T. Nirmala Devi. Population Growth and Development in SAARC.
Mahmood, Naushin
T. Nirmala Devi. Population Growth and Development in SAARC. New
Delhi: South Asian Publishers, 1996. Hardbound. Indian Rs 160.00.
The complex relationship between population growth and
socio-economic. development has long been debated. The arguments about
the direction and causality of the relationship between population
growth and development indicators remain inconclusive. The available
literature on the subject reflects three main ideological groups.
Nationalists see population growth as a stimulus to economic
development, whereas" the neo-Malthusians see it the other way
round. The Marxists, however, see the population problem being solved in
terms of development through a socialist model.
The author of this study appears to take the neo-Malthusian and
neo-classical approach where population growth must slow down to promote
economic and social development. The justification for undertaking such
an approach is that, as the statistics show, the existing population
growth rates in the SAARC area are unsustainable at least for the near
future, and pose a major development challenge in the region. In this
context, an attempt has been made to pull together information on the
population of the SAARC countries and assess its negative externalities
for development, in terms of their implications for education, health,
employment, and environment policies. The main objective outlined in the
study is to examine how and to what extent the size, age structure, and
growth of population have a determining role in the choice and execution
of development strategies of the SAARC economies. For this purpose,
cross-country data from secondary sources have been used for substantive
evidence to support the arguments.
Comprising six chapters in all, the study begins with a brief
introduction to the issue of population and development interactions.
Chapter two presents historical trends and components of population
growth using available data for six countries in the SAARC region. The
description is useful for observing the population profile of these
countries and demonstrating how each country has moved along the path of
demographic transition since the 1950s. The next chapter deals with
issues of population growth in terms of the urban-rural variations,
incidence of poverty, and performance of vital rates in each country,
while the second half of the chapter is devoted to assessing the effects
of selected socio-economic variables on population parameters in a
regression analysis. The interrelations between population growth and
development indicators in the SAARC context are analysed in Chapter
Four, followed by a review of population policies and programmes in each
country in the next chapter. Some concluding observations and policy
implications which emerge from this analysis are summed up in the last
chapter.
A key question examined in the study is that a large and growing
populations in the SAARC countries continues to constrain economic and
social development, a phenomenon which has depressed the per capita
income growth in the region. The author argues that the population
problem is further aggravated when the policies related to population
control, human resource development, and poverty alleviation are not
implemented successfully. However, a good deal of literature accumulated
on the economy and society now clearly suggests that the economic and
social problems and related policy issues in such countries exist due
largely to weak governance, unstable political conditions, and
fluctuations in economic growth, which, in turn, increasingly depend
upon international forces. These need to be taken into account in any
analysis of development policies.
In Chapter Two, where the author employs the regression technique
to determine the role of socio-economic variables in demographic change,
adult literacy is spelled out as a significant factor in bringing down
fertility and mortality indicators--a-finding reinforcing an already
established fact. However, because of the cause and effect relationship
between the two sets of variables, the statistical method used is
inadequate for examining the interrelationship in a robust manner. The
multicollinearity and interdependence among the variables and their
structural variations among countries limit the estimation of a
parsimonious model. The statistical analysis done thus raises many
questions about the utility and specificity of the models used, and adds
little to reveal the complexities of the relationship between population
and development indicators.
A major limitation of the study is the low quality and variation in
the reliability of data and statistics on key variables. In the case of
Pakistan, outdated figures on population parameters are reported. These
may have produced misleading results and policy conclusions. Indeed,
limitations imposed on the analysis by the lack of data is an issue
highlighted in the beginning and at many points in subsequent chapters.
This situation perhaps calls for making a strong case about the need for
collecting improved and reliable data on economic and demographic
indicators in these countries before substantive and policy conclusions
can be drawn.
This book, however, will appeal to researchers and policy-makers to
enhance their knowledge about the population and development
issues," those who can utilise a large quantity of information
collected from various sources and who can assess and identify major
weaknesses of population policies and programmes of individual SAARC
countries. Although one will find uneveness and imbalance in the quality
and coverage of information in these chapters, the book is a useful
contribution to a topic that continues to be important to the
demographic community as well as the policy-makers in the context of
development of the SAARC countries.
Naushin Mahmood
Pakistan Institute of Development Economics, Islamabad.