How Populations Grow and Change: Crash Course Geography #33
Summary
TLDRThis episode of Crash Course Geography explores the complexities of population dynamics, discussing both overpopulation and policies encouraging population growth. It delves into the historical perspectives of Malthus and Boserup, highlighting the debate on poverty's link to population growth. The video explains the Demographic Transition Model and population pyramids to illustrate birth and death rates' impact on population trends. It emphasizes the importance of understanding economic security and women's empowerment in managing population pressures and their environmental implications.
Takeaways
- 🌍 Earth's overpopulation can occur due to either high population density or resource overuse, both of which have significant environmental impacts.
- 📉 Some countries, particularly in Eastern Europe, are facing declining birth rates and have implemented policies to encourage population growth, contrasting with global overpopulation concerns.
- 🧐 Population issues are complex, involving not just numbers but also economic, cultural, and environmental factors.
- 🌱 Population geographers study the spatial aspects of populations, including why people are located where they are and how they impact their environment.
- 📚 Thomas Malthus' 'Malthusian Prediction' from 1798 suggested that population growth would outstrip resource availability, an idea that has been debated for centuries.
- 🔄 The Neo-Malthusian movement revived concerns about overpopulation and resource scarcity in the mid-20th century, influencing global population policies.
- 💡 Ester Boserup's theory countered Malthus by arguing that population pressure leads to agricultural innovation, suggesting that population growth can drive progress rather than disaster.
- 📊 Demographic tools like the Demographic Transition Model and population pyramids help understand and predict population changes and their economic implications.
- 🌐 The Demographic Transition Model outlines four stages of population change, from high birth and death rates to low growth or decline, influenced by economic development.
- 🌟 Empowering women through education and economic opportunities is a key factor in reducing birth rates and managing population growth.
- 🏛 Population trends must be considered in the context of economic security and societal roles to effectively address ecological and social challenges.
Q & A
What are the two ways Earth can be considered overpopulated according to the script?
-Earth can be overpopulated when there is pressure in an area from more people than the area can support, or when even a small number of people overuse the resources in an area.
Why did countries in Eastern Europe start implementing policies to encourage more children in the early 2000s?
-They noticed an alarming trend of fewer babies being born, which could potentially affect the economy and social support systems due to an aging population.
What is the Malthusian Prediction proposed by Thomas Malthus in 1798?
-The Malthusian Prediction suggests that the world would soon be overrun by people who would use up all available resources due to agricultural production increasing linearly while the population seemed to be increasing exponentially.
What is the Boserup Theory and how does it differ from the Malthusian Prediction?
-The Boserup Theory argues that people innovate, especially in agriculture, when there is pressure from having more mouths to feed, suggesting that poor people would not use up all resources as Malthus thought, and disaster was not imminent.
What does the term 'carrying capacity' mean in human geography?
-Carrying capacity in human geography refers to how many people a given environment can support.
What is the Demographic Transition Model and what does it attempt to approximate?
-The Demographic Transition Model is a tool used by demographers to approximate how different birth and death rates lead to population change and how that ties to the economy.
What are the four stages of the Demographic Transition Model?
-The four stages are: Stage 1 with high birth and death rates leading to a small but steady population; Stage 2 with rapid population growth due to high birth rates and low death rates; Stage 3 where both death and birth rates start to decrease, slowing population growth; and Stage 4 with slow to declining population growth.
How does a population pyramid help population geographers?
-A population pyramid allows population geographers to see historic impacts on population and predict future growth and decline, which helps governments allocate resources.
What are some factors that can lead to a decrease in birth rate according to the script?
-Factors that can lead to a decrease in birth rate include economic security, education for women, and access to good paying jobs.
What is the role of a population geographer in understanding population trends?
-A population geographer uses demographic tools and studies to assemble population trends into a picture that helps understand the role they play in economic and environmental issues, aiding societies in decision-making.
Why might some countries face an aging crisis despite the global population increase?
-Some countries face an aging crisis because a large portion of their population is getting older without enough younger people to care for them, often due to low birth rates and high life expectancy.
