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Lifeboat
Ethics: the Case Against Helping the Poor by Garrett Hardin First published Psychology Today
September 1974; Reprinted from: The Garrett Hardin Society http://www.garretthardinsociety.org/articles/art_lifeboat_ethics_case_against_helping_poor.html Environmentalists use the
metaphor of the earth as a "spaceship" in trying to persuade
countries, industries and people to stop wasting and polluting our natural
resources. Since we all share life on this planet, they argue, no single
person or institution has the right to destroy, waste, or use more than a
fair share of its resources. But does everyone on
earth have an equal right to an equal share of its resources? The spaceship
metaphor can be dangerous when used by misguided idealists to justify
suicidal policies for sharing our resources through uncontrolled immigration
and foreign aid. In their enthusiastic but unrealistic generosity, they
confuse the ethics of a spaceship with those of a lifeboat. A true spaceship would
have to be under the control of a captain, since no ship could possibly
survive if its course were determined by committee. Spaceship Earth certainly
has no captain; the United Nations is merely a toothless tiger, with little
power to enforce any policy upon its bickering members. If we divide the world
crudely into rich nations and poor nations, two thirds of them are
desperately poor, and only one third comparatively rich, with the First, we must recognize
the limited capacity of any lifeboat. For example, a nation's land has a
limited capacity to support a population and as the current energy crisis has
shown us, in some ways we have already exceeded the carrying capacity of our
land.
So here we sit, say 50
people in our lifeboat. To be generous, let us assume it has room for 10
more, making a total capacity of 60. Suppose the 50 of us in the lifeboat see
100 others swimming in the water outside, begging for admission to our boat
or for handouts. We have several options: we may be tempted to try to live by
the Christian ideal of being "our brother's keeper," or by the
Marxist ideal of "to each according to his needs." Since the needs
of all in the water are the same, and since they can all be seen as "our
brothers," we could take them all into our boat, making a total of 150
in a boat designed for 60. The boat swamps, everyone drowns. Complete
justice, complete catastrophe. Since the boat has an
unused excess capacity of 10 more passengers, we could admit just 10 more to
it. But which 10 do we let in? How do we choose? Do we pick the best 10,
"first come, first served"? And what do we say to the 90 we
exclude? If we do let an extra 10 into our lifeboat, we will have lost our
"safety factor," an engineering principle of critical importance.
For example, if we don't leave room for excess capacity as a safety factor in
our country's agriculture, a new plant disease or a bad change in the weather
could have disastrous consequences. Suppose we decide to
preserve our small safety factor and admit no more to the lifeboat. Our
survival is then possible although we shall have to be constantly on guard
against boarding parties. While this last solution
clearly offers the only means of our survival, it is morally abhorrent to
many people. Some say they feel guilty about their good luck. My reply is
simple: "Get out and yield your place to others." This may solve
the problem of the guilt-ridden person's conscience, but it does not change
the ethics of the lifeboat. The needy person to whom the guilt-ridden person
yields his place will not himself feel guilty about his good luck. If he did,
he would not climb aboard. The net result of conscience-stricken people
giving up their unjustly held seats is the elimination of that sort of
conscience from the lifeboat. This is the basic
metaphor within which we must work out our solutions. Let us now enrich the
image, step by step, with substantive additions from the real world, a world
that must solve real and pressing problems of overpopulation and hunger. The harsh ethics of the
lifeboat become even harsher when we consider the reproductive differences
between the rich nations and the poor nations. The people inside the
lifeboats are doubling in numbers every 87 years; those swimming around
outside are doubling, on the average, every 35 years, more than twice as fast
as the rich. And since the world's resources are dwindling, the difference in
prosperity between the rich and the poor can only increase. As of 1973, the The harsh ethics of the
lifeboat become harsher when we consider the reproductive differences between
rich and poor. Multiplying the Rich and the Poor Now suppose the But, one could argue,
this discussion assumes that current population trends will continue, and
they may not. Quite so. Most likely the rate of population increase will
decline much faster in the The Tragedy of the Commons The fundamental error of
spaceship ethics, and the sharing it requires, is that it leads to what I
call "the tragedy of the commons." Under a system of private
property, the men who own property recognize their responsibility to care for
it, for if they don't they will eventually suffer. A farmer, for instance,
will allow no more cattle in a pasture than its carrying capacity justifies.
