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The world's population is increasing. It has increased since the beginning of time. What varies over time are rates of increase and areas of high and low population growth. Historically projections for the past 50 years have been overestimates. UN estimates for 2050 range from 7.3 billion to 10.7
billion. There is a huge margin of error because rates are so volatile.
"Population explosion" and "population time bomb" were apocalyptic phrases coined in the 1970s by advocates of a "population control" agenda. Supporters of this view include: Marie Stopes International, Population Concern*, the International Planned Parenthood Federation *(IPPF) and the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF). (* Major contributors to China's now discredited *one child per couple policy¹.)
The following are in favour of population control and endorse the widespread provision of abortion services and systematic sterilisation programmes (backed by transnational pharmeceutical firms): United Nations Children¹s Fund (UNICEF), United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), World Bank, World Health Organisation (WHO). Most of the activity of these organisations is in the developing world. The Holy See's observer at the UN, Archbishop Renato Martino has recently expressed concern at "a shift by western powers away from development issues into population control and contraception".
Low birth rates emerge as a by-
Western materialism makes far more demands on the planet's physical resources than the populations of the developing world. The USA has less than 7% of the world's population but uses one third of its raw materials. The wealthiest 20% of the population consume 70 times more than the poorest 20%.
A 1995 London School of Economics report stated: "Research does not support the idea that world population growth is currently out pacing food production". Although world population has doubled since the 1950s, world food supplies have trebled.
While the global poor see children as a blessing and a gift from God, increasingly
secular and materialistic western societies view them as a threat to adult earning
power and freedom, leading to "anti-
born by God to become a burden. Each one is an asset."
Further Information
Vatican Web site (www.vatican.va)
World Population