Title: Population Growth and the Demographic Transition
1Population Growth and the Demographic Transition
- Ian RH Rockett, PhD, MPH
- Professor and Associate Chair
- Department of Community Medicine
- West Virginia University
- PO Box 9190
- Morgantown, WV 26506-9190
- USA
- irockett_at_hsc.wvu.edu
2Learning Objectives
- To view population growth from a Malthusian
perspective - To calculate crude death rates, birth rates,
rates of natural increase, and population
doubling times - To comprehend the concept of the Demographic
Transition
3Performance Objectives
- Examine patterns of natural increase
- Classify populations and sub-populations within
the demographic transition framework - Predict growth trends in populations and
sub-populations
4Demography
- a kindred population science
- with epidemiology, it shares the Greek root
demos (people) and the same founder, 17th
century Englishman, John Graunt
5Demography is the scientific study of the
determinants and consequences of human population
trends
6By the beginning of the 21st century, world
population reached 6 billion. Most of the growth
has occurred in the past 200 years.
7Figure 1 World Population Growth
Source Joseph A. McFalls, Jr. Population A
Lively Introduction. Third edition. Population
Reference Bureau 53(3) 1998 38
8The unprecedented population growth of modern
times heightens interest in the notion of
doubling time. Calculation of population doubling
time is facilitated by the Law of 70.
9Law of 70
- If a population is growing at a constant rate of
1 per year, it can be expected to double
approximately every 70 years - -- if the rate of growth is 2, then the expected
doubling time is 70/2 or 35 years.
10T.R. Malthus, 1766-1834
- English clergyman, Thomas Robert Malthus, was the
first person to draw widespread attention to the
two components of natural increase, births and
deaths (fertility and mortality).
11In his Essay on the Principle of Population,
initially published in 1798, Malthus postulated
that population tended to grow geometrically
while the means of subsistence (food) grew only
arithmetically.
12The Malthusian Traparithmetic growth (food)
1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10geometric growth
(population)1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256,
512
13Malthus argued that the difference between
geometric and arithmetic growth caused a tension
between the growth of population and that of the
means of subsistence.-- this gap could not
persist indefinitely.
14Owing to war, disease, hunger, and vice,
mortality would serve as a positive check on
population growth.
15Solution to the Malthusian Trap
- Preventive checks birth control through (1)
later age at marriage. (2) abstinence from
sex outside marriage. - (Malthus opposed artificial methods of birth
control on moral grounds. Viewed contraception as
a vice)
16Population Explosion
- Contrary to Malthuss prediction, mortality has
not yet risen to curb world population growth. - lt 1 billion people in 1800
- 6 billion by the end of the
- 20th century
17Population Explosion
- Why was Malthus unable to foresee the population
explosion (also known as the population bomb)? - He did not recognize the force of the Industrial
Revolution, which produced exponential growth in
the means of subsistence.
18The Demographic Transition
- During the first half of the 20th century,
demographers conceived the notion of the
demographic transition.
19The Demographic Transition
- The demographic transition framework illustrates
population growth in terms of discrepancies and
changes in two crude vital rates mortality and
fertility (ignores migration)
20CRUDE VITAL RATES
- Crude Death Rate (CDR)
- deaths in calendar year k
- midyear population
-
21CRUDE VITAL RATES
- Crude Birth Rate (CBR)
- deaths in calendar year k
- midyear population
- Rate of Natural Increase CBR - CDR
22Figure 2 The Demographic Transition
Source Joseph A. McFalls, Jr. Population A
Lively Introduction. Third edition. Population
Reference Bureau 53(3) 1998 39
23Four Perspectives on Demographic Transition
24Description
(2) Classification
25(3) Explanation
(4) Prediction
26Figure 3 Demographic/ Epidemiologic Transition
Framework
Source Ian R.H. Rockett. Population and
Health An Introduction to Epidemiology. Second
edition. Population Reference Bureau 54(4)
1999 9