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Development Population and Environment S

Dr. Ananta Kumar Biswas gave a presentation on the relationship between development, population, and the environment in developing countries. Rapid population growth in poor countries can overwhelm resources and lead to problems like lack of education, healthcare, and infrastructure development. It can also concentrate health and environmental problems in areas with high population density. While population growth alone does not necessarily degrade the environment, the compound growth of population, consumption, and production in developing nations is generating serious environmental and social challenges.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
141 views10 pages

Development Population and Environment S

Dr. Ananta Kumar Biswas gave a presentation on the relationship between development, population, and the environment in developing countries. Rapid population growth in poor countries can overwhelm resources and lead to problems like lack of education, healthcare, and infrastructure development. It can also concentrate health and environmental problems in areas with high population density. While population growth alone does not necessarily degrade the environment, the compound growth of population, consumption, and production in developing nations is generating serious environmental and social challenges.

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shakti tripat
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ITIHAS ACADEMYDHAKA, BANGLADESH

13th International Seminar, 17 February, 2017

Development, Population and Environment: Status and Impact on

Society in Developing country

Dr. Ananta Kumar Biswas

Asst. Professor, Dept. of Sociology

The University of Burdwan

West Bengal, India

Key Words: Compound growth, Externality, Sustainable development

Abstract: Compound growth in population and in particular, production and consumption have

some environmental outcomes such as climate change, air and water pollution, deforestation, loss

of habitat and biodiversity, soil erosion, per capita decline in food availability, shrinking of water

supplies, and social differences in the distribution of environmental goods and bad.

In order to address environmental outcomes generated by compounding growth in population,

consumption and production we need to take close scrutiny about the relationships among

development, population and environment. This paper attempts to examine how current method

of cultivation in agriculture is able to feed their growing population without any externalities to

the society or in sustainable manner.

Introduction: Since independence, India has been adopting mega development projects such as

big dams, heavy industries, petrochemicals and thermal power plants etc., for achieving Western

standard in economic matters, but such development could enhance neither an equitable nor a just

society. The very process of development has done massive exploitation of abandoned natural

resources such as land, water, minerals, forests etc. It is fact that development model undoubtedly
1
helped the country to achieve something noble in economics and political realms; however this

process has generated wider socio-economic problems, inequality, poverty, pollution etc, across

time and space. In this context, we can review the vicious circle of poverty, population and

pollution in developing world.

Current population explosion in India and its deleterious effects on life of the people have been

widely recognised. Although, population can be considered as wealth in achieving equity and

efficiency, provided good education, health and democratic environment could nurture the

population to fit such an achievement. Population is a per-requisite to development only to the

extent that a society requires more man power to carry out its developmental activities. A huge

population can be a blessing only if it can be made productive, literate and healthy. But in India, it

is argued that, ‘excess manpower is a liability to development’ 1. Therefore, we have to tackle our

huge population problem for thinking to make our society sustainable.

The rate of world population growth is however falling today. The peak came in the early

1960s, when the world population was growing at an annual rate of 2.2 percent. By 2011, the rate

had fallen to 1.08 percent. Although the growth rate has declined, the size of new increments to

the world’s population is still higher than it was in 1960s. Today’s slower growth rate is applied to

a bigger population, so the world’s average annual population increased dramatically. But more

than 90 percent of world’s current population growth is taking place in poor countries. Such

growth in rich and middle-income countries is either slow or in the negative. In over thirty

countries, including Japan, South Africa and most of the former European Bloc countries, the

population growth rate as of 2010 is zero or below. In fifty nine countries, however, population

growth is running at two percent or more per year. And these have happened in all countries with

high poverty rates and low levels of human development. Ethiopia has the seventh fastest growth

rate of 3.2 percent per year with a current population of 88 million. If this growth rate doesn’t

change, in a hundred year Ethiopia would have a population of about 2.2 billion, larger than any

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country today. India has a current population of about 1.2 billion, but India’s growth rate is much

lower than Ethiopia. Bangladesh has a current population of about 0.16 billion but with annual

changes in population is 1.2 percentages which is equivalent to India’s annual changes in

population. As far as we concern Bangladesh’s population composition in age we find that more

than sixty percent population falls within the age group of 15-64 which has much implication for

country’s future development thinking. However, there need proper plan for utilizing these huge

human resources and work force for country’s actual development. It is needless to say that

education, health and democratic environment are the prerequisites for such a plan. China has 1.3

billion people, the world’s largest population today, but it now has a fairly low annual growth rate

of 0.49 percent, due to the country’s severe population policies2.

