JAPAN'S ECONOMYSome people, however, think race important, and changing world demographics will interest them. According to Mark Steyn in The Australian on February 16, 2006:
"Demography doesn't explain everything but it accounts for a good 90 per cent. The 'who' is the best indicator of the what-where-when-and-why. Go on, pick a subject. Will Japan's economy return to the heady days of the 1980s when U.S. businesses cowered in terror? No. Japan is exactly the same as it was in its heyday except for one fact: it stopped breeding and its population aged. Will China be the hyperpower of the 21st century? No. Its population will get old before it gets rich.
"Why does Australia have an English Queen, English common law, English institutions? Because England was the first nation to conquer infant mortality.
"By 1820 medical progress had so transformed British life that half the population was under the age of 15. Britain had the manpower to take, settle and administer huge chunks of real estate around the planet. Had, say, China or Russia been first to overcome childhood mortality, the modern world would be very different."
RELIGIOUS SOCIETIES
One demographic reality is that religious societies breed more than non-religious ones. In the U.S. pious 'red' states out-reproduce secular 'blue' ones. In 'post-Christian' Europe the birth rate has plummeted below the 2.2 children per woman replacement rate and in many places is approaching what demographers call 'lowest-low' fertility - 1.3 births per woman - where populations go into steep decline. By 2050, Italy's population will have fallen by 22 per cent.
On the other hand, the highest birth rate countries are mostly Moslem. The long term may be unpredictable, but it takes 25 years to produce an adult. So in a generation, barring catastrophe, there will be a lot more faithful Moslems and a lot less non-practising Europeans than there are now. 'Developed' and 'developing' country birth rates are converging. But even within national borders, faith and fertility go together. The 'religion is dying' crowd have it backwards.
It's very curious. Every other organism reproduces at its maximum environmental capacity rate. Why do humans alone need 'divine' prompting to 'Go forth and multiply'? Dostoevsky once wrote that "If you were to destroy the belief in immortality in mankind, not only love but every living force on which the continuation of all life in the world depended, would dry up at once."
Well, the population facts support his thesis. From a biological point of view it's clearly better to believe in anything rather than nothing.
Maybe those campaigning for atheists to be described as 'brights', in the same way as homosexuals are referred to as 'gays', are on to something. From a purely organic perspective, atheists and homosexuals are both low reproductive minorities who drastically under-contribute to the human gene pool.
Demographics also suggest that however admirable on the individual level, liberal western values likely weaken the general reproductive will.
THE 'OPEN MINDED'
Feminism, tolerance for homosexuality and legal abortion are all negatively correlated with state fertility. While rigidly patriarchal traditional societies tend to have high birth rates. The 'open-minded' can't understand why 'religious fanatics' don't share our 'modern educated' outlook on gender and sex. But maybe on an instinctual level, they know something we don't?
Take, for instance, Britain and Iran. In 1950 the former had 50 million people and the latter 16 million. Now Britain has 60 million and Iran has 70 million. Britain scores better on virtually every quality of life measure.
No sensible - at least western educated - person would choose to live in theocratic fundamentalist Iran instead of tolerant and free Britain. Yet Iran has gone from having less than one third Britain's population to having 15 per cent more people. So which is the more successful country? Well, what matters more, genes or ideas?
Email Kevin O'Brien Chang at changkob@hotmail.com.