Outlines
🌍 Overpopulation vs. Encouraging Higher Birth Rates
In this section, we explore the paradox of overpopulation concerns and the simultaneous encouragement of higher birth rates. The script references historical and recent policies, particularly in Europe, where countries like Estonia offer benefits to increase population amidst declining birth rates. This contrasts with global concerns about resource strain due to overpopulation. Understanding population dynamics helps predict urban and rural growth, cultural shifts, and political movements.
📊 Understanding Population Growth and Decline
This paragraph introduces the Demographic Transition Model, explaining the stages of population growth and decline. It covers Stage 1's high birth and death rates, Stage 2's rapid growth due to better healthcare, Stage 3's slowing growth as both rates decrease, and Stage 4's declining growth in economically stagnant regions. The section also highlights the use of population pyramids to visualize demographic changes and predict future trends, using Yemen's example to illustrate conflict impacts on population.
🌱 Population Trends and Economic Security
This section discusses the interplay between economic security, women's empowerment, and birth rates. It emphasizes that places with shaky economic security or poor child survival rates tend to have higher birth rates. Conversely, empowering women through education and employment leads to lower birth rates. The role of population geographers is highlighted, showing how they use demographic tools to inform policies that address economic and environmental challenges. The conclusion underscores the need to view population issues beyond mere numbers, considering the complex lives and economic contexts of people.
Mindmap
Keywords
💡Overpopulation
💡Birth Rate
💡Demographic Transition Model
💡Carrying Capacity
💡Economic Security
💡Malthusian Prediction
💡Population Pyramid
💡Migration
💡Agricultural Intensification
💡Neo-Malthusian Movement
Highlights
Two ways Earth can be overpopulated: pressure from too many people or overuse of resources.
Policies in Europe encouraging population growth due to declining birth rates.
Complexity of population issues including economic and cultural impacts.
Introduction to population geography focusing on spatial aspects and impacts.
Case study of habitat loss in India and its relation to banana varieties.
Historical context of overpopulation concerns dating back to Thomas Malthus.
Malthusian Prediction and its implications for resource scarcity and population growth.
Neo-Malthusian movement and its environmental awareness in the mid-20th century.
Boserup Theory as a counterargument to Malthus, emphasizing innovation in agriculture.
Concept of carrying capacity in human geography and its relevance to population studies.
Demographic tools like the demographic transition model and population pyramids.
Demographic Transition Model's stages and their relation to economic development.
Use of population pyramids to predict future growth and inform government resource allocation.
The role of economic security and women's empowerment in influencing birth rates.
Global efforts to reduce population sizes and their ethical implications.
The importance of understanding economic situations and individual lives in population studies.
Practical applications of population geography in policy-making and resource planning.
The dual nature of global population issues: overpopulation and aging crises.
Conclusion on the multifaceted approach needed to address ecological and social tensions related to population.
Transcripts
Back in episode 16 we got into two ways our Earth can be overpopulated: either when there’s
pressure in an area from more people in a place than the area can support, or when even
a small number of people apply pressure by overusing the resources in an area. And both
types of overpopulation sound like a big deal, especially when we think about how we’re
using our resources and the effects on our environment.
But if we check out global news over the last few decades, we’d see something that seems
counterintuitive: policies encouraging people to have more kids -- basically to increase the population!
In the early 2000s countries across Europe, and especially Eastern Europe, started to
notice an alarming trend -- fewer and fewer babies were being born.
So countries like Estonia began implementing new policies like benefits and payments to
encourage people to have more children.
So...it seems like we’re getting some mixed messages.
While we worry about there being too many people for the planet to support, we can also
worry about how fewer people in a given place may affect the economy, what may happen when
there are more elderly people who need care than there are healthcare workers, or even
be concerned about how many people are necessary to carry on a language, religion, or other
aspects of culture.
Population is more complex than just having too many or too few people. But when we understand
what drives the population of a place, whether we're talking about movement in and out of
a country or how many people are being born or dying, we can begin to understand future
patterns of urban and rural growth, cultural changes, and even political movements.
I’m Alizé Carrère, and this is Crash Course Geography.
INTRO
As population geographers, we focus on the spatial aspects of populations, or specific
groups of people. Like where people are located, why they’re located there, and how the location
and number of people impact a place.
