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02 Dec 06

Art De Vany: The State of the World

  • The State of the World


    November 30, 2006 09:48 AM



    The Spectator has a fine summary by Allister Heath of Goklany’s, The Improving State of the World, published by the Cato Institute (they published my [co-authored] book on electromagnetic spectrum years ago).



    You must be subscribed to the Spectator to read the whole article, but subscription is free. Go to The Spectator to sign up.



    Here is a brief part of Allister Heath's summary of the book. It reminds me of the Skeptical Environmentalist by Lumborg, which was the first to actually look at measures of health and well-being and draw the same conclusions.




    For billions of people around the world, these are the best of times to be alive. From Beijing to Bratislava, more of us are living longer, healthier and more comfortable lives than at any time in history; fewer of us are suffering from poverty, hunger or illiteracy. Pestilence, famine, death and even war, the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse, are in retreat, thanks to the liberating forces of capitalism and technology.

    If you believe that such apparently outlandish claims cannot possibly be true, think again. In a book which will trigger intense controversy when it is published later this month, the acclaimed American economist Indur Goklany, former US delegate to the United Nations’ intergovernmental panel on climate change, demonstrates that on every objective measure of the human condition — be it life expectancy, food availability, access to clean water, infant mortality, literacy rates or child labour — well-being and quality of life are improving around the world.



    A remarkable compendium of inform-ation at odds with the present fashionable pessimism, Goklany’s The Improving State of the World, published by the Cato Institute, reveals that, contrary to popular belief, it is the poorest who are enjoying the most dramatic rise in living standards. Refuting a central premise of the modern green movement, it also demonstrates that as countries become richer, they also become cleaner, healthier and more environmentally conscious.

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