Saving lives does promote family planning, in a sense.
The excess growth caused by reducing mortality is temporary; once people’s kids stop dying of random diseases all the time, they don’t feel the need to have so many for insurance, and birth rates fall as part of a demographic transition.
When you save lives the most major effects are preventing short-term suffering and saving society all the resources that it’s invested in the dying person.
The slower population growth that comes with improved education and standard of living is partly offset by increased per-capita resource demands. The quantity I don’t have a clear idea how to estimate is how much per-capita consumption (lets say in fractions of an American or European) is sufficient to achieve a stable population.
Saving lives does promote family planning, in a sense.
The excess growth caused by reducing mortality is temporary; once people’s kids stop dying of random diseases all the time, they don’t feel the need to have so many for insurance, and birth rates fall as part of a demographic transition.
When you save lives the most major effects are preventing short-term suffering and saving society all the resources that it’s invested in the dying person.
The slower population growth that comes with improved education and standard of living is partly offset by increased per-capita resource demands. The quantity I don’t have a clear idea how to estimate is how much per-capita consumption (lets say in fractions of an American or European) is sufficient to achieve a stable population.