09 Chapter2
09 Chapter2
09 Chapter2
Review of Literature
degradatiop of forests and the nexus among are plenty. In this connection several
studies have also discussed the importance of forest resources on the economy
especially for those who depend mostly on such resources for their sustenance and
therefore the effect of degradation of such resources. Discussions have been going on
to have an idea about the relationships among those aforesaid variables and also to
fmd out the other factors that interfere in the interlinkages among those three. The
question always arises that if the relation exists, what is the pattern of such relation
and whether it differs from one region to another or from local level to regional and
global level? People have been struggling to establish the exact pattern of
interconnections for long period of time and to formulate models linking one with
another through their physical, technological, social and economic linkages that may
lay down the basis for providing a meaningful solution to the observed problems and
avoid any disturbance that may lead to loss of environmental balance and economic
collapse.
Plethora of studies are available on the topic and after going through those
numerous literatures one may fmd it very difficult and confusing to conclude whether
Similarly, there are debates regarding to what extent poverty is responsible for
population and human resource, poverty, food security, environment and resource
there regarding the problem of management and control of natural resources and
whether the limitation of resources can affect the growth process or not.
resource use as observed from earlier literatures are both ways. But from the available
studies, we get the conflicting arguments on how population growth affects and is
affected by the environmental changes. Historically human action has often been
blamed for its adverse impact on environment and resource condition. More than two
Centuries back, Malthus (1798) was concerned about the growth of population to
outrun the available food supply. The negative impact on the nature due to increasing
pressure caused by the population growth and natural logic of diminishing marginal
Population. In Malthusian view, the population growth would undo itself through its
rising pressure on natural resources like land, water, forest and thereby declining the
etc; ultimately leading to a low level equilibrium. The pessimistic views have also
been found in the writing of Ehrlich (1968), Meadows et al (1972), Ehrlich and
Ehrlich ( 1990) etc., who were of the opinion that the world would be falling short of
critical natural resources after some time if population continues to grow. They
argued that if the existing patterns of population growth and resource use continued, it
would lead to environmental break down and economic collapse. Even the renewable
natural resources like forest, fishery can be exhausted if the population exceeds the
16
carrying capacity and thus rate of extraction is higher than the rate of regeneration.
Therefore a balance between the population growth and resource use is well
warranted for the maintenance of ecological balance and sustainable growth of the
economies.
On the other hand, Julian Simon (1981, 1996), Simon and Myers (1994), were
of the opinion that population growth is not a danger, but a benefit. According to
them, the world is not running at the risk of shortage of resources. Rather, population
resources through their effort and improving knowledge, innovation, etc. Human
being continuously learns how to overcome the bottlenecks imposed by the nature.
Johnson (2000) also tried to prove through historical evidences that in spite of huge
population growth in the last century the level of well-being has increased manifold.
Their arguments derive supports from the fact that at the beginning of
Christian era i.e., 1 A.D. world population was around 2.5 crore and growing at
around 0.04 per cent per year. Now the world's population passed 6 billion and
growing at an annual rate of around 1.5 per cent (Tietenberg, 2003; De, 2006b). Still
now, Malthusian catastrophe that was expected to happen much before and the world
to return to a subsistence level have yet not been observed. The progress was
growth in population. In 1761 Robert Wallace also argued that the progress would
visited in December, 2005). The interesting point to note is that at the time Malthus
wrote, most societies were constrained by the agricultural limits and the world
population was what India's population today. Still now we did not observe any such
17
catastrophe, rather we are living on an average in a better world today with better food
security, fewer famines, lower mortality rates, enhanced life expectancy, better
amenities and access to resources and most of those have been possible due to the
food insecurity we observe today are mostly localised and occur largely due to war,
political unrest, market distortions, loss of entitlement and sometimes due to crop
At the same time we observe rising pollution level at many parts of the world,
global worming, acid rain, ozone layer depletion, declining forest resources, rising
mortality due to lack of access to safe drinking water, falling long term productivity
of soil, loss of biodiversity etc. Those may be not only due to the growth of
population but also for the application of advanced technology (but not environment
"The rapid growth of knowledge has resulted both from the growth of world's
population and the increase in the percentage of that population that is now
able to devote time and energy to the creation of knowledge" (Johnson, 2000,
p. 13).
