Title: Population and development: Malthus versus Boserup
1Population and development Malthus versus
Boserup
- BIAN2120/DEMO8024
- Lecture 5
- Robert Attenborough
2Theories for situations of population stasis
- I.e. of little or no population size change over
long periods, slow growth at most - This may or may not mean equilibrium
- Peter McDonald reviewed theories for this last
time homeostasis versus chaos - On a homeostasis model, feedback loops control
any tendency to growth or decline - On chaos model, no such systematic control is at
work instead, extrinsic factors
3Today, older theories for newer situations
- Situations of dramatic population change
- Also of radically changed patterns of society
economy in many regions - Development modernization over the last 250
years or less - Somehow population has escaped homeostatic
control, if there was any - Popn also interacts in complex ways with
economic development what causes what?
4Is population growth good or bad for economic
development?
- Bad Thomas Malthus
- Good Julian Simon technological optimism
people are the ultimate resource - Neutral Esther Boserup greater density of
population leads to technological change - These are not politically neutral ideas
- Malthusian neo-Malthusian can be terms of
abuse but what did Malthus say?
5The Reverend Professor T.R. Malthus (1766-1834)
- A mathematician, a clergyman, and Britains first
professor of political economy - Also father of demography its theory
- One of the most influential thinkers of his day,
which was a period of hectic social change
Industrial Revolution, Poor Laws - Provided one of the critical influences on
Darwins thinking, hence on biology too
6Malthuss An Essay on the Principle of
Population (1798)
- First edition proposed a quite stark simple
model, drew social policy conclusions from it - Perhaps for that reason, it had a dramatic impact
on public debates - Nonetheless, it was quite a sketchy theory
- Second and later versions were more nuanced in
argument, much better supported evidentially -
less interesting
7Malthus started from two postulata
- 1. Food is necessary for survival
- 2. The passion between the sexes is necessary
and will remain in its present condition - From these he asserted that population growth
would always have the potential to outpace
economic growth - (Heres the link to Darwin though its a
side-issue in the present context)
8Thus some check must limit population growth
- Accordingly, Malthus saw two ways to keep
population and resources in balance - 1 the positive check mortality deaths
- 2 the preventive check nuptiality
marriages, or rather constraints on them - He ruled out contraception as immoral
9Positive and preventive checks
- Positive check
- Population size rises
- Real income falls
- Mortality increases (poorer diets living
conditions) - Population size falls
- Preventive check
- Population size rises
- Real income falls
- Marriages are postponed (they become
unaffordable) - Fertility falls
- Population size falls
10Malthus had very limited access to relevant data
- Economic history (Phelps-Brown Hopkins)
historical demography (Wrigley Schofield) now
allow a much fuller assessment of, say, the
English historical data than Malthus himself
could make - P-B H produced real wages index based on wages
of building workers price of food - W S inferred demography from parish registers
11English results show
- a clear link between marriage real wages
- no clear link between mortality real wages
- Thus Malthus did appear to have captured an
important facet of his own society - And the preventive check was predominant
- However, Malthus wrote when England was entering
the Industrial Revolution the relation between
economy demography, including the links he
stated, was changing radically
12Thus Malthus was in a way successful
- But his model took some aspects of society,
economy, agriculture etc. as static - They were then undergoing rapid change, so his
model described the past better than the future - The model does not handle change well
- This is perhaps partly why he has subsequently
been seen as conservative - Malthusian sometimes even used to mean opposed
to social improvement which would be a
distortion even of TRMs crudest version
13Need to incorporate social change in population
models
- What is the rĂ´le of population dynamics in
situations of complex social, economic
technological change? - Such situations may be those of globalization in
the present day - Or economic development, modernization
- Or 19th-century industrialization
- Or even earlier changes agriculture
urbanization
14Ester Boserup first book 1965
- Danish agricultural economist, with field
experience in India other Asian countries - Interested in the interaction between population
growth and innovation, e.g. in agricultural
practice technology - Although neither a demographer nor an
anthropologist or archaeologist, she has proved
to be an important influence on all
15Archaeological background
- How does past population growth relate to social,
cultural, economic, technical change, e.g.
agriculture, urbanization? - Archaeologists e.g. Childe had often taken the
benefits of such changes to be obvious - Assumed they would be implemented as soon as
society was advanced enough - Population growth would then follow
16Boserup archaeology
- Boserups implication for archaeology was to turn
previous assumption on its head - Population growth was not so much the end-product
of social technical change - Rather, population growth was an extrinsic
pressure, driving changes which otherwise might
not have happened - Far-reaching implications for archaeology
anthropology, still being explored
17So what did Boserup actually say?
- When a population is over-crowded, it evolves new
forms of agriculture - High density of population is neutral, neither
good nor bad, but usually needed for development
of new techniques - With historical change, humankind has moved
through a series of increasingly intensive
agricultural systems - Each requires supports more people
18Stages of agricultural development
- Gathering always fallow
- Forest fallow 1-2 crops, 15-25 yrs fallow
- Bush fallow 4-6 crops, 8-10 yrs fallow
- Short fallow 1-2 crops, 1 yr fallow
- Annual cropping 1 crop, lt1 yr fallow
- Multi-cropping 2 crops, no fallow yrs
- What triggers adoption of new methods?
- New methods may require social change
19Testing Boserup
- No long-run data series like Wrigley
Schofields for Malthus is available for testing
Boserups model - Nonetheless specific examples often support the
propositions such as farmers generally have to
do more subsistence work than hunter-gatherers
work further increases with intensification of
agriculture
20Synthesis
- Agricultural change is only part of a wider
more complex picture of development - When agricultural productivity comes from
mechanization, as often nowadays, it is
capital-intensive, not labour-intensive - Nonetheless Malthus Boserup have both
contributed stimulating models insights - Lee (1986) Wood (1998) have both put the two
together into overall models of population
dynamics, seeing them as complementary