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420 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. ix (1975)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0420 and id is 1 raw text is: PREFACE

The theme of the 79th Annual Meeting of the American Academy of
Political and Social Science, held April 11-12, 1975, was suggested to me
by the Comptroller General of the United States, Mr. Elmer B. Staats, a
distinguished member of the Board of the Academy. His office last year
produced, among many other items, a compilation of reports on commodity
shortages, reflecting the federal government's concern with this major issue.
Whether certain commodities are truly in scarce natural supply relative
to current use and demand, or are available in amounts limited by political
and economic pressures, was one of the major issues considered by the
participants in this year's program. The contributors did not agree about: (1)
the existence of scarcity; (2) the particular commodities believed to be in
short supply; (3) the reasons for shortages; or (4) whether, or how, society
should made adjustments to perceived scarcity.
But there is more than subjective perception to characterize many of the
concerns about food, fertilizer, minerals, petroleum, and energy resources in
general. Descriptive statistics of the world supplies are probably reasonably
accurate, and the projections of population are generally accepted by
various authorities and agencies. There is little disagreement that world
population growth is the chief cause of increasing demand.
More than 1,800 years were required for the world's population
to increase from 210 million to one billion. About 125 years were needed to
produce the second billion, but only 30 years to grow the third billion. Now,
only 15 years are needed to add the fourth billion; and should our growth
rate continue, the present population of 3.6 billion will double in 35 years.
By the end of this century the population of the world could increase by a
billion every eight years. More than 80 percent of this increase will occur
in developing countries where the increase of food production has not kept
pace with the people production. Is this a recent pending disaster facing
humanity, or are we just now awakened to the calls of social
evolution?
Are we unduly pessimistic in our projections? Is society facing scarcity?
Is it real, imagined or manipulated? Are new political, social and
economic alliances capable of regulating the flow of production and
consumption? Will new energy resources protect us from radical changes in
our mode of living? Is there any beam of sanguinity to light the
path of our future?
The belief in man's onward, upward movement of increasing productivity
and progress that so much characterized the late 1800s seems much longer ago
than a century. The language of our thoughts today includes instead the
limits of growth, zero population increase, reduction of use, and energy crisis.
Our theme, therefore, is appropriate and timely: adjusting to scarcity.
Some emphasis in the articles in this volume is on scarcity, but much is on
adjustment. To adjust has various meanings: to bring to agreement, to settle,
to cause to conform, to adapt, to fit or to regulate. Perhaps all of these
meanings will be employed as the world continues to define and confront its
perception of scarcity.
MARVIN E. WOLFGANG

ix

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