Like in India we’re losing habitat in the region that is the genetic hearth, or birthplace,
of many varieties of banana. [Gasp of horror?]
So we might look at how the banana diffused as people travelled and then migrated along
the Silk Roads over many centuries. Then we’d look at when the habitat started
to decline and make note of who was using the land and how they were using it. Maybe
the density, or number of people per square kilometer, had changed, or the economic or
political practices, or both. As the land use changes, we’d look for how humans have
driven that change.
In fact, while worrying about natural resources and the impact of population feels like a
very 21st century-climate-crisis-thing, scholars have been talking about overpopulation for
a couple hundred years now.
Back in 1798 British economist Thomas Malthus first proposed what we now call the “Malthusian
Prediction.” Based on what he was seeing in Britain where agricultural production was
increasing linearly but the population seemed to be increasing exponentially, he concluded
that the world would soon be overrun by people who would use up all the available resources.
Malthus also argued that poverty causes population growth, and that adding more people to the
planet would doom us all. Today there are about 7 billion more people on the planet
than in 1798, so Malthus hasn’t been right yet. But while many of Malthus’s ideas were
disproven, the idea that poverty and population growth are linked stuck around.
In fact, between the 1940s and 1960s it resurfaced as part of growing environmental awareness.
This Neo-Malthusian movement pointed back to Malthus’s arguments, sounding an alarm
that there were too many people on the planet, and soon there wouldn’t be enough resources for everyone.
Malthusian ideas -- like that we should be wary of outstripping our resources and that
poverty is to blame -- led to global movements to encourage poor countries to achieve lower
birth rates, but not everyone agreed with the rather convenient – for wealthy countries
– argument that global environmental disaster was the fault of poor people.
Like Danish economist Ester Boserup who in 1965 published what’s sometimes called the
Boserup Theory or agricultural intensification.
Unlike Malthus, Boserup argued that people innovate, and in particular, the agriculture
sector only innovates when there’s pressure from having more mouths to feed. So poor people
weren’t going to use up all the resources like Malthus thought, and disaster wasn’t imminent.
What Malthus and Boserup both were getting at were ideas of carrying capacity, which
in human geography means how many people a given environment can support. Rather than
blame over or underpopulation, today when population sizes increase or decrease, a population
geographer will ask questions to figure out what’s happening in that place and how humans
are putting pressure on the environment.
We also use the tools of demography, or the study of population, to study how populations
change over space and time.
Demography often includes lots of statistics, like birth rate, which we’ve already mentioned
and death rate, or the mortality rate.
One tool demographers use is the demographic transition model which tries to approximate
how different birth and death rates lead to population change and how that ties to the
economy. In fact, it was originally created to model how population size might respond
to changes in the economy -- like within or between agricultural, manufacturing, or even
service-based economies.
Like any mathematical model, the Demographic Transition Model isn’t perfect because predicting
the future is hard! In particular the Demographic Transition Model was developed based on population
patterns in Western Europe and North America, and doesn’t always capture patterns in lower
income or non-white populations.
And while we read the stages from left to right, when using the model it’s important
to remember that economic development and population changes aren’t strictly sequential.
It’s possible for dramatic events like a war or an environmental disaster to create
conditions that cause populations and economies to skip back and forth between stages.
But we’ll still talk through them from left to right. In the Demographic Transition Model,
Stage 1 populations have high birth and high death rates which end up balancing each other
out more or less, so the population size is roughly small but steady. Before the industrial
revolution every country would’ve been considered a Stage 1 country, but today none exist.
A stage 2 population is one that is growing rapidly -- like the population of Western
Europe when Malthus was writing in the 18th century. Lots of people are being born, but
fewer and fewer people are dying.
Better healthcare and nutrition mean that people are living longer.
In 2020, there were only a few countries considered Stage 2, like Yemen. And to see what a high
birth rate and low death rate means for the overall population and trends over time, we
can use another demography tool called a population pyramid.
A population pyramid allows us to see historic impacts on population, and also predict future
growth and decline which helps governments allocate resources. From this pyramid, we
can see that in 2020, there was a steady decline in population after 10 years old, and a sharper
decline after 44 years old.
