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Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population
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Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

Dec 25, 2015

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Page 1: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population

Page 2: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803)

A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

B. 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128

C. Humans would not be able to control their own population

Page 3: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

World population

0

1

2

3

4

5

6

0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 1100 1200 1300 1400 1500 1600 1700 1800 1900 2000

Year (A.D.)

Bill

ions

of p

eopl

e

Page 4: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

D. Predicted that food supply could only increase arithmetically (linearly) 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10

1. Famine would be the ultimate check on world population.

Page 5: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

E. Food production has increased even faster than population1. Food production per capita has increased dramatically over the past 35 years

a. 1961: calories per capita per day = 2,235

b. 1995: calories per capita per day = 2,712

Page 6: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

II. Population began to increase rapidly around 6000 to 8000 B.C. after agriculture replaced hunting and gathering as the major method of obtaining food

Page 7: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

A. Population Growth

Year Population (billions)

Years to add a billion

1804 1 - 1927 2 123 1960 3 33 1974 4 14 1987 5 13 1999 6 12

Page 8: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

1. Rate of population growth peaked at 2% per year in 1965 and has declined to 1.3% today (Figure 9.6-p.139)

a. Rapid population growth in the present implies continued population growth in the future even if the current population reduces the number of children it has to replacement levels (2 children per woman)

Page 9: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

b. This will happen as the large number of people born today reach child-bearing age

(see population pyramid p.174)

Page 10: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

2. Fertility = average number of children born to a woman during her lifetime

Year FertilityDevelopedCountries

FertilityDevelopingCountries

1950 2.8 6.2

Present 1.6 3.3

2050 2.1 2.1

Page 11: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

3. Every 3 years the world’s population increases by not quite the size of the U.S.

a. 78 million per year

b. 1 billion every 12 to 13 years

Page 12: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

Country Fertility rateU.S. 2Mexico 3.1Brazil 2.5India 3.4China 1.8Niger 7.4Spain, Italy, Russia 1.2

Page 13: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

B. Population Projections for the Year 2050

Projection Population (millions)

Percentage Increase from 2000

UN Low 7,409 22.04

UN Medium 8,919 46.92

Census Bureau 9,084 49.44

UN High 10,633 75.16

Table 9.1 page 140

Page 14: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

Demographic transition

I. Preindustrial Stage or Slow growth stage

high birth rate high death rate

Page 15: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

II. Mortality decline before fertility decline or Rapid growth stage

high birth rate low death rate

III. Fertility Decline birth rate declines low death rate

Page 16: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

IV. Modern Stage: low birth rate low death rate

Both around 12 per 1,000

Page 17: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

C. Where is population growing?1. 6 of the 10 fastest growing countries are in sub-Saharan Africa

2. China and India are the 2 most populous countries

3. U.S. is fastest growing industrialized country

4. Europe is losing population or growing very slowly

Page 18: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

D. Reasons for declining death rate1. Medical improvements

a. Antibiotics

b. Immunization2. Food aid during disasters3. Public health improvements

a. Sanitationb. Control of malaria-bearing mosquitoes

Page 19: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

E. AIDS/HIV1. UN estimates for the end of 2002:

a. 40 million people worldwide living with HIV/AIDS

b. 3 million deaths due to HIV/AIDS in 2002c. Cumulative deaths due to HIV/AIDS

in 2000 was 21.8 milliond. 5.3 million people newly infected

with HIV in 2000

Page 20: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

2. HIV/AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa

a. 7 out of 10 people newly infected with HIV in 2000

b. 25.3 million people infected

c. 78% of all deaths due to HIV/AIDS since the epidemic started

Page 21: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

d. Infection rates range from 2% of the adult population in western Africa to 20% in southern Africa

e. In 8 countries AIDS will claim the lives of a third of today’s 15 year olds

Page 22: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

f. In South Africa and Zimbabwe, where a fifth or a quarter of the adult population is infected, AIDS will claim the lives of around half of all 15-year-olds.

g. In Botswana, where about one in three adults are already HIV-infected – the highest prevalence rate in the world – no fewer than two-thirds of today’s 15-year-old boys will die prematurely of AIDS.

Page 23: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

3. AIDS effect on population by 2020 in sub-Saharan Africa could be severe (U.S. Census Bureau estimates)

a. 45 % smaller in Uganda

b. 35% smaller in Rwanda

c. 30% smaller in Malawi

Page 24: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

F. Changes in life expectancyYear Life expectancy

developedcountries

Life expectancydevelopingcountries

1950 66 40

present 75 63

2050 81 76

Page 25: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

IV. Why do people in LDCs have children?A. Emotional satisfaction

B. Investment

1. Children can work

2. Children can support aging parents

C. High child mortality leads to greater number of children

Page 26: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

D. What causes birth rates to decline?

1. Family planning programs

2. As women’s income and education levels increase they decide to have fewer children.

a. Women given the ability to choose, decide to have

fewer children

Page 27: Chapter 9 – It Is Not Food Versus Population. I. Reverend Thomas Malthus on population (1803) A. Predicted that population would grow geometrically (exponentially)

V. Population density - the number of people in a given area

1. Why does the number of people per square kilometer or square mile matter?

a. Natural resource base may not be able to sustain a large number of people

b. The “demographic trap” (Quote from Brown&Kane p.138) – ecological carrying capacity reached

(high birth rates and high death rates)