Johnson's argument may be partly true at the global level but not at the
regional level. If it is certain that population growth helps development in the field of
science and technology and thereby innovations, more scientific inventions would
have occurred in Asia and more so in China and India (where more than one third of
world's population live and the region has experienced much higher population
growth than any other region in the world) and not in Western Europe. It may
activities i.e., the level of human quality, which is defmitely higher in European
happened may not lead to uniform development across the globe that has always
below the carrying capacity may raise the labour supply, contribute more to the
production, better management of resources and thus well being. In other words, if we
accept the notion of carrying capacity and the level of population is well below that
their sub-optimal level with given technology and other parameters. If it crosses that
limit, it would lead to rise in pressure on and thus depletion of resources. Defmitely,
technological development enhances the scope for use of any resource, its
productivity and the capability to tolerate and bear more people (i.e., enhance carrying
capacity) over time but there is uncertainty whether the same can grow at the desired
pace all the time and uniformly. It also varies with the variation in consumption
basket that changes along with the changes in standard of living and adjusted by the
people with technological invention and innovation (De, op. cit). However the
concept of carrying capacity is of very little relevance to those who have been
optimistic (Simon, Johnson, Solow, Hartwick etc.) and think each and every
constraint would be overcome if everybody is free and the markets are allowed to play
their role, ensuring that is of course a remote possibility even under globalisation.
Simon had cited the examples of some countries like, Netherlands, Taiwan,
Singapore etc. where the population density have been very high yet developing at
faster rates compared to many other countries (especially African) with lower density
19
of population and thus population may not be a constraint. At the same time we
observe the North-Eastern part of India that suffers from declining forest resources
population density is still well below the national average and poverty level declined
over time). That may also be due to lack of alternative opportunity and also because,
the growing population depends more on natural resources and their traditional
agricultural practices. Dreze and Sen (1989) have also identified the incidence of
poverty and not the population growth as the principal reason for the degradation of
resources. They also cited the example of countries like Israel, Hong Kong and
Portugal where per capita food production declined during the decade of 1980s but
countries were developed and people had the entitlement to afford to buy imported
Bhagat and Hassan (1994) have shown that the changes in maJor
environmental parameters and degradation of resources in the world during the last
Century especially after 1950 was not only due to the rapid growth of population but
also owing to the escalation of consumption of fossil fuel, industrial production and
the growth of the economy, which have been much higher than the rate of growth of
technology and the later one is much more important than the former one (Macneill,
1989, p. 105). The rise in per capita consumption of such resources in North America
and Western Europe have been much higher than that of other parts of the world,
though the rate of population growth was comparatively lower in North America and
Western Europe. Bartelmus (1986, p. 25) also argued that the increasing demand for
20
agricultural land and various forest products due to rising population as well as
consumption behaviour of the people would lead to destruction of almost all the
Therefore population may be one of the reasons but not the only reason for the
degradation of forest. Ownership pattern may be the other reason. If the resource
and hence subject to rapid degradation (Hardin, 1968). On the other hand if the
resource is owned by any private individual he/she will use it as if monopoly and the
resource will be seriously under-utilised (Buchanan and Yoon, 2000). Though a major
part of forest in Meghalaya is under the community ownership, in most cases there is
open access;
By using panel data and regression analysis, Cropper and Griffiths (1994)
showed that economic growth would not necessarily solve the problem of degradation
of forest. Also higher population growth leads to higher deforestation and thus in their
opinion, controlling population growth is the best method of reducing the rate of
failure arises out of undefined property right, zero private cost of deforestation and as
most of the poor people has no property right they do not have the incentive to make
Moreover, poorer are often blamed for the degradation of the forest. But they
are not always responsible for that, as in many cases they do not have the property
right and thus limited access. In some cases even because of their indigenous
knowledge and for sustainability, they are found to better manage arid invest in such
resources and whatever they extract is for their survival. It is rather the non-poor who
have better access to such resources, damage much of the forest resource. The rich
21
overexploit the forest due to their profit motive where as the vulnerable poorer are
highly affected due to such degradation (World Bank, 1987 & 1988).
