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Case study: China’s one-child Case study: China’s one-child policy policy 1980
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Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Dec 21, 2015

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Page 1: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Case study: China’s one-child policyCase study: China’s one-child policy

1980

Page 2: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Human population growth: 7 billionHuman population growth: 7 billion

Page 3: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Human population growth: 7 billion

A few milestones that lead to our present population:

• 10,000 bc agriculture• 1500 new crops from Americas reach

Europe • 1798 vaccinations• 1850 sewers were separated from drinking

water, which was filtered and chlorinated• 1884 contraception• 1930 better nutrition, sanitation, health care• 1960 Green Revolution

Page 4: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

The human population is still growing rapidlyThe human population is still growing rapidly

Agricultural Revolution Industrial Revolution

1350

Hunter/Gatherer

Page 5: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Increasing our carrying capacity

Page 6: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.
Page 7: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Result of Large Populations

pollution

starvationReduction in biodiversity

Greater need for resources

Page 8: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

World population has risen sharply

• Global human population was <1 billion in 1800.

• Population has doubled just since 1963.

• We add 2.5 people every second (79 million/year).

“baby boom”

Page 9: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

United States birth rate (births per 1000 population)

Baby boom 1946-1964

1909 1919 1929 1939 1949 1959 1969 1979 1989 1999 2009

1939-1945 WWII

Page 10: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Rates of growth vary from region to regionRates of growth vary from region to region

At today’s 1.2% global growth rate, the population will double in 58 years

Page 11: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Global Variation in Fertility RateGlobal Variation in Fertility Rate

Page 12: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Is population growth really a Is population growth really a problem?problem?

Population growth results from technology, medical care, sanitation, and food.

– Death rates drop, but not birth rates.

Some people say growth is no problem.– New resources will replace depleted ones.– But some resources (i.e., biodiversity) are

irreplaceable.

Quality of life will suffer with unchecked growth.– Less food, space, wealth per person

Page 13: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Population and the Environment• Population growth can lead to environmental

degradation.

Overpopulation in Africa’s Sahel region has led to overgrazing of semi-arid lands.

Page 14: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Affluence and the environment• Poverty can lead to environmental

degradation…

BUT

• wealth and resource consumption can produce even more severe and far-reaching environmental impacts.

Page 15: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Population (Billions), 1999

Energy Use/ Year (1999)

Developed 1.2 7.4 kW

Developing 4.6 1 kW

Population vs. Energy Use

Page 16: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Demography studies human Demography studies human populationspopulations

• Demography: the application of population ecology to the study of human populations– Population size – Density and distribution– Age structure, sex ratio – Birth, death, immigration,

and emigration rates

Page 17: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Population size and densityPopulation size and density

Predictions of population size depend on different assumptions about fertility rates.

Page 18: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Population density and Population density and distributiondistribution

Page 19: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Population size: National populations

Page 20: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Age Pyramid United States 2012

• The United States’ “baby boom” is evident in age bracket 40–50. U.S. age structure will change as baby boomers grow older.

Page 21: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Age structure: Age pyramids

Page 22: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Age structure: “Graying Age structure: “Graying populations”populations”

• Demographers project that China’s population will become older over the next two decades.

Page 23: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Age structure: “Graying Age structure: “Graying populations”populations”

• China’s aging population will mean fewer working-age citizens to finance social services for retirees.

Figure 7.11c

Page 24: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

China’s natural rate of change has fallen

China’s rate has fallen with fertility rates. It now takes the population 4 times as long to double as it did 25 years ago.

Page 25: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Sex ratiosSex ratios 100 females born to 106 males China: 100 females born to 117 males

Page 26: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Population growth depends Population growth depends on various factorson various factors–Birth –Death –Immigration –Emigration

• Technological advances led to dramatic decline in human death rates.– Widening the gap between birth rates and

death rates resulting in population expansion

Page 27: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Factors affecting total fertility rate

• Urbanization decreases TFR.– Access to medical care– Children attend school and impose

economic costs • With social security, elderly parents

need fewer children to support them.• Greater education allows women to

enter the labor force, with less emphasis on child rearing.

Page 28: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Worldwide, total fertility Worldwide, total fertility varies widelyvaries widely

Page 29: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Family planning and TFR

• Family planning, health care, and reproductive education can lower TFRs.

A counselor advises African women on health care and reproductive rights.

Page 30: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

Poverty and population growth are Poverty and population growth are correlatedcorrelated

Page 31: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

The Earth can’t support our consuming The Earth can’t support our consuming lifestylelifestyle

Humanity’s global ecological footprint surpassed Earth’s capacity to support us in 1987.

Page 32: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

The wealth gap and population growth The wealth gap and population growth cause conflictcause conflict

Page 33: Case study: China’s one-child policy 1980. Human population growth: 7 billion.

LongevityLongevity• Lowest: Africa (55 years) and developing Oceania (64) Lowest: Africa (55 years) and developing Oceania (64)

years)years)Mortality Rates in Long-Lived Populations

Age Adjusted Death Rates (per 100,000 people)

Rank* Location Life Expectancy

Eating Pattern CHD** Cancer Stroke All Causes

1 Okinawa 81.2 East-West 18 97 35 335

2 Japan 79.9 Asian 22 106 45 364

3 Hong Kong

79.1 Asian 40 126 40 393

4 Sweden 79.0 Nordic 102 108 38 435

8 Italy 78.3 Mediterranean 55 135 49 459

10 Greece 78.1 Mediterranean 55 109 70 449

18 USA 76.8 American 100 132 28 520

* Average life expectancy world rank** Coronary Heart Disease