Elon Musk published a few hours this tweet:
"Population collapse due to low birth rates is a much bigger risk to civilization than global warming"
Robin Hanson, who is something for whom I feel a lot of intellectual respect, liked the tweet.
In my model of the world works, overpopulation is in fact a big problem. In general, the more people you have, the less resources you have to share among those people. A decreasing population would be in fact good news, although maybe not in the short term.
Can you help me understand what are Elon/Robin seeing that I am not?
A couple of extra points for the sake of clarity:
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I do understand that, in the current system, having an aging population is a problem because many resources go toward people that reach an old age
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AI might or might not end the world. Let's assume in this scenario that it does not and we have many more decades ahead
To sustain high tech-driven growth rates, we probably need (pre-real-AI) an increasing population of increasingly specialized and increasingly long-lived researchers+engineers at every intelligence threshold - as we advance, it takes longer to climb up on giants' shoulders. It's unclear what the needs are for below-threshold population (not zero, yet). Probably Elon is intentionally not being explicit about the eugenic-adjacent angle of the situation.