Newsroom | Archive 2004 | THINGS ARE GETTING BETTER November 2004
 

By MIKE MOORE November 2004

THINGS ARE GETTING BETTER

In 250 CE, St. Cyprian of Carthage proclaimed:
“The world has grown old. The rainfall and sun’s warmth are both diminishing, the metals are nearly exhausted.”

In 1014 CE, Archbishop Wulfstan declared:
“The world is in a rush and getting to its end.”

Bad news is good news for newspapers, talkback hosts and some politicians. It sells newspapers, inflates ratings, buys votes and makes for stimulating dinner party conversation.

This alarmist world view is pervasive and taken as gospel by many who believe that the world is in steady and inevitable decline.

The only problem with the alarmist world view is that it is wrong on nearly every count.

In the 1800’s, economist Stanley Jevons predicted that Britain would be destroyed as a superpower because it would run out of coal. Thomas Malthus thought that rising populations would lead to mass famines, while Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring predicted back in 1962 that manmade chemicals would wipe us out within 20 years. Science Digest predicted a new Ice Age in the 1970’s. Yet, within a few years, equally reputable scientists were suggesting that we were more likely to end up in a global sauna. In 1980, acid rain was going to kill all the forests in North America and Europe. It didn’t happen. Remember the Club of Rome predicting, in The Limits of Growth, that gold would be exhausted by 1981, tin by 1987, petroleum by 1992, and copper, lead and natural gas by 1993?

In 1900, male life expectancy in America was 49 years. In the 1920’s, the majority of U.S. farms didn’t have electricity. The pollution level of the River Thames contributed to the cholera epidemics between 1831 and 1866 that killed over 35,000 people. In 1861, it carried the typhoid disease that killed Queen Victoria’s husband, Prince Albert. In 1950, large stretches of the river were devoid of oxygen because of pollution, rendering it almost dead.

Now people fish and swim in the river, and pollution counts are hugely down in developed economies.

It may not be fashionable to say this but life is getting better and it’s partly because of the alarmists. Free societies respond to crisis - public opinion shifts politicians, answers are found.

It is not an historic anomaly that the worst environmental and social outcomes come from closed economies of the far left and the far right. Without an active civil society pushing for better outcomes, creating public opinion that politicians and bureaucrats must respond to, then the worst happens. Thus, democracy is a necessity for development, as well as a principle and a human right.

Let’s look at some key indicators.

In fifty years, life expectancy has gone up by 20 years; infant mortality has halved. The average person in the OECD born today will live to 100 years. This is portrayed as a pension and health-care crisis. It’s good news.

In the ten years from 1980, the percentage of people with access to good sanitation rose from 78 percent to 84 percent in urban areas, and from 29 percent to 36 percent in rural communities. Over just one decade, this is real progress.

The world’s population has doubled since 1961, but we now produce more food per capita. Food production in the developing world has tripled in that time.

Super-wheat and super-rice have saved millions of lives. The man who invented the crops received the Nobel prize for Peace. Nowadays, some people would want to destroy his laboratory.

The percentage of people suffering from starvation in the developing world has fallen from 45 percent in 1949, to 35 percent in 1970, to 18 percent in 1997 - and the UN expects that figure to have fallen to 12 percent by 2010.

Living standards are also improving worldwide. The UN reports more progress in alleviating poverty in the developing world in the past 50 years than in the previous 500.

A child dies of poor sanitation every second, and over 2 billion people don’t have access to a private toilet. But - again - the magnitude of the problem is less than it was, and the situation is undeniably better and can improve, given sane economic and political conditions.

Newsroom
Archive
 
   

© 2004-2008. Mike Moore & Associates. All material on this site is under the ownership of numerous contributors, please contact us if you wish to use any material from this site. All forms submitted from this site will be for the stated use only, this information will not be passed to any other parties.