Guest Post by Morbo
It isn’t considered polite to mention population control these days. For years, advocates of hyper-free market capitalism argued that the more people we had the better. We need them to drive the economic engine of the world. Occasional food shortages were blamed on distribution kinks or unstable political situations. There was enough cheap food for everyone.
Recent events should cause us to reconsider. All it takes is one falling domino to see how fragile our world’s food supply really is.
I submit that domino has fallen in Australia, where a six-year drought has led to a sharp drop in rice production. This in turn has had devastating consequences in the Philippines, which imports 16 percent of the rice it needs. Over the past year, the price of rice in the Philippines has increased by 41 percent.
Bloomberg News recently profiled Myrna Lacdao, who eats just one meal a day so there will be more food for her two grandchildren. “I just take coffee in the morning and then have lunch at noon,” she said. “That’s my first and last meal of the day.”
You may have thought food riots were something out of “Soylent Green,” but eight countries have experienced them recently. If food shortages are to be the wave of the future — and I fear they are — it would be foolish not to reconsider the wisdom of continually adding more people to the world.
Population control would go a long way to alleviating hunger in a country like the Philippines. In Thailand, the government began pursuing an aggressive policy of birth control in the 1970s and got its population under control. Experts believe that if the Philippines were to do the same, it could export rice to other countries rather than import it.
So why isn’t it happening? The government of the Philippines remains under thumb of ultra-conservatives bishops in the Catholic Church, who oppose all forms of artificial contraception. Birth control devices are legal there, but the government does nothing to make them available to the poor. Poor people cannot afford even condoms, so the devices might as well be illegal.
The Post interviewed Maria Susana Espinoza, who told the paper she wanted only two children but has four. “I knew it existed, but I didn’t know how it works,” she said, speaking of birth control. Espinoza lives with her family in a tumble-down hut near a vast garbage dump in Manila. She makes a living scavenging from the dump. Meanwhile, Catholic bishops in the Philippines are threatening to deny communion to any government worker caught distributing birth-control devices.
Archbishop Paciano Aniceto said in a statement issued last year:
“Chemical agents and mechanical gadgets that make up the cluttered display of contraceptive methods of birth control have caused serious damage in family relationships, disrupting the unity and openness that build family life by the effects that accompany the contraceptive culture which include extramarital relationships, adolescent pregnancies, and even the hideous murderous act of abortion.”
I have news for the archbishop: starvation causes serious damage in family relationships too.)
Ninety percent of the people living in the Philippines say the government should provide birth control for those too poor to afford it. There was a time when the U.S. government would have stepped in and helped a country like the Philippines by funding a population-control program. Yet in the Philippines, the American government will later this year end a program that pays for contraceptives.
The fate of hungry people who live in grinding poverty abroad should concern us simply because of our shared humanity. We are all in this together as we face a future of dwindling energy supplies, erratic weather and crop failures sparked by global warming.
There is still time to change course. The first step is to get someone in the White House who understands why all of this is a problem — someone who will stand up to religious extremists with a mindset from the Middle Ages, not agree with them.