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Be Fruitful and Multiply
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The day you were born, you
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brought both costs and benefits into this world. The costs include the demands
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you made (and continue to make) on the world's resources. The benefits include
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your ongoing contributions to the world's stock of ideas, love, friendship, and
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diversity.
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Do the costs outweigh the
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benefits, or vice versa? In other words: Should the rest of us consider your
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birth (or any child's birth) a blessing or a curse?
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Let's not try to
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settle this by listing all the costs and benefits of sharing the world with
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other people. After an evening stuck in summer traffic, you'll remember that
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the driver in front of you imposed a cost, but you might forget that the guy
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who invented your car's air conditioner conferred a benefit. New Yorkers
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remember to complain about the crowds, but sometimes forget that without the
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crowds, New York would be Cedar Rapids.
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Instead
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of making a list, let's think about the decision your parents faced when they
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were considering whether to conceive a child. Is it more likely that they
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undercounted costs or that they undercounted benefits?
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I'll start with benefits. The clearest benefit of your
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birth is that it gave your parents a child to love; they certainly counted that
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one. But the other benefits are spread far and wide. If you build a better
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mousetrap, millions will be in your debt. If all you do is smile, you'll still
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brighten thousands of days. We don't know how to list those benefits, but we do
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know that many of them fall on total strangers. That makes it unlikely that
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your parents took them fully into account.
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Now let's look at costs. The
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costs of your existence fall into two categories. First, you consume privately
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owned resources like food and land. Second, you might consume resources to
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which you have no clear property right--for example, you might open a factory
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that pollutes the air I breathe, or you might become a burglar who steals my
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stereo system.
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(You might
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imagine that there are also costs associated with your competing in the
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marketplace, bidding some prices up and others down, applying for the job I
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wanted, and so forth. But each of those costs has an offsetting benefit. If you
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bid up the price of cars, sellers will gain as much as buyers lose. If you
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prove a stronger job candidate than I do, my loss is the employer's gain.)
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Stealing and polluting clearly impose costs on
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strangers. But if you're at all typical, your consumption of staples like food
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and land will far exceed your consumption of other people's air and other
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people's property. In other words, for most people, the first category of costs
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is the big one. So let's concentrate on that.
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Where do you get all those
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resources you own and consume? Some you create; those don't cost anybody
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anything. Some you trade for; again, those don't cost anybody anything. The
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rest you inherit; and those come from your siblings' share. That means your
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siblings--not strangers--bear most of the costs of your birth.
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That's a
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point that's often missed. When people think about overcrowding or
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overpopulation, they typically imagine that if, for example, I had not been
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born, everyone else would have a slightly bigger share of the pie. But that's
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not right. If I had not been born, both my sisters would have substantially
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bigger shares of the pie, and everybody else's share would be exactly what it
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is now.
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So when parents are deciding whether to have a third,
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fourth, or fifth child, they are generally more conscious of the costs than of
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the benefits. Most of the costs are imposed on their other beloved children,
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while many of the benefits are dispersed among strangers.
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When a decision-maker is more
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conscious of costs than of benefits, he tends to make decisions that are overly
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conservative. That almost surely means that parents have fewer children than is
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socially desirable, and that therefore, the population grows too slowly. My
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daughter is an only child, which makes me part of the problem.
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Somewhere
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there is a young lady whose life has been impoverished by my failure to sire
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the son who would someday sweep her off her feet. If I cared as much about that
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young lady as I do about my own daughter, I'd have produced that son. But
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because I selfishly acted as if other people's children are less important than
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my own, I stopped reproducing too soon.
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Population growth is like pollution in reverse.
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The owner of a polluting steel mill weighs all its benefits (that is, his
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profits) against only a portion of its costs (he counts his expenses, but not
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the neighbors' health). Therefore, he overproduces. Parents weigh all--or at
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least most--of the costs of an additional child (resources diverted from their
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other children) against only a portion of the benefits (they count their own
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love for their children, but not others' love for their children). Therefore,
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they under produce.
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This argument seems to
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suggest that I should have had more children for the sake of strangers. A
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second, completely separate argument says I should have had more children for
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the sake of those children themselves. Presumably they'd have been grateful for
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the gift of life. I'm not sure how far to push that argument. There's obviously
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nothing close to a consensus on how to assign rights to the unborn, so we can
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hardly hope for a consensus on how to assign rights to the unconceived. But the
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second argument does tend to buttress the first.
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Personally, I ignored both
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arguments when I selfishly limited the size of my family. I understand
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selfishness. But I can't understand encouraging others to be selfish,
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which is the entire purpose of organizations like Zero Population Growth.
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Instead, we should look for ways to subsidize reproduction. A world with many
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people offers more potential friends who share our interests, more small acts
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of kindness between strangers, and a better chance of finding love. That's the
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kind of world we owe our children.
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