If he overloads it, erosion sets in, weeds take over, and he loses the use of
the pasture. If a pasture becomes a
commons open to all, the right of each to use it may not be matched by a
corresponding responsibility to protect it. Asking everyone to use it with
discretion will hardly do, for the considerate herdsman who refrains from
overloading the commons suffers more than a selfish one who says his needs
are greater. If everyone would restrain himself, all would be well; but it
takes only one less than everyone to ruin a system of voluntary restraint. In
a crowded world of less than perfect human beings, mutual ruin is inevitable
if there are no controls. This is the tragedy of the commons. One of the major tasks of
education today should be the creation of such an acute awareness of the
dangers of the commons that people will recognize its many varieties. For
example, the air and water have become polluted because they are treated as
commons. Further growth in the population or per-capita conversion of natural
resources into pollutants will only make the problem worse. The same holds
true for the fish of the oceans. Fishing fleets have nearly disappeared in
many parts of the world, technological improvements in the art of fishing are
hastening the day of complete ruin. Only the replacement of the system of the
commons with a responsible system of control will save the land, air, water
and oceanic fisheries. The World Food Bank In recent years there has
been a push to create a new commons called a World Food Bank, an
international depository of food reserves to which nations would contribute
according to their abilities and from which they would draw according to
their needs. This humanitarian proposal has received support from many
liberal international groups, and from such prominent citizens as Margaret
Mead, U.N. Secretary General Kurt Waldheim, and Senators Edward Kennedy and
George McGovern. A world food bank appeals
powerfully to our humanitarian impulses. But before we rush ahead with such a
plan, let us recognize where the greatest political push comes from, lest we
be disillusioned later. Our experience with the "Food for Peace
program," or Public Law 480, gives us the answer. This program moved
billions of dollars worth of And indeed it did. In the
years 1960 to 1970, Extracting Dollars Those who proposed and
defended the Food for Peace program in public rarely mentioned its importance
to any of these special interests. The public emphasis was always on its
humanitarian effects. The combination of silent selfish interests and highly
vocal humanitarian apologists made a powerful and successful lobby for
extracting money from taxpayers. We can expect the same lobby to push now for
the creation of a World Food Bank. However great the
potential benefit to selfish interests, it should not be a decisive argument
against a truly humanitarian program. We must ask if such a program would
actually do more good than harm, not only momentarily but also in the long
run. Those who propose the food bank usually refer to a current
"emergency" or "crisis" in terms of world food supply.
But what is an emergency? Although they may be infrequent and sudden,
everyone knows that emergencies will occur from time to time. A well-run
family, company, organization or country prepares for the likelihood of
accidents and emergencies. It expects them, it budgets for them, it saves for
them. Learning the Hard Way What happens if some
organizations or countries budget for accidents and others do not? If each
country is solely responsible for its own well-being, poorly managed ones
will suffer. But they can learn from experience. They may mend their ways,
and learn to budget for infrequent but certain emergencies. For example, the
weather varies from year to year, and periodic crop failures are certain. A
wise and competent government saves out of the production of the good years
in anticipation of bad years to come. Joseph taught this policy to Pharaoh in
"But it isn't their
fault!" Some kind-hearted liberals argue. "How can we blame the
poor people who are caught in an emergency? Why must they suffer for the sins
of their governments?" The concept of blame is simply not relevant here.
