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The implications
15. Is rapid population growth a
cause or a consequence of under-development? Except in extreme cases,
population density cannot account for hunger. Let us look first at the
following facts. It was in the over-populated deltas and valleys of Asia that the "green revolution" agricultural
innovations were first applied. Yet, countries with small populations, like Zaire or Zambia which could have fed a population 20
times the size of their own without requiring any major irrigation schemes, are
still short of food. The reason lies in the skewed measures imposed by
governments and in economic management and policies, not in any objective
causes or economic poverty. Today it is said that there is a greater chance of
reducing excessive demographic growth by trying to reduce mass poverty than
there is of combating poverty merely by reducing the population growth rate(25).
The demographic situation will
only evolve slowly so long as families in the developing countries believe that
their production capacity and their security can only be guaranteed by having a
large number of children. It should once again be reiterated that it is
generally economic and social changes(26) that enable parents to accept
the gift of a child. In this area, developments depend to a very large extent
on the parents' socio-cultural background. Thought should therefore be given to
educating couples in responsible planning of family size and the spacing of
births in full respect for moral and ethicalprinciples and in harmony with the
true nature of the human being(27).
25) Cf. Pontifical Academy of Sciences, Population and Resources.
Report, Vatican City, 1993. (The statistics given in this report have since
changed).
26) Cf. Pontifical
Council for the Family, Ethical and Pastoral Dimensions of Population
Trends, Vatican City, 1994. Cf. Le contrôle des naissances dans
les pays du Sud: promotion des droits des femmes ou des intérêts
du Nord, "Inter-Mondes", vol. 7, October 1991, No. 1, p. 7: In
many areas of the world, research has shown, that in addition to birth control
there are three other factors which also contribute to reducing world
population growth. One is economic and social development, another is improving
the living conditions of women and, paradoxically, reducing infant mortality.
Cf. also United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), The Situation of Children
in the World, Geneva, 1991.
27) John Paul II, Address
to the delegates attending the Week of Study on "Population and
Resources" organised by the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, 22 November
1991, Nos. 4 and 6: "The Church is aware of the complexity of the
problem... The urgency of the situation must not lead into error in proposing
ways of intervening. To apply methods which are not in accord with the true
nature of man actually ends up by causing tragic harm... and can risk placing
the heaviest burden on the poorest and weakest sectors of society, thus adding
injustice to injustice".: AAS 84 (1992), pp. 1120-1122. Cf. also
Angelo Cardinal Sodano, Address to the United Nations Conference on
Environment and Development (UNCED), Rio de Janeiro, 3-14 June 1992, L'Osservatore Romano,
15-16 June 1992.
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