<p class="bodytext">Most people on Earth today live in a country where birth rates are already too low to stabilise the population: fewer than two children for every two adults. In After the Spike, economists Dean Spears and Michael Geruso sound a wakeup call, explaining why global depopulation is coming, why it matters, and what to do now.</p>.<p class="bodytext">It would be easy to think that fewer people would be better for the planet, better for the people who remain. This book invites us all to think again. Despite what we may have been told, depopulation is not the solution we urgently need for environmental challenges like climate change. Nor will it raise living standards by dividing what the world can offer across fewer of us. Spears and Geruso investigate what depopulation would mean for the climate, for living standards, for equity, for progress, for freedom, and for humanity’s general welfare. And what it would mean if, instead, people came together to share the work of caregiving and of building societies where parenting fits better with everything else that people aspire to.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Dean Spears and Michael Geruso are economists, demographers and associate professors at the University of Texas at Austin, USA. </p>
<p class="bodytext">Most people on Earth today live in a country where birth rates are already too low to stabilise the population: fewer than two children for every two adults. In After the Spike, economists Dean Spears and Michael Geruso sound a wakeup call, explaining why global depopulation is coming, why it matters, and what to do now.</p>.<p class="bodytext">It would be easy to think that fewer people would be better for the planet, better for the people who remain. This book invites us all to think again. Despite what we may have been told, depopulation is not the solution we urgently need for environmental challenges like climate change. Nor will it raise living standards by dividing what the world can offer across fewer of us. Spears and Geruso investigate what depopulation would mean for the climate, for living standards, for equity, for progress, for freedom, and for humanity’s general welfare. And what it would mean if, instead, people came together to share the work of caregiving and of building societies where parenting fits better with everything else that people aspire to.</p>.<p class="bodytext">Dean Spears and Michael Geruso are economists, demographers and associate professors at the University of Texas at Austin, USA. </p>