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Why Mullah's are always giving you nightmares and sleepless nights....Its HARAM in Islam to do population control, said the street Mullah
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Why Mullah's are always giving you nightmares and sleepless nights....Its HARAM in Islam to do population control, said the street Mullah
Pakistan,India,Bangladesh, have a whole lot of mouths to feed. Pry climate change isn't real.
see The Maya Collapse.So far I have not seen any nation vanishing due to population explosion.
Pakistan,India,Bangladesh, have a whole lot of mouths to feed. Pry climate change isn't real.
The problem has never been the increase of population, neither the scarcity of resources but rather how resources are made available to the larger number.
Full stop laga do ab sir ji. Just to even it out @Armstrong has decided not to sire any heirWell... for me.... it's bachay chay (6) hee achay!
We have been well aware of this problem. You won't have to worry about India.Pakistan,India,Bangladesh, have a whole lot of mouths to feed. Pry climate change isn't real.
Unfortunately praying will not demolish the reality of climate change...or the scarcity of resources. All I can pray for is probably common sense and a little bit of self respect.
Best way to control population is to increase cost of living as we did in Norway. It actually worked. Currently we have only 5 million people in Norway, most of them very healthy, wealthy and wise
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It's out, even the Pope has said it that there's no need to "breed like rabbits". He was, of course, addressing the Catholics, but he could well have been talking to Pakistanis.
Pakistan's population explosion may become a threat to the very existence of the nation
The fact that there will be 342 million people in Pakistan by 2050 is giving many people sleepless nights. For years now, demographers have been trying to get the attention of the policy makers, showing them that Pakistan needs to slow population growth.
Today, the signs are all over — perpetual power outages, current petrol imbroglio, 25 million out of school kids, and polio cases through the roof.
Dr Farid Midhet, a demographer heading Jhpiego, who sees a clear link between poverty, inequality and population, is worried that unless the government invests in the young Pakistani population (approximately 56 per cent of the population in 2014) the latter may become a threat to the very existence of the nation.
"If young people are unable to achieve their dreams, their energies may be directed towards undesirable activities," he warned.
Demographic Dividend
Pakistan's population is growing by around two per cent a year but the economy has failed to keep pace with the population growth.
Demographic dividend is defined as a one-time window of opportunity of accelerated economic growth; it begins with changes in the age structure of a country's population as it transitions from high-to-low birth and death rates, which are called the demographic dividend.
Many see this population explosion quite differently
They say Pakistan is well-placed as it has a young and rapidly urbanised population in an ageing world.
"Pakistan is going through a youth bulge in its demographic transition. Data shows that the youth (aged 15-24) is better educated than the older generations and have lower fertility rates and are increasingly urban," said acclaimed economist, Asad Sayeed, director and senior researcher at the Collective of Social Science Research, a Karachi based research and consulting organisation.
However, he said, the setback to harnessing these factors is the "significant inequality, not so much across income levels but across genders and across urban and rural areas."
But accelerated economic gains are not around the corner, at least not yet. And with over half the population living on less than two dollars a day, something is not quite right.
"While investment in human capital is necessary, it is more important that this investment is geared towards women and towards the rural areas," said Sayeed.
Having a large population of young employable people will not automatically translate into economic prosperity.
While the changing population structure is the necessary first step, investment in health, education, sound economic policies, and good governance will result in accelerated economic growth.