So this is a time as population geographers we can ask questions to see what’s happening
in Yemen. Turns out, there’s been conflict and war in the region going back to at least
2011, and that dip represents some of the people who have died in the conflicts. But
overall, a triangular pattern like this tends to indicate that the population will continue
to increase.
While there aren’t many countries in the stage 2 category, in 2020, a large number
of the world’s countries fit in Stage 3. This stage is where both death rates and eventually
birth rates start to decrease.
So our population growth rate starts to slow down. In fact, the world’s population growth
rate, or the rate of natural increase which only considers births and deaths and ignores
migration, was actually at its highest in 1963.
But in 2021, there’s still a lot of population momentum -- the birth rate might be getting
smaller, but bigger and bigger groups of people are getting old enough to have kids. So the
world population will still increase for a few more generations until the number of people
who aren’t old enough to have kids is smaller than the number who are.
Which brings us to the final stage we’ll discuss: stage 4 where countries have slow
to declining population growth. Across Eastern Europe there’s been an economic
stagnation after the wars and economic decline of the 1990s. And instead of leading to high
birth rates like might happen with a stage 1 or 2 country, the lack of economic opportunity
leads to voluntary migration -- kind of a double population whammy.
As people leave, there are fewer people to support the economy and take care of the aging population.
So stage 4 countries, like Japan or Germany, or even some stage 3 countries
like Estonia, are trying to create incentives for people to both stay in the country and
have more children.
What we can learn from demographic tools like the Demographic Transition Model or by studying
population pyramids is that the interplay between birth rates, death rates, and migration
requires a lot of context. But we can use this information to better understand the
relationship between people, their economic security, and their impact on the resources they use.
Globally there’ve been drastic efforts to reduce population sizes in the name of saving
the environment or resources -- like restrictions on the number of children a family can have,
or even forced sterilization programs. But by looking at more than just population size,
we can notice that most places where the birth rate comes down have a few things in common,
especially economic security and the role of women in society.
In societies where economic security is shaky, or where children rarely make it to adulthood,
or where there is no guaranteed retirement income, there’s often a high birth rate.
And countries have found that if they want to encourage a decrease in birth rate, one
of the fastest ways to help that happen is to empower women. Many different studies show
each year of education a woman has decreases the birth rate by 5 to 10%. And education
combined with access to good paying jobs is a major factor in the total fertility rate
or the average number of children a person is expected to give birth to over the course
of their reproductive years.
A population geographer uses all of these tools to assemble the population trends into
a picture that helps us understand the role they play in economic and environmental issues.
Societies can then use this picture for decision-making.
Like to understand the current population trends and predict the future trajectory to
better plan for workforce and resource needs, or to implement policies to educate women
and encourage them to participate in the workforce to try to decrease future population pressure.
So, is the world overpopulated or underpopulated? It seems to be both. It just depends on where
you’re located. The global population is increasing, but some countries like Estonia,
Japan or to some extent the US face an aging crisis -- a huge chunk of their population
is getting older without enough younger people to care for them.
Other high density places like Bangladesh, India, and South Korea have implemented a
wide range of programs, or have economies that give people economic options that make
it more possible to have smaller family sizes.
If we want to understand how to address some of our largest ecological and social tensions,
we need to understand more than just how populations grow. We have to understand what makes people
feel economically secure, but keep in mind that economic success uses up a lot of resources.
So rather than go “Ah! There are almost 8 billion people on the planet!” it’s
more helpful if we remember we’re talking about people with complex lives and dreams,
living in particular economic situations, not just numbers, and look at multiple factors
to understand the problems related to population size.
Thanks for watching this episode of Crash Course Geography which is filmed at the
Team Sandoval Pierce Studio and was made with the help of all these nice people. If you want
to help keep all Crash Course free for everyone, forever, you can join our community on Patreon.
تصفح المزيد من مقاطع الفيديو ذات الصلة
IGCSE Geography: 1.1 Population Dynamics
Unit 2 - Demographic Transition and Population Pyramids
Global Demography - The Contemporary World Lecture Series
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Understanding Population Dynamics [AP Human Geography Review Unit 2 Topic 4]
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