Paul Ehrlich is the modern version of |Thomas Malthus| — the most visible
and persistent predictor of mass famine and economic catastrophe. Unlike Malthus,
though, Ehrlich doesn’t seem to learn from his mistakes; when one of his
predictions of disaster fails to come true, Ehrlich simply moves on and makes
other predictions of disaster, constantly pushing back the timetable for massive
world famine, perhaps in the desperate hope that if he keeps predicting the
same thing, eventually pure chance will fulfill the conditions he requires.
Ehrlich penetrated the American consciousness with his 1968 book, The Population
Bomb. Given the economic stagflation that struck the world in the 1970s,
books with pessimistic outlooks claiming humanity had enormous problems to solve
were to be expected.
Ehrlich went way beyond this and instead predicted famine and disaster on a
scale unprecedented in world history. In the prologue to The Population Bomb
he wrote, “The battle to feed all of humanity is over. In the 1970s and
1980s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death in spite of any crash
programs embarked upon now. At this late date nothing can prevent a substantial
increase in the world death rate…” (1)
Not only was the world headed for catastrophe, but there was little that could
be done to avoid it. Some parts of the world might see some minor and temporary
recovery, but “a minimum of ten million people, most of them children,
will starve to death during each year of the 1970s. But this is a mere handful
compared to the numbers that will be starving before the end of the century”
(emphasis in the original). (2)
In fact the last quarter of the 20th century has been amazing for the reduction
in famine. If current trends persist, by 2001 only about 2 million people will
have died from famine-related causes. Many of those died in Africa’s various
famines where governments such as Ethiopia used food as a weapon against people
— the food was there, but the political will to feed the starving was missing.
(3)
Compare the end of the 20th century with the end of the 19th century. Twenty
to twenty-five million people died of famine related causes from 1875 to 1901,
in a world whose population was only one-half to one-third as large. If the
world had remained at 19th century levels in comparable food production, Ehrlich’s
prediction would have come true. Unfortunately for Ehrlich (but not for the
world) humanity learned a little about agriculture and other resources in the
intervening 100 years.
But Ehrlich did not publish The Population Bomb as a mere academic exercise.
He called for legislative action in the United States (which he believed was
as overpopulated as the rest of the world) to solve the overpopulation problem.
In the prologue to The Population Bomb, Ehrlich is quite explicit that,
“Our position requires that we take immediate action at home and promote
effective action worldwide. We must have population control at home, hopefully
through changes in our value system, but by compulsion if voluntary methods
fail.” (4) What sort of compulsory population
control methods did Ehrlich support to stop the mass famine he predicted for
the 1970s?
Later in the book he mentions a proposal by some of his colleagues (who he
doesn’t identify) to require adding contraceptive materials to all food
sold in the United States. He ultimately rejects this proposal as a bad idea,
not because it is wrong in itself, but because he thinks it is politically unfeasible
(and of course at the time scientifically unfeasible). Ehrlich expressed support
for changes proposed by then-Sen. Bob Packwood (R-Oregon) to decrease tax deductions
for dependent children. (5)
Believing that the United States could only support a population of 150 million,
Ehrlich proposed that “luxury taxes could be placed on layettes, cribs,
diapers, diaper services, [and] expensive toys…” and suggested giving
“responsibility prizes” to couples who went at least five years without
having children or to men who got vasectomies. He called for setting up a federal
Bureau of Population and Environment to oversee reducing U.S. population growth.
(6)
Ehrlich reserved the brunt of his wrath, however, for Third World nations he
believed would never achieve “self-sufficiency” in feeding their population.
Complaining about “the assorted do-gooders who are deeply involved in the
apparatus of international food charity,” Ehrlich endorsed a proposal by
|William and Paul Paddock| to simply stop both private and government-sponsored
food aid to nations which experienced chronic food shortages. If nations refused
to institute Ehrlich’s population control proposals, he was more than willing
to let the people in those nations starve. (7)
In the same vein, Ehrlich proposed that the United States, Soviet Union and
other powers act to change political boundaries in areas such as Africa and
Southern Asia. Ehrlich reserved his most strict treatment to India. He argued
for the forced sterilization of all Indian men with three or more children.
(8)
In a 1971 book written with Richard L. Harriman, How to Be a Survivor,
Ehrlich even revealed himself to have an affinity with the sort of policies
used by the Chinese government. Harriman and Ghrlich wrote,
However, those who claim that the government could never intrude into such
a private matter as the number of children a couple produces may be due for
an unpleasant surprise. There is no sacred legal “right” to have
children. The argument that family size is God’s affair and not the business
of the government would undoubtedly be raised — just as it was against outlawing
polygamy. But the government tells you precisely how many husbands or wives
you can have and claps you in jail if you exceed that number. (9)
Ehrlich summed up his approach to overpopulation with a flourish worthy of
the great totalitarian dictators of the 20th century,
A cancer is an uncontrolled multiplication of cells; the population explosion
is an uncontrolled multiplication of people. Treating only the symptoms of
cancer may make the victim more comfortable at first, but eventually he dies
— often horribly. A similar fate awaits a world with a population explosion
if only the symptoms are treated. We must shift our efforts from treatment
of the symptoms to the cutting out of the cancer. The operation will demand
many apparently brutal and heartless decisions. The pain may be intense. But
the disease is so far advanced that only with radical surgery does the patient
have a chance of survival. (10)
Based on the evidence of the past 25 years, this would have been a horrible
“solution.” The world turned out to have a case of the flu, and Ehrlich
recommended the equivalent of bleeding the patient.
Why did Ehrlich’s predictions fail to come true? Because the model he
used, like almost all those who predict dire problems from population, was basically
flawed. In a nutshell what Ehrlich did was take population growth for the 1960s
and extrapolate it out through the 1970s, but he insisted production of resources
such as food and water were at their limits — both would likely decline, and
certainly not increase.
Food production not only increased, but increased faster than population growth,
so 27 years after the publication of The Population Bomb, not only are
there many more people alive in the world, but they eat more than they did in
the past. Water quality, which Ehrlich believed beyond repair, has also steadily
improved.
Footnotes:
1. Ehrlich, Paul R. The
population bomb. New York: Ballantine Books, 1971, p.xi.
2. Ehrlich, Paul R. The
population bomb. New York: Ballantine Books, 1971, p.3.
4. Ehrlich, Paul R. The
population bomb. New York: Ballantine Books, 1971, pp.xi-xii.
5. Ehrlich, Paul R. The
population bomb. New York: Ballantine Books, 1971, pp.131-2.
6. Ehrlich, Paul R. The
population bomb. New York: Ballantine Books, 1971, pp.131-3.
7. Ehrlich, Paul R. The
population bomb. New York: Ballantine Books, 1971, pp.146-8.
8. Ehrlich, Paul R. The
population bomb. New York: Ballantine Books, 1971, p.151.
9. Ehrlich, Paul R. and
Harriman, Richard L.. How to be a survivor. New York: Ballantine Books, 1971,
p. 33.
10. Ehrlich, Paul R.
The population bomb. New York: Ballantine Books, 1971, p.152.