by Gerontion » Fri 09 Nov 2007, 06:55:00
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pixie', ' ')Countries like India or Thailand, that are "developing" but still live pretty close to the edge, I believe will experience the worst hardship. The strongest economies in the world are China, the US and Europe. When oil becomes scarce, we in the strong economies will pay the higher pricesand continue burning the oil, and there will be less left over for countries like India and Thailand and Honduras and Ghana, and they will lose their fertilizer, pesticides, medicines and transportation. Once they do, all those 7-child families are going to starve to death on their ruined farms, while those of us in the strong economies watch on TV. In the past, we would have sent them our excess grain stocks and processed cheese spread, but in the future, we won't have any to give, so we will just watch.
This illustrates the problem with these kinds of discussions; you have to make assumptions about all sorts out places about which you know nothing. Thailand is a huge exporter of rice and the idea that it’s dependent on the largesse of America to keep starvation at bay through emergency shipments of processed cheese is ridiculous. 7 child families? I don’t think so - it is has a very low population growth. Nor does it make any sense to lump it in with India or Honduras, unless your criteria for similarity is the fact that it’s not America, it’s got a few poor brown people in it and you’ve actually heard of it.
I lived in Thailand for four years and will be returning for good next year. Aside from the monstrous Bangkok, the population is overwhelmingly rural and agricultural and I think that – for the reasons mentioned above – it will be relatively well set for life post-peak. What’s more, although at first glance the shopping malls of Bangkok seem as pernicious as those of the west, there exists a far greater resilience amongst the population than seems to exist in Europe and North America and there is also a far greater depth of knowledge about things that really matter – how to grow crops, how to repair broken machinery, really, how to get by – and probably most importantly, in the villages there is a very strong, very deep sense of community. It’s far from being an idyll but I’d rather be there than almost anywhere in the west.