Recent fall in growth is attributable not to only fertility decline in some case but to increase in

warfare, to high rates of AIDS deaths in sub-Saharan Africa and to sharp decline in life

expectancy in the former Eastern bloc due to economic dislocation 3. In spite of such growth rate

fall in some cases, demographers predict that world population would be 9.2 billion in 2050, with

the world growing at about 41 million people a year. Neo-Malthusians also worry about such a

scenario of world population. Because, even a constant population may still have an increasing

appetite for materials resources on the one hand, and increases in population come on top of

accelerating per capita consumption and production, on the other hand. And even if world

population eventually stabilizes, environmental impacts may continue to compound because of our

growing appetite for resources. This has been leading, some argue to a general condition of

underproduction and lessening overall carrying capacity of the world, a very undesirable situation

termed as ‘Overshoot’ by William Catton 4. But it is fact that, population control alone does not

make any guarantee for achieving sustainable society, contrarily, over production and over

consumption in western countries may reduced the chances of achieving the cherished goal of

sustainability.

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The implication of compounding growth in population, production and consumption need to be

considered carefully. It is stated, at least theoretically, that growth in consumption, production and

population does not necessarily degrade the environment. In fact, population growth itself has no

environmental consequences at all. Any environmental impact depends on what is being

consumed and what is being produced by these increased number of people and on how they go

about consuming and producing. Improved technology and social organization could possibly

compensate for potential impacts and even leave the environment in better shape than it was to

begin with. However, rapid population growth generates serious environment and health problems

in countries like Bangladesh and India.

Boserup5 argued that whereas population density may provide the incentive to intensity in

production, rapid population growth may overwhelm the economic and social resources that are

essential to intensification .The following are some consequences of rapid population growth.

1) Governments and Local communities fail to provide a burgeoning population with education,

healthcare, poverty relief and infrastructure development or improvement like roads and irrigation.

2) Rapid population growth also leads to a population with a high percentage of children requiring

schooling and care giving and thus competing for scarce funds and adult labour.

3) In poor countries rapid population pronounce in yielding low funds to invest in new roads, public

transport, sewage lines, clean water supplies, school buildings, hospitals, phone lines and power

generation.

4) In poor countries rapid increasing population does not have enough money to attract much

private investment to provide basic amenities of the society.

5) People of poor countries with rapid population growth easily indulge in corruption to maintain

their income as against their low pay as a government officials and others.
4
6) Corruption intensity occurred in the infrastructural development and environmental offenders

avoid environmental regulation through payoffs to officials.

7) Rapid population growth in poor countries result in serious health problems and children,

women as well as elderly person of these countries are obvious victims of diseases and health

problems.

8) Rapid population growth generates health, housing, sanitation, clean air, water problems and

other environmental consequences.

9) More population concentration surrounding industry in poor countries with rapid population

growth caused health problems due to air and water pollution as well as land degradation.

10) Flood, heavy rain, cyclone, drought and earth quake in poor countries with rapid population

growth like Bangladesh, and others result in heavy causalities to people and poor people of these

countries have to live in high degree of risk and vulnerability which may forced them migrate

elsewhere as ‘environmental refugee’6

Classical Malthusianism provides us insights in understanding the relationships among poverty /

affluences, population and environment but these are under critical scrutiny in many ways. Anti-

Malthusians also argue that population is the ‘ultimate resources’. That is, the solution to resource

scarcity is actually to increase population. A prominent proponent of anti-Malthusian, Julian

Simon7argued that a larger number of people means more brain power and labour to work out

technological solution to scarcity. When confronted with scarcity, we apply our collective brain

power and find out new resources of formerly scarce one and new technologies for extracting

them. In some case, new technology will allow us to substitute different materials for ones that

have become scarce, what Simon called the principle of ‘substitutability’8.

