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Malthusian Pessimism

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Malthusian Pessimism In his 1798 theory, English economist and demographer Reverend Thomas Malthus predicted that, because population growth is exponential while ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Malthusian Pessimism


1
Malthusian Pessimism
  • In his 1798 theory, English economist and
    demographer Reverend Thomas Malthus predicted
    that, because population growth is exponential
    while agricultural productivity growth follows a
    linear trend, food demand would inevitably
    eventually outstrip supply capacitythereby
    causing mass starvation and/or the need for
    population control measures to equilibrate supply
    and demand.
  • This fatalistic vision of population growth was
    taken up by Paul Ehrlich in his 1968 The
    Population Bomb as well as by Lester Brown.
  • The argument was popularised in the 1970s by
    bestseller Limits to Growth (Meadows et al.)

2
The Counter-Evidence
  • According to Lomborg, the Malthusian premise
    regarding the respective patterns of population
    and productivity growth does not hold.
  • Empirical evidence shows that population growth
    is rarely exponential while agricultural
    production rarely grows linearly.
  • According to the UN, food production is 23
    greater today than in 1961 (WRI 1996-97).

3
More Food than Ever
  • In general, Lomborg argues, food per capita is
    higher than ever despite significant population
    growth.
  • Calorie intake per person has increased in both
    the developed and the developing world, and the
    proportion of world population that is starving
    has fallen.
  • And despite increasing demand fuelled by
    population growth, food prices have fallen
    dramatically. This implies that foodstuffs have
    become less scarce.

4
The Green Revolution
  • The unprecedented advances in agricultural
    productivity are largely due to the advent of a
    number of new technologies, collectively known as
    the Green Revolution.
  • High yield crop varieties, pioneered by Nobel
    Peace Prize winner Norman Borlaug, germinate
    earlier in the year, grow faster, and are more
    resistant to disease and drought.
  • Irrigation and water control improve soil
    fertility and hence yields.
  • Increased use of fertilizers and pesticides
    improves plant growth and prevents losses
    resulting from disease and insects.

5
The Green Revolution consequences
  • 30 rise in maximum yields (accounting for
    20-50 of productivity growth)
  • Additional income to farmers estimated at 4
    billion per annum
  • In 1997, 18 of total agricultural land was
    irrigated, up from 10.5 in 1961
  • Since 1950, the use of fertilizer has increased
    nine-fold.

6
Regional Distribution
  • Improvements in the supply of food per capita
    have not been equitably distributed among
    nations.
  • Sub-Saharan Africa has remained largely stagnant,
    with the rate of increase of the population
    outstripping growth between 1980-1995. Lomborg
    sees this as the result of poor policies.
  • In contrast, the economic reforms instituted in
    China in the late 1970s have paved the way for
    increased agricultural production per capita and
    rapidly growing rural incomes.
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