Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Macron’s African statement ignores human ingenuity
Macron’s African statement ignores human ingenuity
Jan 15, 2025 8:56 AM

A French media outlet has captured an otherwise ment from French President Emmanuel Macron that Africa is overpopulated. When asked about a possible “Marshall Plan for Africa,” Macron listed among the continent’s current problems the need for “demographic transition,” lamenting the fact that some African “countries still haveseven to eight children per woman.” His concerns seem particularly worth examining today on World Population Day.

During a July 8 press conference about the G20 summit, Macron began by naming truly concerning problems such as “failed plex democratic transitions,” corruption, and the need for the rule of law. These, with private property rights, are the pillars of a free society. But he continued, “When countries still haveseven to eight children per woman, you can decide to spend billions of euros, [but] you will not stabilize anything.”

Of course, the average African has between five and six children, not seven or eight babies, according to the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis. But the theoretical case cited by the newly elected president of France rings familiar for two reasons.

Population: A blessing, not a curse

First, his concern about overpopulation has been a perennial scarecrow among European intelligentsia for centuries, the all-purpose and ever-present threat that never seems to materialize. It is the impetus behind World Population Day, which was established by the United Nations Development Programme and observed every July 11.

Perhaps its best-known expositor, Thomas Malthus, wrote in 1798 that, unless the West wanted to face mass malnutrition, people should actively “court the return of the plague” – especially among the poor. For centuries, “experts” have continued to assert that a rising tide of humanity would swamp the earth’s fixed pool of resources. In 1970, Paul Ehrlich predicted that “at least 100-200 million people per year will be starving to death during the next 10 years.” Ehrlich’s disciple, John Holdren, defended his own dire forecasts while being confirmed as Barack Obama’s science czar.

Yet these forecasts e to pass. Resources are but one part of the equation; the other, which the prognosticators overlook, is human innovation. Population growth has been facilitated by man-made technology, from the bustion engine, to irrigation, to genetically modified food. As Chelsea German wrote at Human Progress:

Humanityfound waysto producemore food per unit of landthrough innovations like synthetic fertilizers and increasingly advanced genetic modification techniques. Asproduction increased, prices fell,calorie consumptionincreased, andundernourishment felleven as the world’s population grew.

While economics recognizes finite resources, it must also recognize the capacityof human ingenuity multiply those resources in unforeseen ways to the benefit of all. Populations are deprived of the ability to help themselves only when the other structures, such as rule of law and access to capital, are missing.

In fact, declining populations are associated with economic contraction – and Macron need not look far to find an example. In a new report on ing German population contraction, the Cologne Institute for Economic Research found that “the demographic trend will worsen the growth prospects of the national economy.The increase in gross domestic product (GDP) will more than halve by 2035.” The harm visited uponGermany, the engine of the European economy, would be magnifiedin less prosperousnations facing similar population issues.

French concern over “eight children” led to forced abortion

Second, the specific wording that Macron used – concerns over tropical women having eight children – has an unfortunate precedent in French history.

Political scientist Françoise Vergès, who chairs Global South studies at the House of Human Sciences in Paris, wrote about incidents of forced abortion and sterilization in the French colony of Réunion in her book Le Ventre des Femmes (The Belly of Women), which was released earlier this year. On her native island located in the Indian Ocean, 30 women filed plaintthat doctors at Saint-Benoît clinichad performed sterilizations and abortions without their knowledge. The practice likely occurred hundreds or thousands of times by the 1971 trial, according to Vergès.

This is where Macron’s phrase rings a bell. Vergès explained that in Réunion there were “huge posters beside the roads depicting women followed by eight children, with writing in large letters: ‘Enough!’”

Vergès can hardly be considered a pro-life fanatic. Her father, Paul Vergès, founded the island’s chapter of the Communist Party, and her book’s subtitle is “Capitalism, Racialization, Feminism.”

It takes a certain intellectual dexterity to blame what Vergès describes as “mass campaigns for birth control and contraception … organized by the public authorities” on capitalism. Only in the rarest of cases, such as modern day Venezuela, is mass sterilization voluntary (and that, too, stems from the failures of socialism). It may be more profitable to ask whether paternalistic leaders – of either sex – have any legitimate authority to declare when women have had “enough” children.

Citizens, though, must tell government when it has “enough” power. Only after the State has centralized money, resources, and medical services into its own hands can it exercise an passing power of life and death – something the Judeo-Christian West sees as a divine prerogative. It is no coincidence that the world’s leading practitioners of forced abortion are China and North Korea.

