
action recommendations made by it in order to generate more
effective programs for population growth limitation. AID
should coordinate closely with the UNFPA in trying to expand
resources for population assistance programs, especially
from non-OECD, non-traditional donors.
The U.S. should continue to play a leading role in ECOSOC
and General Assembly discussions and review of the WPPA.
3. Department of State
a. The State Department should
urge the establishment at U.N. headquarters of a high level
seminar for LDC cabinet and high level officials and
non-governmental leaders of comparable responsibility for
indoctrination in population matters. They should have the
opportunity in this seminar to meet the senior officials of
U.N. agencies and leading population experts from a variety
of countries.
b. The State Department should also encourage organization
of a UNFPA policy staff to consult with leaders in
population programs of developing countries and other
experts in population matters to evaluate programs and
consider actions needed to improve them.
c. A senior officer, preferably with ambassadorial
experience, should be assigned in each regional bureau
dealing with LDCs or in State's Population Office to give
full-time attention to the development of commitment by LDC
leaders to population growth reduction.
d. A senior officer should be assigned to the Bureau of
International Organization Affairs to follow and press
action by the Specialized Agencies of the U.N. in population
matters in developing countries.
e. Part of the present temporary staffing of S/PM for the
purposes of the World Population Year and the World
Population Conference should be continued on a permanent
basis to take advantage of momentum gained by the Year and
Conference.
4. Alternate View on 3.c.
c. The Department should expand
its efforts to help Ambassadorial and other high-ranking
U.S.G. personnel understand the consequences of rapid
population growth and the remedial measures possible.
d. The Department would also give increased attention to
developing a commitment to population growth reduction on
the part of LDC leaders.
e. Adequate manpower should be provided in S/PM and other
parts of the Department as appropriate to implement these
expanded efforts. 4. A.I.D. should expand its programs to
increase the understanding of LDC leaders regarding the
consequences of rapid population growth and their commitment
to undertaking remedial actions. This should include
necessary actions for collecting and analyzing adequate and
reliable demographic data to be used in promoting awareness
of the problem and in formulating appropriate policies and
programs.
5. USIA.
As a major part of U.S.
information policy, the improving but still limited programs
of USIA to convey information on population matters should
be strengthened to a level commensurate with the importance
of the subject.
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