The real question is, what are the operational consequences of establishing a
world food bank? If it is open to every country every time a need develops,
slovenly rulers will not be motivated to take Joseph's advice. Someone will
always come to their aid. Some countries will deposit food in the world food
bank, and others will withdraw it. There will be almost no overlap. As a
result of such solutions to food shortage emergencies, the poor countries
will not learn to mend their ways, and will suffer progressively greater
emergencies as their populations grow. Population Control the On the average poor
countries undergo a 2.5 percent increase in population each year; rich
countries, about 0.8 percent. Only rich countries have anything in the way of
food reserves set aside, and even they do not have as much as they should.
Poor countries have none. If poor countries received no food from the
outside, the rate of their population growth would be periodically checked by
crop failures and famines. But if they can always draw on a world food bank
in time of need, their population can continue to grow unchecked, and so will
their "need" for aid. In the short run, a world food bank may
diminish that need, but in the long run it actually increases the need
without limit. Without some system of
worldwide food sharing, the proportion of people in the rich and poor nations
might eventually stabilize. The overpopulated poor countries would decrease
in numbers, while the rich countries that had room for more people would
increase. But with a well-meaning system of sharing, such as a world food
bank, the growth differential between the rich and the poor countries will
not only persist, it will increase. Because of the higher rate of population
growth in the poor countries of the world, 88 percent of today's children are
born poor, and only 12 percent rich. Year by year the ratio becomes worse, as
the fast-reproducing poor outnumber the slow-reproducing rich. A world food bank is thus
a commons in disguise. People will have more motivation to draw from it than
to add to any common store. The less provident and less able will multiply at
the expense of the abler and more provident, bringing eventual ruin upon all
who share in the commons. Besides, any system of "sharing" that
amounts to foreign aid from the rich nations to the poor nations will carry
the taint of charity, which will contribute little to the world peace so
devoutly desired by those who support the idea of a world food bank. As past Chinese Fish and Miracle Rice The modern approach to
foreign aid stresses the export of technology and advice, rather than money
and food. As an ancient Chinese proverb goes: "Give a man a fish and he
will eat for a day; teach him how to fish and he will eat for the rest of his
days." Acting on this advice, the Rockefeller and Ford Foundations have
financed a number of programs for improving agriculture in the hungry
nations. Known as the "Green Revolution," these programs have led
to the development of "miracle rice" and "miracle wheat,"
new strains that offer bigger harvests and greater resistance to crop damage.
Norman Borlaug, the Nobel Prize winning agronomist who, supported by the
Rockefeller Foundation, developed "miracle wheat," is one of the
most prominent advocates of a world food bank. Whether or not the Green
Revolution can increase food production as much as its champions claim is a
debatable but possibly irrelevant point. Those who support this well-intended
humanitarian effort should first consider some of the fundamentals of human
ecology. Ironically, one man who did was the late Alan Gregg, a vice president
of the Rockefeller Foundation. Two decades ago he expressed strong doubts
about the wisdom of such attempts to increase food production. He likened the
growth and spread of humanity over the surface of the earth to the spread of
cancer in the human body, remarking that "cancerous growths demand food;
but, as far as I know, they have never been cured by getting it." Overloading the Environment Every human born
constitutes a draft on all aspects of the environment: food, air, water,
forests, beaches, wildlife, scenery and solitude. Food can, perhaps, be
significantly increased to meet a growing demand. But what about clean
beaches, unspoiled forests, and solitude? If we satisfy a growing
population's need for food, we necessarily decrease its per capita supply of
the other resources needed by men. My final example of a
commons in action is one for which the public has the least desire for
rational discussion - immigration. Anyone who publicly questions the wisdom
of current Perhaps we still feel
guilty about things we said in the past. Two generations ago the popular
press frequently referred to Dagos, Wops, Polacks, Chinks and Krauts in
articles about how America was being "overrun" by foreigners of
supposedly inferior genetic stock [see "The Politics of Genetic
Engineering: Who Decides Who's Defective?" PT, June]. But because the
implied inferiority of foreigners was used then as justification for keeping
