Earlier this month, we held our ‘Boom or Bust?’ conference, examining how demographic changes can help develop an economy which delivers wellbeing and lasting security on a healthy planet. The conference was accompanied by the launch of our major new report on ageing (see below), a comprehensive challenge to the prevailing narrative that ageing populations spell economic disaster, and a call for common sense solutions. As at any worthwhile conference, there were differences of opinion,
fresh perspectives and positive challenges. But overall, there was much common ground in our international speakers’ analysis of the issues and their solutions.
Keynote speaker, Dr Eliya Zulu of the African Institute for Development Policy, followed up with a warm endorsement, "Thank you very much for inviting me to give the keynote to the 2021 Population Matters Conference. The work that Population Matters does is very critical for achieving sustainable development and you provide an unparalleled platform for divergent views on a wide range of population, environment and development issues. …[I] will be happy to explore ways in which AFIDEP and Population Matters
can collaborate on various ventures." Dr Leticia Appiah of the National Population Council of Ghana affirmed the benefits that access to family planning brings for women individually and societies collectively, “What we really need is to slow population growth and have zero population growth [everywhere]”.
Putting those statements into practice, we’re partnering with grassroots Guatemalan organisation Na’leb’ak in supporting adolescent girls in rural regions to make
informed life decisions and choices - over 65,000 pregnancies were registered to girls aged between 10-19 years old in the first half of this year. PM will be promoting the additional benefits to our environment at COP26 in Glasgow, spurred by Lord Adair Turner, former chair of the UK’s Climate Change Committee, who wrote the foreword to our report on population ageing, “It is a facile statement to say that population growth has really nothing to do with climate change". - Robin Maynard, Director, Population Matters |