Do we need to limit economic growth to protect the
environment?
Economic growth and
environmental progress go hand in hand. For example, economic progress means we
can afford to clean our drinking water, a fact that has saved millions of lives
over the past century. Since local engineers and industry introduced
chlorination in the 1880's, waterborne-related deaths in the United States
dropped from 75 to 100 per 100,000 people to fewer than 0.1 deaths per 100,000
annually in 1950.
Moreover, the efficiencies
generated in developed economies actually increase the stock of resources. For
example, the developed world's decreased dependence on wood for fuel and
construction as well as modern forestry practices mean that Americans now
consume half the wood they consumed in 1900, and we grow 36 percent more trees
than we harvest every year. Accordingly, researchers estimate that there are
more trees today in North America than when Columbus arrived in 1492.
Is the environment getting better or worse?
Many measures indicate that
wealth created by development have helped improve the environment. For example, enables nations to deal with air
quality concerns, producing great improvements. Air quality is the worst in
less developed nations because they use dirtier burning fuels—such as wood and
cow dung—for home heating and cooking, which creates deadly levels of indoor
air pollution. In developed nations, the picture is very different. According
to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), air quality in the United States
has improved tremendously as our economy has grown during the past several
decades, even as the number of drivers and industrial activity increased.
The EPA reports, between
1980-2006 carbon monoxide levels have dropped 50 percent, the ambient concentration
of lead has plummeted 97 percent; nitrogen dioxide ambient levels have declined
by 33 percent; ozone concentrations have decreased by 17 percent; and sulfur
dioxide levels have dropped 47 percent. In the last ten years, particulate
matter concentrations (PM 10) have declined by 28 percent.
Should we control population to ensure that we don’t
run out of food or other resources?
Some people say that
population will outstrip our capacity to grow food, but history has proven that
claim incorrect. Per capita grain supplies have increased by more than 22
percent since 1950, and food prices have dropped, indicating abundance, not
greater scarcity. Wheat prices have gone from $256 per ton in 1950 to $90 per
ton in the 1990s (in constant dollars).(2) A bushel of corn in 1950 would have
cost $10.72 in year 2000 dollars, but in 2000, a bushel of corn sold for $1.80.
These gains are not just confined to industrialized countries. Developing
countries have also experienced impressive gains. The rate of increase in food
production in poor countries has been more than double the rate of population
growth.
In addition to feeding more
people, we are able to produce food more efficiently, using fewer and fewer
acres and leaving more land available for wildlife habitat. To understand the
true impact on the environment, consider that to grow the amount of food
currently consumed, using 1950s technologies, farmers would have to plow an
additional 10 million square miles of wildlife habitat.