From the Economist:
http://www.economist.com/world/inter...ry_id=11049284
Hmm, Bretton Woods ended in the 70's. There was an oil shock in the 70's. Coincidence?
Hmm, isn't that nearly half of the 6.65 billion people estimated to be around right now?
I'm guessing they aren't going to have many babies, or many surviving babies.
So all you rich-country, BRIC, and whatnot better start fornicating right quick to make sure the world continues to grow in population.
http://www.economist.com/world/inter...ry_id=11049284
Usually, a food crisis is clear and localised. The harvest fails, often because of war or strife, and the burden in the affected region falls heavily on the poorest. This crisis is different. It is occurring in many countries simultaneously, the first time that has happened since the early 1970s.
“We are the canary in the mine,” says Josette Sheeran, the head of the UN's World Food Programme, the largest distributor of food aid.
...
“For the middle classes,” says Ms Sheeran, “it means cutting out medical care. For those on $2 a day, it means cutting out meat and taking the children out of school. For those on $1 a day, it means cutting out meat and vegetables and eating only cereals. And for those on 50 cents a day, it means total disaster.”
...
“For the middle classes,” says Ms Sheeran, “it means cutting out medical care. For those on $2 a day, it means cutting out meat and taking the children out of school. For those on $1 a day, it means cutting out meat and vegetables and eating only cereals. And for those on 50 cents a day, it means total disaster.”
Just over 1 billion people live on $1 a day, the benchmark of absolute poverty; 1.5 billion live on $1 to $2 a day.
I'm guessing they aren't going to have many babies, or many surviving babies.
So all you rich-country, BRIC, and whatnot better start fornicating right quick to make sure the world continues to grow in population.
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