Yiu won't solve the problems of urban centers with birth control. That's because these problems are caused by MIGRATION!
The fertility rate of Manila is already BELOW REPLACEMENT LEVEL. The population grows NOT because of births but because of MIGRATION.
The solution, therefore, is to convince people to stop coming ot Manila. To do that you must develop the coutnryside, the rural areas, and the smaller urban centers. But of course this is very difficult to do because of MASSIVE CORRUPTION (plus our *****ic lawmakers want to waste millions on population control).
People are producers, not just consumers. When they work together, they produce more. When te population density is high enough, they produce more efficiently. When the population grows, the economy grows. And when a growing population makes possible an increasing number of interactions, you have innovation. But population control fanatics ignore all of this.
Overpopulation is a myth. HB 5043 will only serve to perpetuate that myth while ignoring the real causes of our problems: bad governance, corruption, mismanagement.
@wng:
because there is no country which achieved both very high human development growth rate and population growth rate at the same time.
You seem to have forgotten all about the United States. It's no microstate. it achieved some of its greatst economic growth whiler it had rapid population growth. Do your homework!
Like Sheldon Richmann said:
The catastrophists' cliche that a growing population is an obstacle to development is especially barren. Studies show a strong correlation between affluence and longevity; as the late Aaron Wildavsky liked to say, wealthier is healthier. The lengthening life expectancy in the developing world is evidence that population growth cannot be increasing poverty.
History makes the same point. The West grew rich precisely when its population was increasing at an unprecedented rate. Between 1776 and 1975, while the world's population increased sixfold, real gross world product rose about 80-fold.
In our own century we have seen a replay of the Industrial Revolution. After World War II the population of Hong Kong grew more quickly than that of 19th-century England or 20th-century India--at the same time that resource-poor island-colony was growing rich.
The increases in population and wealth have not been merely coincidental. They are causes and effects of each other. Today, with few exceptions, the most densely populated countries are the richest. Any mystery in that is dispelled by the realization that people are the source of ideas. The addition of people geometrically increases the potential for combining ideas into newer, better ideas. As the Nobel laureate and economist Simon Kuznets wrote, "More population means more creators and producers, both of goods along established production patterns and of new knowledge and inventions." A growing population also allows for a more elaborate division of labor, which raises incomes. Those who wish to stifle population growth would condemn hundreds of millions of people in the developing world to the abject deprivation that characterized the West before the Industrial Revolution.
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No to Reproductive Health Bill (HB5043) Petition
No to Reproductive Health Bill (HB5043) Petition
Kill Bill 5043
FILIPINO FAMILY | Under Siege