SEMAINE D'ÉTUDE SUR LE ROLE DE L’ANALYSE ECONOMETRIQUE ETc. 256 by expenditures for public health, by family allowances, by government policies toward family planning, and by general cultural and religious attitudes toward the idea of population control. In addition, both variables are in part endogenously affected by the level of income. Both possibilities of partial control raise new conceptual problems in formalizing the idea of optimal economic growth. In the middle of the scientific explosion, it is hard to assess whether technological progress can go on forever, so that also its rate can be raised or lowered forever. It is conceivable that a higher rate of discovery and invention in the present will entail a lower rate of progress at some later time when the fund of knowledge usable in production nears completion. Another consideration is that technological progress raises transition and dislocation difficulties that affect the relative welfare of different individuals within the same generation. The possibility of influencing population size raises the question of the value of population size in itself — as distinct from the question of the weight given to numbers in aggregating utility over generations, discussed above. It should be noted that all utility functions discussed in this paper imply neutrality with regard to population size as such. The question is of some importance because a different attitude might lead to a different balance between the « value of numbers » and the loss of per capita income that may result from an increase in the ratio of population to land and/or other resources. This problem did not come up in the more formal analysis of the preceding section because the assumption of constant returns to proportional increases in both labor and capital precluded the recognition of resource limitations. Koobmans - pag. 35