Saturday, 20 Sep 2025
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • DMCA
logo logo
  • World
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Economy
  • Tech & Science
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • More
    • Education
    • Celebrities
    • Culture and Arts
    • Environment
    • Health and Wellness
    • Lifestyle
  • 🔥
  • Trump
  • House
  • VIDEO
  • White
  • ScienceAlert
  • Trumps
  • Watch
  • man
  • Health
  • Season
Font ResizerAa
American FocusAmerican Focus
Search
  • World
  • Politics
  • Crime
  • Economy
  • Tech & Science
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
  • More
    • Education
    • Celebrities
    • Culture and Arts
    • Environment
    • Health and Wellness
    • Lifestyle
Follow US
© 2024 americanfocus.online – All Rights Reserved.
American Focus > Blog > Tech and Science > After the Spike review: Provocative new book says we must persuade people to have more babies
Tech and Science

After the Spike review: Provocative new book says we must persuade people to have more babies

Last updated: July 10, 2025 4:05 am
Share
After the Spike review: Provocative new book says we must persuade people to have more babies
SHARE

crowd in a stadium

A large population may enable innovation and economies of scale

PHILIPPE MONTIGNY/iStockphoto/Get​ty Images

After the Spike
Dean Spears and Michael Geruso (Bodley Head (UK); Simon & Schuster (US))

Four-Fifths of all the humans who will ever be born may already have been born. The number of children being born worldwide each year peaked at 146 million in 2012 and has been falling overall ever since. This means that the world’s population will peak and start to fall around the 2080s.

This fall won’t be gradual. With birth rates already well below replacement levels in many countries including China and India, the world’s population will plummet as fast as it rose. In three centuries, there could be fewer than 2 billion people on Earth, claims a controversial new book.

“No future is more likely than that people worldwide choose to have too few children to replace their own generation. Over the long run, this would cause exponential population decline,” write economists Dean Spears and Michael Geruso in After the Spike: The risks of global depopulation and the case for people.

This, you might think, could be a good thing. Won’t it help solve many environmental issues facing us today? No, say the authors. Take climate change: their argument isn’t that population size doesn’t matter, but that it changes so slowly that other factors such as how fast the world decarbonises matter far more. The window of opportunity for lowering carbon dioxide emissions by reducing population has largely passed, they write.

Spears and Geruso also make the case that there are many benefits to having a large population. For instance, there is more innovation, and economies of scale make the manufacture of things like smartphones feasible. “We get to have nice phones only because we have a lot of neighbors on this planet,” they write.

See also  A new version of the periodic table could change how we measure time

So, in their view, our aim should be to stabilise world population rather than letting it plummet. The problem is we don’t know how, even with the right political will.

As we grow richer, we are more reluctant to abandon career and leisure opportuntiies to have children

While some government policies have had short-term effects, no country has successfully changed long-term population trends, argue the authors. Take China’s one-child policy. It is widely assumed to have helped reduce population growth – but did it? Spears and Geruso show unlabelled graphs of the populations of China and its neighbours before, during and after the policy was in place, and ask the reader which is China. There is no obvious difference.

Attempts to boost falling fertility rates have been no more successful, they say. Birth rates jumped after Romania banned abortion in 1966, but they soon started to fall again. Sweden has tried the carrot rather than the stick by heavily subsidising day care. But the fertility rate there has been falling even further below the replacement rate.

All attempts to boost fertility by providing financial incentives are likely to fail, Spears and Geruso argue. While people might say they are having fewer children because they cannot afford larger families, the global pattern is, in fact, that as people become richer they have fewer children.

Rather than affordability being the issue, it is more about people deciding that they have better things to do, the authors say. As we grow richer, we are more reluctant to abandon career and leisure opportunities to have children. Even technological advances are unlikely to reverse this, they say.

On everything other than the difficulty of stabilising the population, this is a relentlessly optimistic book. For instance, say the authors, dire predictions of mass starvation as the world’s population grew have been shown to be completely wrong. The long-term trend of people living longer and healthier lives can continue, they suggest. “Fears of a depleted, overpopulated future are out of date,” they write.

Really? Spears and Geruso also stress that the price of food is key to determining how many go hungry, but fail to point out that food prices are now climbing, with climate change an increasing factor. I’m not so sure things are going to keep getting better for most people.

This book is also very much a polemic: with Spears and Geruso laboring their main points, it wasn’t an enjoyable read. That said, if you think that the world’s population isn’t going to fall, or that it will be easy to halt its fall, or that a falling population is a good thing, you really should read it.

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

New Scientist book club

Love reading? Come and join our friendly group of fellow book lovers. Every six weeks, we delve into an exciting new title, with members given free access to extracts from our books, articles from our authors and video interviews.

Topics:

TAGGED:BabiesBookpeoplepersuadeProvocativereviewspike
Share This Article
Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Addressed: It’s Hot Out. You Need a Hand Held Fan. But Which One? Addressed: It’s Hot Out. You Need a Hand Held Fan. But Which One?
Next Article Ask a Scientist: How Livestreaming 100 Hours of Weather and Climate Moved Thousands to Action  Ask a Scientist: How Livestreaming 100 Hours of Weather and Climate Moved Thousands to Action 
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Popular Posts

NASA intern stole $21M of Lunar to use during sex to have ‘sex on the moon’

Thad Roberts: The Man Who Stole the Moon Rocks Back in 1998, a young NASA…

August 11, 2025

Trump taps conservative economist E.J. Antoni to head BLS : NPR

President Trump plans to name conservative economist E.J. Antoni to head the Bureau of Labor…

August 11, 2025

Google May Pixel Drop: Phone Bug Fixes But a Warning

Google has just rolled out the May Pixel Drop update, bringing a slew of bug…

May 9, 2025

Future of Cloud Computing and How It Fuels Enterprise Growth

Cloud computing has become an essential part of enterprise growth strategies, with spending expected to…

January 16, 2025

‘Duck Dynasty’ Star Phil Robertson ‘Not Good’ Amid Alzheimer’s Battle

"Duck Dynasty" star Phil Robertson's battle with Alzheimer’s is not going well, according to his…

April 5, 2025

You Might Also Like

Where you store fat may influence the effect it has on your brain
Tech and Science

Where you store fat may influence the effect it has on your brain

September 20, 2025
Nvidia eyes 0M investment into self-driving tech startup Wayve
Tech and Science

Nvidia eyes $500M investment into self-driving tech startup Wayve

September 20, 2025
Why are so many young people getting cancer?
Tech and Science

Why are so many young people getting cancer?

September 20, 2025
Peacemaker Season 2: Earth-X Theory Explained
Tech and Science

Peacemaker Season 2: Earth-X Theory Explained

September 20, 2025
logo logo
Facebook Twitter Youtube

About US


Explore global affairs, political insights, and linguistic origins. Stay informed with our comprehensive coverage of world news, politics, and Lifestyle.

Top Categories
  • Crime
  • Environment
  • Sports
  • Tech and Science
Usefull Links
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • DMCA

© 2024 americanfocus.online –  All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?