Poverty and Environment - 2
The
determinant of well-being
If all the countries
of the world wee to choose the path to development that the industrialised
world has taken, the resulting levels of pollution would exceed the capacity
of the earth to absorb them, says Thomas H Tietenberg, Chairman of the
Department of Economics at Colby College, Waterville, Maine, and former
President of the Association of Environmental and Resource Economists. This is
the second part of a shortened version of his article published in the
journal, CHALLENGE, September-October 1990. The first part appeared in
DEVELOPMENT ALTERNATIVES, May - June 1991.
The Chief
determinant of well-being is income. It can purchase food, health, services,
education. What are the income trends? As Inter-American Development Bank
President Enrique Iglesias said in September 1988: "The per capital
income of the average Latin American is 9% lower today that what it was in
1980. This is average. In some countries the standard of living has slipped
back to where it was 20 years ago."
The picture is not totally bleak. Success against poverty is possible. Asian
countries have done well in the 1980s, for example. Thailand has reported a
50% decrease in its poverty rate since 1960.
One of the channels of poverty is population growth. Population growth rates
are substantially higher in low income populations. High infant mortality
causes parents to compensate with large numbers of births. Children provide
one of the few available means of old age security. Knowledge about birth
control techniques is sparse and the availability of contraceptives is
limited. Women frequently have low levels of education and in some cultures,
large families are the only possible way for women to achieve status.
Without the assistance of the industrialised world the strategies that
developing countires will take to solve their poverty problems are likely to
exacerbate the very environmental problems we have been talking about.
Increased energy consumption to support industry will add greenhouse gases.
Increased refrigeration will add more of the gases depleting the stratospheric
ozone level. If all the countries of the world were to choose the path to
development that we in the industrialised world have taken, the resulting
levels of pollution would exceed the capacity of the earth to absorb them.
Similarly, biodiversity would fall in the face of new assaults on biologically
rich areas as countries are forced to cash in their biological heritage simply
to survive.
Trade policies have had a major role in distorting economic activity away from
sustainable development in the Third World. The terms of trade for many Third
World countries have deteriorated in the recent past. the terms of trade
determine international purchasing power. when the terms of trade deteriorate,
Third World exports purchase fewer imports. Some of the reasons for this
deterioration are natural effects of markets rather that misguided policies.
Included in this category are the import substitutions in the industrialised
world (such as when optical fibres are substituted for copper in phone lines)
and lower demand for Third World exports triggered by lower economic growth in
the industrialised countries. But political factors are also important. When
political forces in the developed countries conspire to eliminate or
substantially reduce natural markets for the developing contours, these
policies not oly exacebrate the poverty in the developing nations, but they
have a direct degrading effect on the environment.
Debt is another source of the deteriorating terms of trade. many third World
countries have staggering levels of debt to service. In 1989, the Third World
owed $1.2 trillion, nearly one half its collective GNP. ambia’s $6 billion
debt represents over 300% of its GNP. In 1988 poor nations sent $43 billion
more to the industrialised nations in interest and principal repayment that
they received in new capital. Ironically, capital is flowing out of the poor
countries where it is desperately needed and into the capital-rich countries.
In periods of hight real-interest rates, servicing these debts puts a
significant drain on foreign exchange earnings. Using these foreign exchange
earnings to service the debt eliminates the possibility of using them to
finance imports for sustainable activities to alleviate poverty. Furthermore,
flooding the market with exports to earn foreign exchange reduces prices and
contributes to the deteriorating terms of trade.
The large debts owed by many developing countries encourage these countries
encourage these countries to overexploit their resource endowments to raise
the necessary foreign exchange. Timber exports represent a case in pint. As
Gus Speth, President of the World Resources Institute points out: "By an
accident of history and geography, half of the Third World external debt and
over two-thirds of global deforestation occur in the same fourteen developing
countries .... Private banks (constituted by purely economic criteria) realize
that complete repayment of the loans is probably not possible. Rather than
write off the loans, an action which not only causes harm to the income
statement but creates adverse incentives for repayment of future loans, they
are willing to consider alternative strategies.
This book is a study of the increasing pressures on India’s fast dwindling
wildlife resources and the resulting conflict between the priorities of
development and conservation.
In India today a declining forest areas, continuing erosion of marginal lands
and high grazing pressures threaten both the country’s land productivity as
well as its biological diversity.
The continuing fall in the population of different species of wild animals
prompted the Indian government to demarcate a number of protected areas after
independence. This led to the evolving of a comprehensive national network of
national parks and sanctuaries. The Wildlife Protection Act of 1972, the
initiation of Project Tiger in 1973, a revised and rational forest policy, and
the National Wildlife Action Plan drawn up in 1982 have strengthened the legal
and administrative aspects of the Indian conservation effort.
At present, India supports 15 per cent of the world’s human population and
14 per cent of the world’s livestock population on merely two per cent of
the world’s land area. There is, consequently, bitter competition for the
country’s wildlife resources. Even the protected areas are facing tremendous
human and developmental pressures that are undermining the conservation
efforts, according to the author. The biggest challenge before the country
today, feels Himraj Dang, is thus management of human pressures on wildlife
resources.
Dang’s book, sponsored by Development Alternatives, studies the different
aspects of conflict that is worrying conservationists in this part of the
world. Price Rs. 295.
This book represents the efforts of architects, engineers and scientists and
describes the status of building construction and design in two high-altitude
cold desert areas of north-western Himalaya: Ladakh and Spiti. The text also
includes three live in design projects for ‘solarisation’ undertaken by
the authors and supported by calculations of thermal performance.
Ladakh and Spiti are two remote areas of India which can be considered ethnic
extensions of Tibet. Both areas have a long tradition of energy-conscious
earth-building practice. In recent decades, the breakdown of traditional
primogeniture, the decline in the power of monasteries, and the increased
presence of defence forces and increased tourism, have all contributed to a
population explosion which have depleted the already scarce natural resources,
the authors point out.
This book profiles the existing topography, vegetation, climate, resource and
energy situation, going on to describe the current sate of building technology
and design, earth construction technology, energy conservation and passive
solar architecture. It includes eight case studies of existing buildings with
three design projects for energy-conscious buildings.
The areas, being cold and sunny, have extremely high potential for passive
solar applications. In the future, given sufficient administrative will, it
should be possible to inculcate development of building construction in the
region without depending on fossil fuels for space and water heating.
The book, sponsored by Development Alternatives, can be ready by the wide
public though much of its is written for administrators, architects, engineers
and scientists working in cold desert areas. Price Rs. 150.
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