Goodstein (1999) has argued that the poorer has a tendency to have more
children and spent very less on birth control for their future security. Therefore the
family size and population growth is rapid in many underdeveloped and developing
countries. The rising population even for sustainable activities enhance pressure on
Boyce (1994) also argued that it is not poverty but a combination of greed,
countries. Many studies also pointed towards logging activities as the principal
Africa and South America (Somanathan, 1991 ; Anderson, 1989; Repetto, 1990;
Cropper and Griffiths, 1994). During 1980s also in Meghalaya to a certain extent~ due
to attractive benefit in the logging ind~es many of the community forests were
Also there are studies that show that agricultural and pastoral encroachment
has been the primary forces behind unsustainable deforestation and logging has been
the catalyst. The infrastructure (road etc) developed due to the expansion of logging
(1987), Cruz and Gills (1990) argue that shifting cultivators, agricultural and pastoral
encroachment in the wake of logging trails were the major causes of deforestation.
Jaganathan (1989) however highlighted that market were the main: factors causing
1
It came out during the discussion of the Author with some District Council Members in East and West
Khasi Hills Districts.
22
such land to estates and mixed gardens. Of course poorer were involved in
landlords.
FAO (1993) study also concluded that agricultural expansion driven primarily
by population pressures was the principal cause for tropical deforestation in the past.
people to move into these areas contributed to the conversion of large tracts of
forestlands into permanent agricultural lands. Also FAO (2005) study shows that the
highest rate of deforestation in South America especially in Brazil in the world during
2000-2005 was due to the expansion of soybean plantations and cattle· ranches.
During the same period the second largest net loss in forests were observed in Africa,
particularly in Nigeria and Sudan, which was largely due to the subsistence activities.
· Southgate (1988) as well as Ives and Messerli (1988) also cited population
the Amazon basin, of course that caused expansion of agriculture and other
subsistence activities. Also some other studies show that poverty intensified
population growth are partly responsible for large-scale deforestation in those regions.
There are large number of studies on the aspects of population, poverty and
among population, poverty and other indicators of human resource development with
The flow chart-1 itself explains how the incidence of poverty, population growth and
Flow chart-I
influx of people from the neighbouring countries, Bangladesh and Nepal. Singh
(1987, p. 146) pointed out that those immigrants in many cases are responsible for the
Joshi (1990, p. 147) also argued that poverty and population growth has
affected the economic growth and development of the state of Meghalaya. He further
argued that due to high rate of population growth (over 2% per year), the pattern of
economic growth could not be improved and also the living conditions of the people.
It is true that more land, water and forest resources are required to feed the
growing population and to take care of their welfare in a variety of ways. At the same
time, excessive exploitation is counter-productive, and not only suffers from the law
of diminishing return, but poses the risk of complete exhaustion of non renewable
resources and the depletion of renewable resources for in excess of their regenerative
extension and distribution mechanisms of inputs and products and· adequate incentives
to promote rapid diffusion. Thus, while slower population growth would help
safeguard the resource base, it would certainly not enough and not even the most
critical change that is needed. Commercial exploitation, often to meet the demand, has
profits can be made from sales of the accumulated stock of a resource that reproduces
slowly; whenever property rights over a resource are uncertain, so that conservation is
not in the interest of a single proprietor; or whenever new technologies make the costs
of exploitation insensitive to the level of the remaining stock. Although the pressures
of poverty and rapid population growth on resources are intense, abundance also
encourages the idea that resource destruction entails no permanent harm and thus
leads to unplanned extraction. Whereas, perceived scarcity in many cases evoke social
mechanisms to limit and regulate resource use (Swamp, et al, 1992, p. 190). Swarup
et al further argued that the most important step to preserve the resource base is the
ways to population growth, which can overwhelm the social institution and traditional
for commercial exploitation without the controls would cause more environmental
Singh and Tripathi enlisted that forest degradation may begin with subtle
25
chemical characteristics of the soil and then gradually lead to damages in all biotic
and abiotic components. They further said that the increasing human and cattle
irrigation, road building, food production, etc., directly or indirectly cause reduction
Banerjee argued that the rapid increase in world population and its effect on
food production and more particularly the food supply poses a severe threat to
mankind. In India particularly the growing population is the root cause of poverty,
Sen in his study mentioned that the growth of population is the cause of
several problems such as it intensifies food problem, reduces the quality of life of the
people and also reduces the happiness of the human mce (Sen, 1994, p. 53). Dasgupta
also identified the degradation of forest that affects the environment and the resources
available for economic development. The main causes of forest degradation are the
institutional fashion and poverty. He argued that when population size is higher
relatively to the resources available, the more urgent is the need to control the growth
of population (Dasgupta, et al, 1994, pp. 39-40). At the local level, the combination of
degradation -for example, rising population pressure leads to farming to hill sides and
other marginal areas causing ·more soil erosion or heavy cutting of forests for fuel, etc.
Sengupta ( 1994) also described that the unbalanced growth of population and
food grains production can only be balanced by bringing in food grains in the state of
Meghalaya from the other parts of the country, thereby increasing the dependence of
26
the state on the other states. Moreover, economic stagnation ofthe state ofMeghalaya
in the face of increasing population could only bring down the quality of life of the
masses. This increases the hardship of the common man that they have to face in
every sphere of their daily life. This has the dangerous potentiality of not only
creating the economic development of the state but also aggravate social and political
Patil (2000, pp. 147-148) also argued for the introduction of the environmental
aspects into the planning and development. Along with effective conservation and
that rapid population growth can be exacerbated by the mutually reinforcing effects of
poverty and environmental damage. The poorer are both victims and agents of
resort to cultivating erosion-prone hill sides and moving into tropical forest areas
where crop yields on cleared fields usually drop sharply after just a few years
(Rajalakshmi, 2000, p. 219). Thus, the increase of population has put natural
resources and the environment under pressure. If population continues to rise, the
pressure on natural resources will probably become more because the unexploited
resource base is reduced and the costs of bringing new lands under cultivation will
become higher.
Devi et al (2000) also argued that the rapid population growth places
deforestation, land degradation and soil erosion is increasing the numbers of those
living in extreme poverty (Devi, et al, 2000, p. 91). Population Explosion in India and
also in North East India was either through high reproductive rate of the population or
27
through migrating of population from the neighbouring areas, which has been a
problem for the country as a whole (Banerjee, 2002, p. 19). Realising the negative
launched family planning programmes. But in many countries, including India, family
social, economic and even political system of the nation (Dutta, 2002, p. 143). On the
The rate of growth and size of population in the states ofNorth-East India has
As a result of this, the region is experiencing depletion of flora, fauna and soil,
fragmentation of cultivated land, rise in import of food grains from other regions and
Lamin argued that the fast growth of population in the state of Meghalaya
affects the environment and forest resources available. The demand for timbers, fuel-
wood and other commercial uses of forests continued to rise rapidly. Thi~ has also
caused adverse ecological change. In some cases, forests have suffered a great loss
and the tribal economy has been badly affected. Thus, there is an urgent need to
review the relationship between forest and life, culture and economy of people
degradation is at the very centre of interaction between man and what he consumes
further pointed out that nowhere is the evil conjunction of the positive and negative
factors more visible in all the fury than in the extensive forest-cum-tribal population
tracts, whether on the plains or in the hills, where the lack of the non-commercial
domestic fuel policy, coupled with the demands of cultivation, industry, housing and
poverty through denudation of forest cover. Thus, the rapid growth of population in
such an undeveloped state like Meghalaya will have an adverse impact on the
environment because most of the people are poor and living in the rural areas. They
have to depend on forest resources and forest products so that they could be able to
substitute and meet their basic needs and requirements of their livelihood. However,
their heavy dependence on forest resources has resulted to the loss of forest cover in
the state. Even in Shillong, the Capital of Meghalaya, we have seen that
indiscriminate felling of trees for construction purposes leading to the loss of forest
2000, p. 184).