World Population Day should be an opportunity for people of faith to celebrate each life “fearfully and wonderfully made” in the image of God and to promote those structures and systems that will allow them, and their posterity, to thrive.

children. Simon Berry. This photo has been cropped.CC BY-SA 2.0.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Joe Biden’s taxpayer-funded abortion order is government at its worst
Today with one stroke of the pen, President Joe Biden vitiated three unalienable rights. Biden signed a presidential memorandum order forcing U.S. taxpayers, including those with religious objections, to fund abortion-on-demand and abortion advocacy around the world. In 1984, President Ronald Reagan enacted the Mexico City Policy, which excluded foreign non-governmental agencies that “perform or actively promote abortion as a method of family planning” from receiving U.S. Agency for International Development funds. President Donald Trump’s Protecting Life in Global Health...
Economic policy should focus on economic issues
With any new presidential es new policies. That’s part of the electoral calculus made by the American people every four years. Different presidents have different priorities. No one expects otherwise. That said, it’s reasonable to anticipate certain consistencies. National security policy focuses on protecting America from foreign threats; its first priority is not gender equality. Similarly the Department of Energy’s main goal is to ensure that America has sufficient energy supplies; it’s not responsible for developing educational curricula. In other...
Chicago’s teacher standoff shows the injustice of public-sector unions
At the beginning of the year, Chicago Public Schools were scheduled to reopen by the end of January. Yet just days before the launch, members of the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU) decided otherwise, with a sizable majority voting to delay in-person learning against the wishes of the mayor, city council, school district, local medical professionals, and countless parents and taxpayers. It’s the latest tale in a growing genre of disputes that stretches from New York City to San Fransisco, in...
Empirical maverick: ‘Thomas Sowell: Common Sense in a Senseless World’ (watch)
“You’re about to meet one of the greatest minds of the past half-century,” says Jason Riley as he introduces his new documentary about economist Thomas Sowell. For once, a host’s description of his subject does not disappoint. The love of Riley, the author of the Wall Street Journal’s “Upward Mobility” column, for Sowell’s ideas shapes every aspect of Thomas Sowell: Common Sense in a Senseless World. The 57-minute documentary, which is drawn largely from Riley’s ing book, Maverick: A Biography...
Acton Institute ranks as a global think tank leader in 2020 report
The Acton Institute is not only one of the world’s most influential thought leaders, according to a new report, but our annual Acton University ranks as the best conference presented by any think tank in the world that consistently supports a free economy. The University of Pennsylvania released its “2020 Global Go To Think Tank Index Report” on Thursday. Once again, Acton ranked well in the categories with which it has e most closely identified. This year, the report feted...
The GameStop squeeze and the politics of envy
The GameStop squeeze is still alive, if fading. After jumping 1,500% in a matter of weeks, the stock has dropped and stalled, with some retail investors still holding out for another surge. But while the dust has not yet settled, the popular narrative already seems to be firmly fixed: This was a battle between David and Goliath, a revolution sparked by the spunky rebels of Reddit against the hedge fund know-it-alls who have long deserved euppance. Whatever the end results,...
Tesla’s Bitcoin buyout may end the reign of unjust money
On Monday, the automaker Tesla Inc. announced that it had acquired $1.5 billion in Bitcoin and may accept the cryptocurrency as a form of payment in the near future. The business intelligence pany MicroStrategy began purchasing large amounts of Bitcoin last August. The pany Square made a smaller but still substantial $50 million Bitcoin acquisition in last October. What is behind this trend of large institutional investments in Bitcoin, and what does it tell us about the state of the...
Organism, institution, and the black church
Some years back, I helped put together a small, edited volume intended as a primer on some of the ways in which the relationship between the church and political life has, and ought to be, understood. In The Church’s Social Responsibility, we aimed in part to apply the Kuyperian distinction between understanding the church as a formal institution and as a dynamic, organic body to questions of social justice. “Sometimes words have two meanings,” as Led Zeppelin has put it,...
Denmark’s government wants to read your sermons
In the name of stamping out domestic subversion, politicians in Denmark have drafted a bill that would force clergy who preach in a foreign language to translate their sermons into Danish and send a copy to the government for review. Had they tried, lawmakers could not e up with a bill that is simultaneously so invasive and ineffective. The bill’s stated purpose is to “enlarge the transparency of religious events and sermons in Denmark, when these are given in a...
How the $15 minimum wage accelerates community decline
As Congress debates the specifics of yet another stimulus bill, President Joe Biden and Sen. Bernie Sanders continue to push for the inclusion a $15 federal minimum wage – a policy that is only likely to prolong pandemic pain for America’s most vulnerable businesses and workers. As if to confirm such fears, large corporations like Amazon and Walmart have been quick to voice their support for the increase. “It’s time to raise the federal minimum wage,” writes Amazon’s Jay Carney,...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved