Page:What Social Classes Owe to Each Other.djvu/78

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74
WHAT SOCIAL CLASSES

spect—that is, to what is technically called a "high standard of living."

Some people are greatly shocked to read of what is called Malthusianism,[1] when they read it in a book, who would be greatly ashamed of themselves if they did not practise Malthusianism in their own affairs. Among respectable people a man who took upon himself the cares and expenses of a family before he had secured a regular trade or profession, or had accumulated some capital, and who allowed his wife to lose caste, and his children to be dirty, ragged, and neglected, would be severely blamed by the public opinion of the community. The standard of living which a man makes for himself and his family, if he means to earn it, and does not formulate it as a demand which he means to make on his fellow-men, is a gauge of his self-respect; and a high standard of living is the moral limit which an intelligent body of men sets for itself far inside of the natural limits of the sustaining power of the land, which latter limit is set by starvation, pestilence, and war. But a high standard of living restrains population; that is, if we hold up to the higher standard of men, we must have fewer of them.

  1. Thomas Malthus's An Essay on the Principle of Population (1798) describes a population growth model in which greater population ultimately leads to greater poverty. (Wikisource contributor note)