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But Simon’s argument that more people means more brainpower to work out problems is rather

dubious. It is clearly by now that the sheer size of a society does not make it innovative.

Innovativeness depends not merely on number of people but on their quality including social

circumstances like equitable distribution of resources, democratic environment and a good

educational system. In fact, greater number of people may only increase a society’s stock of

misguided ideas if that society is set up in a way that stumps everyone in the same mould or

clouds their creativity.

Critique also doubts Simon’s optimism about technology. For Simon, technology has indeed made

possible substantial substitutions in the resource we depend on, often in the face of scarcity, such

as the techniques for the use of fossil fuel that resolved the fuel wood and water power shortages

of early industrialism. But will technology always come to the rescue in time to prevent serious

problems? This question is particularly germane as we encounter limits in resources that seem less

substitutable, such as fresh water, clean air, and land for agriculture and habitat for biodiversity.

Other critiques related with new technology which can bring with it unintended consequences,

such as the substitution of HCFCs (Hydrochloroflucarbons), a potent greenhouse gas, for ozone-

depleting CFCs (Chlorofluorocarbons). Solving one problem often contributes to another.

Technology is also critical for its short-term benefits or unsustainable characters along with

externalities or negative effects for society. For example, green revolution in India and other

developing countries where mechanization, irrigation, pesticides, fertilizer use, high-yielding

hybrids, rural road construction, to open up new areas for clearing and cultivation - all these

techniques and practices allowed world grain production to increase 2.6 fold between 1950 and

1984. The per capita world grain harvest rose by 40 percent. This miracle in production happened

due to miracle rice ‘IRRI” 9.Unfortunately, from the mid-1980 per capita yield of all grain worlds

wide has been declining. And since then, the tale is not pretty regarding rice production. Because
10
crop yields fluctuates and decline with the weather over years. A comparative study of rice

6
production between two periods (i.e., 2004-2008 and 1984-1988) reveals that rice production rose

on an average of 34.2 percent and world population rose over 32.5 percent during the same period.

That made for a 1.3 percent increase in per capita rice yields. Moreover, in recent times, there is a

fluctuating or declining trend of rice production that does not match with growing number of

world population. Researchers at the World Watch Institute suggest that the declining

responsiveness of crops to further fertilization, as well as soil erosion, the conversion of grain land

to non-farm uses, and spreading water scarcity, is limiting the growth of grain production 11. So, it

is still not clear how new biotech varieties like ‘Golden rice’ and ‘Bt rice’ would boost yield of

rice and other grains back to at least matching population growth without causing ecological

damage? And how can current methods of cultivation provide us a way to boost yields without

negative effects or externalities to society? Moreover, whether we are able to develop technology

and resource which are capable of feeding growing world population without any externalities to

the society or in sustainable manner? These are the basic questions of our time and answers to

these questions are drawn from the following observation.

Take the previous example of green revolution that has been occurred in India and others since

1960s. The entire increase in wheat production in India came from the shift from traditional

varieties to high yielding varieties in wheat growing areas. By now, around 80 percent of the

wheat area has been brought under high-yielding varieties. Obviously, with time, the scope for a

further shift becomes limited. The rate of increase in wheat production has dropped from around

ten percent per annum in the early years of the wheat production to five percent in recent years. A

study conducted by the Narottam Shah12 of the centre for Monitoring Indian economy (CMIE)

shows that there has been a literal revolution in agricultural inputs. Between 1976-77 and 1982-83

gross irrigated area increased at the rate of 5.6 percent per annum, the number of diesel and

irrigated pump set increased at the rate of eight per cent to nine per cent, consumption of power

for agriculture increased at the rate of over twelve per cent, area under high-yielding varieties