them out, people now assume that restrictive policies could only be based on
such misguided notions. There are other grounds. A Nation of Immigrants Just consider the numbers
involved. Our Government acknowledges a net inflow of 400,000 immigrants a
year. While we have no hard data on the extent of illegal entries, educated
guesses put the figure at about 600,000 a year. Since the natural increase
(excess of births over deaths) of the resident population now runs about 1.7
million per year, the yearly gain from immigration amounts to at least 19
percent of the total annual increase, and may be as much as 37 percent if we
include the estimate for illegal immigrants. Considering the growing use of
birth-control devices, the potential effect of education campaigns by such
organizations as Planned Parenthood Federation of America and Zero Population
Growth, and the influence of inflation and the housing shortage, the
fertility rate of American women may decline so much that immigration could
account for all the yearly increase in population. Should we not at least ask
if that is what we want? For the sake of those who
worry about whether the "quality" of the average immigrant compares
favorably with the quality of the average resident, let us assume that
immigrants and native-born citizens are of exactly equal quality, however one
defines that term. We will focus here only on quantity; and since our
conclusions will depend on nothing else, all charges of bigotry and chauvinism
become irrelevant. Immigration Vs. Food Supply World food banks move
food to the people, hastening the exhaustion of the environment of the poor
countries. Unrestricted immigration, on the other hand, moves people to the
food, thus speeding up the destruction of the environment of the rich
countries. We can easily understand why poor people should want to make this
latter transfer, but why should rich hosts encourage it? As in the case of foreign-aid
programs, immigration receives support from selfish interests and
humanitarian impulses. The primary selfish interest in unimpeded immigration
is the desire of employers for cheap labor, particularly in industries and
trades that offer degrading work. In the past, one wave of foreigners after
another was brought into the But not all countries
have such reluctant leadership. Most education Hawaiians, for example, are
keenly aware of the limits of their environment, particularly in terms of
population growth. There is only so much room on the islands, and the
islanders know it. To Hawaiians, immigrants from the other 49 states present
as great a threat as those from other nations. At a recent meeting of
Hawaiian government officials in At this point, I can hear
We Americans of
non-Indian ancestry can look upon ourselves as the descendants of thieves who
are guilty morally, if not legally, of stealing this land from its Indian
owners. Should we then give back the land to the now living American
descendants of those Indians? However morally or logically sound this
proposal may be, I, for one, am unwilling to live by it and I know no one
else who is. Besides, the logical consequence would be absurd. Suppose that,
intoxicated with a sense of pure justice, we should decide to turn our land
over to the Indians. Since all our other wealth has also been derived from
the land, wouldn't we be morally obliged to give that back to the Indians
too? Pure Justice Vs. Reality Clearly, the concept of
pure justice produces an infinite regression to absurdity. Centuries ago,
wise men invented statutes of limitations to justify the rejection of such
pure justice, in the interest of preventing continual disorder. The law
zealously defends property rights, but only relatively recent property
rights. Drawing a line after an arbitrary time has elapsed may be unjust, but
the alternatives are worse. We are all the
descendants of thieves, and the world's resources are inequitably distributed.
But we must begin the journey to tomorrow from the point where we are today.
We cannot remake the past. We cannot safely divide the wealth equitably among
all peoples so long as people reproduce at different rates. To do so would
guarantee that our grandchildren and everyone else's grandchildren, would
have only a ruined world to inhabit. To be generous with one's
own possessions is quite different from being generous with those of
posterity. We should call this point to the attention of those who from a
commendable love of justice and equality, would institute a system of the
commons, either in the form of a world food bank, or of unrestricted
immigration. We must convince them if we wish to save at least some parts of
the world from environmental ruin. Without a true world
government to control reproduction and the use of available resources, the
sharing ethic of the spaceship is impossible. For the foreseeable future, our
survival demands that we govern our actions by the ethics of a lifeboat, harsh
though they may be. Posterity will be satisfied with nothing less. |