attributed to the commercial logging and cultivation purposes, which consequently led
in the North Eastern Region is due to indiscriminate felling and cutting of trees,
shifting cultivation and mining and increased human activities towards massive
utilisation of natural resources, particularly forest, the climate and ecology has been
adversely affected.
29
Sengupta also pointed out that the adverse effect of population growth on the
land man ratio. The per capita availability of land for cultivation thus declines with
rising population thereby retarding the development of the economy. This results in
raising the level of poverty, giving rise to the problem of une~ployment as well as
Datta is of the opinion that the high rate of growth of population is sure to
create pressure on the limited availability of land in the state of Meghalaya and at the
same time leads to large-scale depletion of forest coverage, when associated with
unplanned and uneconomic use of them for shifting cultivation (Datta, 2000, p. 174).
Purkayastha (2000, p. 184) opined that in and around Shillong, the Capital of
Meghalaya, indiscriminate felling of trees for construction purposes along with rapid
growth of population leads to environmental degradation. This loss has occurred not
only because man had too many needs but also because he was too greedy and
The interactions of the factors .that influence deforestation are very complex
and policies designed to address the problem should take care to examine the local
context and target factors that mostly affect rates of deforestation in a given area. The
interactions that contribute to this process. This call for multisectoral approaches that
encompass all four drivers: people, poverty, plunder, and policy (Nash, 2003, pp. 43-
45). Potrykowska (2003) also said that environmental damage has several sources:
poverty among some parts of the population and rising affluence among others,
and urbanisation. Poverty is clearly a major factor. She further pointed out that in their
struggle to survive; poor people often have no choice but to destroy their surrounding
forests by cutting down trees, overworking the soil, overgrazing rangelands, and over-
fishing. The efforts of the poor people to escape from poverty also damage the
environment. For example, timber and cash crops are exploited beyond sustainable
levels, and mineral supplies are rapidly depleted in order to earn quick revenue.
She further argued that the developing countries are facing the environmental
problems that threaten the efforts to improve the standard of living, that worsen health
conditions and that reduce income from agriculture and other sources. In rural areas,
pressure to grow both more food and cash crops has led to massive losses of topsoil,
trees, plants and animals. It has increased congestion in towns and urban places,
industrial expansion and also increased of air and water pollution. Although some
consider that this environmental stress is the price of development, in fact widespread
environmental change is likely to hinper the development efforts and worsen the
Kuri (2005) by using his village level survey data has shown that around one-
fourth of the income of rural households in Arunachal Pradesh comes from nearby
forest resources. However both poor and non-poor people earn substantial material
showed that extent of extraction by the families depends positively on their family
size and inversely with the distance of forest from the residence of the families.
well as variation in per capita SDP, De (2006, op. cit.) has found a significantly
forest. However taking queue from the EKC principle or inverted-U hypothesis one
can say that the degradation first increases with the rise in income (i.e, in the early
stage of development) and after reaching a peak level it declines with further
development (Grossman and Krueger, 1995). He opined that the states of North East
India were still low developed having lower per capita income and higher incidence
of poverty especially rural poverty than the national average and hence, they were on
the rising phase of EKC. Moreover, whatever poverty reduction had taken place it
was at the cost of forest resources, which were easily accessible by the people.
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