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Theories for the relationship between population and resources

Theories for the relationship between population and resources. Pessimistic Approaches. Thomas Malthus (1776-1834) Wrote “An essay on the Principle of Population” in 1798 which described a forthcoming population catastrophe World population was then nine million

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Theories for the relationship between population and resources

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  1. Theories for the relationship between population and resources

  2. Pessimistic Approaches • Thomas Malthus (1776-1834) • Wrote “An essay on the Principle of Population” in 1798 which described a forthcoming population catastrophe • World population was then nine million • World population has now exceeded 6 billion

  3. Mathus’ core principles • Food is essential for life • Population increases faster than food supply • Therefore Mathus predicted that population would grow until it reached the limit of food supply, then there would be widespread poverty and famine.

  4. Malthus recognised that: Population, if left unchecked, will grow geometrically: 1,2, 4, 8,16,32 Whereas food supply increases arithmetically as the amount of land is finite: 1, 2,3, 4, 5, 6

  5. And therefore he said … … there would be a Malthusian catastrophe: Population Food supply At the point where population reaches its limit of food supply there will be war, famine and disease. Food supply Population Time

  6. Malthusian Checks • Malthus stated that once population reached this point, checks would come into play to readdress the balance between population and resources: 1. positive checks – increased levels of misery (war, famine and disease) 2. preventative checks – celibacy, later marriage etc

  7. Negative checks (decreased birth rate)…. • Negative Checks were used to limit the population growth. • It included abstinence/ postponement of marriage which lowered the fertility rate. • Malthus favored moral restraint (including late marriage and sexual abstinence) as a check on population growth.

  8. Positive checks (increased death rate) • Positive Checks were ways to reduce population size by events such as famine, disease, war - increasing the mortality rate and reducing life expectancy.

  9. Was Malthus right? • Evidence to support Malthus: • There has been a population explosion • Repeated wars & famines in Sahel region suggest population growth has outstripped food supply • FAO says that more than 800m people are chronically malnourished • UN say that by 2050 4.2billion people will be living in areas that cannot provide enough water for basic needs.

  10. But … • Critics say that Malthus did not allow for: • the development of new technology • The opening of new land for cultivation (mainly in the LEDW) • The development of irrigation systems which have allowed for increased yields • The Green Revolution – widespread introduction of high-yield crop varieties, pesticides, fertilisers etc • The slow down in population growth as countries develop economically and progress to the latter stages of the DTM.

  11. Neo-Malthusians • Neo = new • Accelerated population growth in LEDCs since the 1950s renewed Malthusian fears • 1972, The Club of Rome published “Limits to Growth Model”

  12. Club of Rome – basic conclusion • Increased pollution and decreased resources will lead to a collapse of population in the mid-21st Century. • The most probable result being a sudden & uncontrollable decline in population and industrial capacity.

  13. Is the Club of Rome right? • Don’t panic yet! • Doesn’t take into account the ability of humans to respond to situations and innovate • Human responses have changed e.g. alternative energy, HYV seeds sent to Africa

  14. Paul Ehrlich • US ecologist--The Population Bomb (1968) • The population explosion threatens the environment. Overpopulation will cause hundreds of millions to starve to death. • A “neo-Malthusian”

  15. Hard-line neo-Malthusians… • …still have a doom-and-gloom view of the world. • …advocate drastic and coercive means to control population • …lifeboat ethics--“The drowning poor and the weak should be allowed to die for the sake of the survival of the planet and the survival of the fittest.” • …reduction or rationing of food and development aid to poor countries and tighter immigration laws.

  16. A more optimistic approach • Ester Boserup (1910-1999) • Wrote “The Conditions of Agricultural Growth” in 1965 • Opposite to Malthus • People have resources of knowledge and technology to increase food supply as necessary

  17. Boserup’s main points • Environments have limits that restrict population • But these limits can be changed using technology • Population growth is the trigger for innovation to allow food supply to increase • e.g. irrigation, weeding, crop intensification, better seed quality, tools, techniques etc

  18. Was Boserup right? • Evidence which supports Boserup: • Increasing intensity of shifting cultivation • Move from ‘slash and burn’ practices to using irrigation in rural areas with higher population densities • The Green Revolution – widespread introduction of high-yielding varieties, pesticides etc • Hugely increased yields allowed more people to be fed

  19. Was Boserup right? • Boserup admits that overpopulation can lead to unsuitable farming practices which may degrade the land • E.g. population pressure as one of the reasons for desertification in the Sahel region

  20. A Comparison – Malthus/Boserup • If Boserup was right, then the most technologically advanced places would be the ones closest to a Malthusian crisis. This is not so. As the places with the larger populations and near starving people, have low tech agriculture. • If Malthus was right, places with large populations that are still increasing, will eventually surpass their food supply and become famine and war stricken. Or would have already done so.

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