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Regulation of Population Growth India

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Family planning 13% of national health budget ... India very diverse, yet government selected blanket ... NASA mission to turn down the sun's thermostat ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Regulation of Population Growth India


1
  • Regulation of Population Growth - India
  • Background
  • 1952 First country to institute national policy
    to limit population growth
  • Family planning 13 of national health budget
  • Result Annual population growth rate 1.7
    today vs. 1.3 in 1940s
  • Why didnt the methods work?
  • India very diverse, yet government selected
    blanket population control method for entire
    country

2
  • Regulation of Population Growth - India
  • Methods
  • Voluntary sterilization
  • Pre-1977 Vasectomies (male)
  • Post-1977 Tubal ligation (female)
  • Followed change in political regime precipitated
    in part by anger over coercive nature of
    vasectomy program
  • Cash incentives to
  • Medical personnel
  • Program managers
  • Individuals accepting sterilization
  • Equivalent to three weeks of average wages
    (150)
  • Problems
  • Sterilization method offers little flexibility
  • Chosen largely by older women who already had
    children and werent planning to have more

3
  • Regulation of Population Growth - India
  • Alternatives
  • Suggestion that increasing economic prosperity
    should lead to a decline in population growth
    rate
  • Correlation between GDP and TFR is weak
  • Most important social factor affecting TFR seems
    to be female literacy rate
  • Female literacy rate correlated positively with
  • Higher age at marriage
  • Greater contraceptive use
  • Lower IMR
  • All correlated with lower TFR

4
  • Regulation of Population Growth - India
  • Female Literacy Kerala (Case Study)
  • Kerala State in SW India high population
    density
  • Per-capita GDP 63 of national average
  • Pre-1970s higher growth rate than national
    average
  • Between 1972 and 1991, TFR in Kerala dropped from
    4.6 to 1.8, the lowest in India (Why?)
  • Reasons
  • Higher social status for women than is typical
    for India. Leads to increased education, higher
    literacy rate (83 vs. 48 nationally)
  • Better family planning services
  • Marxist government that fosters egalitarianism
    (belief in individual equality) and imposes high
    taxation that supports education, health care and
    small family norm
  • Prof. Virginia Abernethy (Vanderbilt)
  • Fertility falls when women can profit from their
    work outside the home. A woman with an
    independent income does not have to marry young
    or barter sex or childbearing for support.

5
  • Overpopulation Resource Availability
  • Resource Costs
  • In 1980, Julian Simon issued a public offer to
    stake US10,000 ... on my belief that the cost of
    non-government-controlled raw materials
    (including grain and oil) will not rise in the
    long run.
  • Paul Ehrlich and two colleagues accepted
    challenge
  • The Bet
  • Ehrlich and colleagues selected five metals
    (chromium, copper, nickel, tin, tungsten) they
    felt would undergo large price increases.
  • They purchased (on paper) 200 worth of each on
    Sep 29 1980.
  • They designated Sep 29 1990 as the date to
    evaluate the bet.
  • If the inflation-adjusted prices of these metals
    rose, Simon would pay Ehrlich 10,000. If the
    prices fell, Ehrlich would pay Simon the loss in
    value.
  • During this 10-year period, the worlds
    population grew by over 800 million people.
  • The price of each of the five metals dropped, in
    some cases substantially (e.g. tin fell from
    8.72/pound to 3.88/pound).
  • Ehrlich lost the bet, to the tune of 576.07.

6
  • Critical Thinking - Tactics
  • Bandwagon
  • Everybody knows this is the case.
  • Categorical Statement
  • Implies no disagreement
  • Deductive Reasoning
  • A is true and B is true, therefore C is true
  • Personal Attack
  • Criticism of opponent instead of viewpoint
  • Slanter
  • Persuasion through inflammatory and exaggerated
    language
  • Testimonial
  • Citing a celebrity or authority to validate
    opinion

7
  • Climate Change Greenhouse Gases
  • Lettermans Top Ten George W. Bush Solutions For
    Global Warming
  • NASA mission to turn down the sun's thermostat
  • Federal subsidies to boost production of Cool
    Ranch Doritos
  • Fast track Rumsfeld's "Colonize Neptune" proposal
  • Convene Blue-Ribbon Committee to explore
    innovative ways of ignoring the problem
  • Let Hillary worry about it when she takes over
  • I dunno - tax cuts for the rich?
  • Give the boys at Halliburton 90-billion dollar
    contract to patch hole in ozone
  • Switch to Celsius so scorching 98 becomes frosty
    37
  • Keep plenty of Bud on ice
  • Invade Antarctica

8
  • Climate Change Greenhouse Gases
  • Background
  • Greenhouse Effect
  • Gases absorb heat
  • Natural Greenhouse Effect
  • Mean planetary temperature 15 oC vs. -6 oC
  • Enhanced Greenhouse Effect
  • Due to GHGs emitted from human activity
  • Greenhouse Gases
  • Most important GHG is water vapor
  • Accounts for 50 of natural GHE

9
Greenhouse Gases
10
http//calspace.ucsd.edu/virtualmuseum/climatechan
ge2/07_2.shtml
11
  • Climate Change Greenhouse Gases
  • Greenhouse Gases
  • Long residence times indicate atmospheric
    concentrations will remain high even if emissions
    stop
  • Other factors besides GHGs may influence global
    climate

12
  • Climate Change Other Factors
  • Cloud Cover
  • Reflects incoming radiation
  • Difficult to estimate in climate models
  • Effects vary in relation to altitude, thickness,
    composition
  • Atmospheric Dust
  • Important factor in cool period from 1930s to
    1960s
  • Overwhelmed effects of rising CO2 during this
    period
  • Produced by volcanic eruptions, dust from areas
    experiencing drought
  • Cool period following eruption of Mt. Pinatubo in
    1992
  • Mechanism behind Nuclear Winter scenario
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