Geographer
Junior Member
Red_Sword, you're right, this is an important debate.
Second, a smaller population means a less diverse economy and more reliance on foreigners. Maybe this won't matter if everyone is on good terms with China, but in reality this is not likely to happen. Even now China faces an arms embargo and their attempts at foreign investment are often blocked for national security reasons. A larger percentage of China's economy under one regulatory roof is probably more economically efficient. A larger population benefits from the synergies of everyone specializing in their own field and trading with each other.
Third, China has been good at leveraging its huge size to win favorable trade terms. Their internal market is so big, with so much potential, that they can demand technology transfers from a foreign company as a condition of their entering the China market, or winning a government contract. Sharing that technology with Chinese companies has allowed China to develop extraordinarily fast and raise living standards faster than most in the West predicted. Foreign companies can afford to ignore Cameroon or Laos if they play hardball and demand foreign technology, they cannot ignore China.
The reason poor families remain poor is lack of capital investment, ie. education. The role of government is to provide all children a strong education to allow them to achieve regardless of their family background. Investing more in education will be more expensive in the short-run but pay off in the long-run. The work and taxes paid by an educated worker--provided they get a good job in an advanced economy--outweigh the education costs. So if you want to reduce poverty, invest more in education and continue building an advanced, diverse economy. Don't limit the number of children. That's short-run thinking."How poor families REMAIN POOR, generation after generation." to you, but I simply say, cheap labor ain't the way out. Those ALREADY POOR familiese, having more birth than recommended (one Boy, or maximun two child) is simply statistically showing - THEY ARE GETTING POORER, if not remain poor, generation after generation. Cause the extra human power they produce, do not getting their family anywhere, nor getting China anywhere close to "resonable" welfare coverage.
Population growth rate and age structure affect living standards in several ways. First is the issue of aging and dependency ratios. As people get older, their productivity declines and eventually falls to zero when they retire. Who supports them? In developed nations the government supports them through taxes on the working age population. In under-developed nations like China, their children support them. With fewer children per retiree, that is greater burden on the children. An aging population eventually lowers living standards because of the need to support a large number of elderly.Population size dose not (THAT) matters, the living standard dose.
Second, a smaller population means a less diverse economy and more reliance on foreigners. Maybe this won't matter if everyone is on good terms with China, but in reality this is not likely to happen. Even now China faces an arms embargo and their attempts at foreign investment are often blocked for national security reasons. A larger percentage of China's economy under one regulatory roof is probably more economically efficient. A larger population benefits from the synergies of everyone specializing in their own field and trading with each other.
Third, China has been good at leveraging its huge size to win favorable trade terms. Their internal market is so big, with so much potential, that they can demand technology transfers from a foreign company as a condition of their entering the China market, or winning a government contract. Sharing that technology with Chinese companies has allowed China to develop extraordinarily fast and raise living standards faster than most in the West predicted. Foreign companies can afford to ignore Cameroon or Laos if they play hardball and demand foreign technology, they cannot ignore China.
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