Malthusian Theory

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Population theories

Malthus, Boserup, The Club


of Rome and Simon

Thomas Malthus
1766-1834. Born near Guildford!
Wrote An essay in the First Principle of
population first published in 1798
Debatable whether the principles of
Malthus two hundred years ago (that were
very revolutionary and controversial) have
any relevance to the modern world.
The world population in 1798 was at nine
million people. We have now passed the
six billion mark.

The Core Principles of


Malthus:
Food is necessary for human existence
Human population tends to grow faster than the
power in the earth to produce subsistence
The effects of these two unequal powers must be
kept equal
Since humans tend not to limit their population size
voluntarily - preventive checks in Malthus
terminology.

Malthus recognised that population if unchecked, grows


at a geometric rate:
1

16

32

However, food only increases at an arithmetic rate, as


land is finite.
1 2 3 4 5 6

and therefore he said.

War,
famine,
disease.

CHECKS
Malthus suggested that once this
ceiling (catastrophe) had been
reached, further growth in
population would be prevented by
negative and positive checks.
He saw the checks as a natural
method of population control. They
can be split up into 2 groups.

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 favoured moral restraint (including
late marriage and sexual abstinence) as a
check on population growth.
However, it is worth noting that Malthus
proposed this only for the working and poor
classes!

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.

'J' Curve - Population


Crash Model

CRITICISM OF MALTHUSIAN THEORY

1. Malthusian theory is a pessimistic


theory
2. Man is born with two hands and
only one mouth
3. Malthus ignored Technology in
food production
4. International cooperation will help
countries suffering with famines
and diseases

Was Malthus right?


There has been a population explosion
Africa repeated famines, wars, food
crisis, environmental degradation, soil
erosion, crop failure and disastrous floods
so was he right?

But..
Technological improvements which he
could not have foreseen
The increased amount of cropland due to
irrigation
Reduced population growth as countries
move through the DTM
Further Information
Malthus (1766 - 1834)

The Club of Rome


Group of industrialists, scientists,
economists and statesmen from 10
countries
Published The Limits to Growth in 1972

The Club of Rome basic


conclusion.
If present growth trends in world population
continue and if associated industrialisation,
pollution, food production and resource
depletion continue unchanged, the limits to
growth on this planet will be reached sometime
in the next 100 years.
The most probably result will be sudden and
uncontrollable decline in both population and
industrial capacity

Is the Club of Rome right?


Dont panic yet!
Doesnt take human dimension
sufficiently into account
Human race is adaptable and
innovative
Human responses have changed
e.g. alternative sources of fuel (to
replace fossil fuels), HYVs seeds to
prevent starvation in parts of Asia
Club of Rome - More info

Esther Boserup 1965


Boserup believed that people have the
resources of knowledge and technology to
increase food supplies.
Opposite to Malthus she suggested that
population growth has enabled agricultural
development to occur
Assumes people knew of the techniques
required by more intensive systems and
used them when the population grew.

i.e..
Demographic pressure (population
density) promotes innovation and higher
productivity in use of land (irrigation,
weeding, crop intensification, better seeds)
and labour (tools, better techniques).

Was she right?


Boserup argued that the changes in
technology allow for improved crop strains
and increased yields.
GM crops
Green revolution
Further Reference:
Totally Explained

But.
Boserup admits 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 (so fragile
environments at risk)
Boserups theory based on assumption of
closed society -not the case in reality
(migration)

Julian Simon
American Economist wrote the Ultimate
Resource in 1981
Argued that the supply of natural materials
in infinite.
As a resource begins to run low the price
will rise so therefore people will invest
worthwhile time and thought into producing
technology that will:

Find more raw materials


Extract more from what is already known
to be available
Discover alternative resources that can
replace those in short supply
Produce alternative ways of organising
society to manage without that resource

In a nutshell
There is only one scarcity:
Human brain power The
Ultimate Resource!

Issues Was he right?


Simons was a very controversial figure
Famously he bet Prof. Paul Ehrlich (author
of "The Population Bomb") that any $1000
shopping basket of raw materials of
Ehrlich's choosing would be less
expensive by 1990. The loser was to pay
the winner the difference. In 1990 Ehrlich
sent Simon a check for $576.01.

In many circles he was condemned as a


neoconservative
His message that markets were doing a
good job of protecting the environment
Also that growth does not reduce the
worldwide standard of living were highly
compatible with politically conservative
viewpoints.
Further reference:
The Ultimate Resource

Examiners TIP!!!
Throughout population module you should
consider how both Simons and Club of
Rome models apply and you ought to be
able to discuss them in relation to
Food Supply
Energy
Health
As well as population change

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