7
increased at the rate of around seven per cent per annum, and fertilizer consumption increased at

the rate of eleven per cent per annum. But while, all the inputs in real terms put together had

increased at the rate of 4.2 per cent per annum between 1970-71 and 1979-80, the real output

increased at only 2.3 per cent per annum. As a result, the index of productivity of inputs (out puts)

declined sharply from 100 in 1970-71 to 75 by 1979-80. Therefore, he remarked ‘we are

experiencing a phenomenon of diminishing returns to inputs in agriculture.13

Shah14 also analyzed the factor behind this continued slackening return to inputs (outputs) in

agriculture. She argued that India’s heavy reliance on irrigation, high-yielding varieties have

created inequalities among farmers. Around two-third of India’s farmers are engaged in dry

farming and only around one-third in irrigation farming. Correspondingly more than two-third of

agricultural development expenditure is devoted to irrigation and irrigation-based farming and less

than one-third to dry farming. Dry farming demands measures for water harvesting and soil and

water conservation. The neglect of dry farming has led to imbalances in the country’s agricultural

development. Then what is needed to be done? According to Shah, India’s agricultural technology

has never developed taking into account the ecological bases of country’s agriculture. She

suggested that understanding of ecological possibilities and constraints need to be worked out

suitably for each soil-climatic regime of the country. And a comprehensive and wide-ranging

education in the elements of ecology and agriculture should be given to farmers for better

production in sustainable manner.

Therefore from above discussion and insights, I recommended the followings suggestions taking

population and resources at the centre for creating a more sustainable society.

1) Total fertility rate (TFR) i.e. number of children per woman, must be maintain at replacement

level. This may be done through proper population policies.

8
2) Infant mortality rate (IMR) should reduce through launching ‘Mother-Child’ care unit,

improvement of health care system, education and eradication of poverty.

3) Flood control and protect people from water and vector borne diseases.

4) More literacy, adult education, continued study, vocational and technical education should be

promoted.

5) Creating proper democratic environment through participation of all citizen in all spheres of

peoples ‘activities irrespective of race, religion, castes and creed etc.

6) Country’s ecological bases should given importance for agricultural activities. Agricultural and

other productive sectors should focus on ecological elements of the country. And proper balance

should maintain between agriculture and ecology for any development activities.

7) Flood, heavy rain fall, cyclone, land devastation, soil erosion, deforestation, overfishing and the

resultant consequences should be minimised and protected people from such causalities. Short run

and long run policies should be launched in this regard.

8) Irrigation, crop cycle maintaining and cultivation of crop should be done through ecological

knowledge and training.

9) Lastly, but not least continued research and follow up in the area of agricultural development

and population growth may be taking as a corrective to any whimsical administered of policies.

Notes and References:

9
1
Biswajit Ghosh. “Excess Manpower to be a Liability for India”? Globalization and
Environment- Discourse, Politics and Practices(ed. Manish Verma) Jaipur, Raw at Publication,
2012, pp 331-351

2
Michael Mayerfeld Bell. An Invitation to Environmental Sociology. New Delhi, Sage
Publication, 2012, p 97.

3
Michael Mayerfeld Bell. An Invitation to Environmental Sociology. New Delhi, Sage
Publication, 2012, p98

4
William Catton. Overshoot: The ecological Basis of Revolutionary Change. Urbana.
University of Illinois Press, 1982

5
Ester Boserup. The condition of Agricultural growth: The Economics of Agrarian Change
under Population Pressure. London, Allen & Unwin. 1965.

6
J. McGregor , “ Refugees and the Environment”, Geography and Refugees (eds.R black and
Vaughan Robinson), London:Belhaven,1983

7
Julian, Simon. The Ultimate Resource. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1981.

8
Julian, Simon. The Ultimate Resource. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 1981.

9
IRRI ( International Rice Research Institute) , A variety of rice seed named after the Institution.

10
Michael Mayerfeld Bell, An Invitation to Environmental Sociology. New Delhi, Sage
Publication,2012. p.112

11
R, Lester Brown Nicholas, Lenssen & Hale, Kane. Vital Signs,1995:The Trend That Are
Shaping Our Future. New York & London. Norton, 1995.

12
Narottam Shah. “The grain gap (Box) Population and environment”, the 2nd Citizens’ Report,
1984-85 ,New Delhi, Centre for Science And Environment (CSE), 1983. P 4 27

13
Narottam Shah. “The grain gap (Box) Population and environment”, the 2nd Citizens’ Report,
1984-85 ,New Delhi, Centre for Science And Environment (CSE), 1983.p431

14
Narottam Shah. “The grain gap (Box) Population and environment”, the 2nd Citizens’ Report,
1984-85 ,New Delhi, Centre for Science And Environment (CSE), 1983.p437

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