Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

137
Imagine that the number of students in our AP HG Class has doubled. List the effects of this, both positive and negative. Would you like to have more, fewer or the same number of students in the class as now?

description

Imagine that the number of students in our AP HG Class has doubled. L ist the effects of this, both positive and negative. Would you like to have more, fewer or the same number of students in the class as now?. Questions: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Page 1: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Imagine that the number of students in our AP HG Class has doubled List the effects of this both positive and negative Would you like to have more fewer or the same number of students in the class as now

Questions

1 What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density

2 What qualities are desirable about areas of lower population density

3 If population continues to grow locally what is the impact on population density

Human Geography

Unit II Population

Population Geographybull Distribution of World Populationbull Population Statisticsbull Population Pyramidsbull Demographic Transition Theorybull Population Control bull Overpopulation

(Malthus and Neo-Malthusians)

Population

bull Demography The study of the Characteristics of human population ndash Demographers look statistically at

how people are distributed spatially by age gender occupation fertility health etc

bull The distribution of the worlds population is in one word ldquounevenrdquo

A little information about world Population

bull 80 of pop Lives within 500 Mi of an ocean

bull World inhabitants live on only 10 of the land

bull 90 of pop Lives North of the Equator

bull 65 lives between 20degN and 60 deg N latitude

Population Concentrations

bull 23 countries = 75 of world population (172)

bull 10 Countries have pops Greater than 100M

bull China India United States Indonesia Brazil

>

World and Country Population Totals

Distribution and Structure 34 of people live on 5 of earths surface

Total 66 billion on planet as of 2007World Clock

Five most populous regions and countriesREGION POPULATION COUNTRY POPULATION

bull East Asia 15 billion China 1254 billion

bull South Asia 12 billion India 986 millionbull Europe 750 million US 274 millionbull SE Asia 500 million Indonesia 206 millionbull East N Am 120 million Brazil 168 million

Factors that Shape Distribution

bull Accessibility bull Topographybull Soil Fertility bull Climate

bull Weather bull Water bull Political

History bull Economic

History

Ecumene

Expansion of the Ecumene 5000 BC - AD 1900

Ecumene or portion of the earthrsquos surface that has permanent human settlement has expanded to cover most of the earthrsquos land area

Population Density

bull Density numerical measure of the relationship between the number of people and some other unit of interest (typically space)

Population Density

bull 2 Main Types of Densities ndashCrudeArithmetic ndashPhysiological

Arithmetic Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of land area US = 76mi2 NYC=1000000mi2 Australia = 7mi2

Physiological Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of arable (farmable) land

CrudeArithmetic Density

bull Total number of people divided by the total land are (also called Population Density)

Limitationsbull Assumes Uniformitybull One dimensional bull Tells little about opportunities or

obstacles contained in the relationship of people to land

Assumes Uniformity

Example New York State bull 407731 People Per Sq Mile

(6th)bull Remove NY City Population

of 8 Million bull And area of NYC 368 sq mibull Density = 24019 People

Per Sq Mile

Population Density of Georgia

Physiological Density

bull Ratio of population to a given unit of cultivated land

bull Number of people dependant on each unit of cultivated land

bull Excludes agriculturally non-productive land

bull Reflects the ldquoburden of dependencyrdquo or ldquocarrying capacityrdquo

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 2: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Questions

1 What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density

2 What qualities are desirable about areas of lower population density

3 If population continues to grow locally what is the impact on population density

Human Geography

Unit II Population

Population Geographybull Distribution of World Populationbull Population Statisticsbull Population Pyramidsbull Demographic Transition Theorybull Population Control bull Overpopulation

(Malthus and Neo-Malthusians)

Population

bull Demography The study of the Characteristics of human population ndash Demographers look statistically at

how people are distributed spatially by age gender occupation fertility health etc

bull The distribution of the worlds population is in one word ldquounevenrdquo

A little information about world Population

bull 80 of pop Lives within 500 Mi of an ocean

bull World inhabitants live on only 10 of the land

bull 90 of pop Lives North of the Equator

bull 65 lives between 20degN and 60 deg N latitude

Population Concentrations

bull 23 countries = 75 of world population (172)

bull 10 Countries have pops Greater than 100M

bull China India United States Indonesia Brazil

>

World and Country Population Totals

Distribution and Structure 34 of people live on 5 of earths surface

Total 66 billion on planet as of 2007World Clock

Five most populous regions and countriesREGION POPULATION COUNTRY POPULATION

bull East Asia 15 billion China 1254 billion

bull South Asia 12 billion India 986 millionbull Europe 750 million US 274 millionbull SE Asia 500 million Indonesia 206 millionbull East N Am 120 million Brazil 168 million

Factors that Shape Distribution

bull Accessibility bull Topographybull Soil Fertility bull Climate

bull Weather bull Water bull Political

History bull Economic

History

Ecumene

Expansion of the Ecumene 5000 BC - AD 1900

Ecumene or portion of the earthrsquos surface that has permanent human settlement has expanded to cover most of the earthrsquos land area

Population Density

bull Density numerical measure of the relationship between the number of people and some other unit of interest (typically space)

Population Density

bull 2 Main Types of Densities ndashCrudeArithmetic ndashPhysiological

Arithmetic Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of land area US = 76mi2 NYC=1000000mi2 Australia = 7mi2

Physiological Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of arable (farmable) land

CrudeArithmetic Density

bull Total number of people divided by the total land are (also called Population Density)

Limitationsbull Assumes Uniformitybull One dimensional bull Tells little about opportunities or

obstacles contained in the relationship of people to land

Assumes Uniformity

Example New York State bull 407731 People Per Sq Mile

(6th)bull Remove NY City Population

of 8 Million bull And area of NYC 368 sq mibull Density = 24019 People

Per Sq Mile

Population Density of Georgia

Physiological Density

bull Ratio of population to a given unit of cultivated land

bull Number of people dependant on each unit of cultivated land

bull Excludes agriculturally non-productive land

bull Reflects the ldquoburden of dependencyrdquo or ldquocarrying capacityrdquo

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 3: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Human Geography

Unit II Population

Population Geographybull Distribution of World Populationbull Population Statisticsbull Population Pyramidsbull Demographic Transition Theorybull Population Control bull Overpopulation

(Malthus and Neo-Malthusians)

Population

bull Demography The study of the Characteristics of human population ndash Demographers look statistically at

how people are distributed spatially by age gender occupation fertility health etc

bull The distribution of the worlds population is in one word ldquounevenrdquo

A little information about world Population

bull 80 of pop Lives within 500 Mi of an ocean

bull World inhabitants live on only 10 of the land

bull 90 of pop Lives North of the Equator

bull 65 lives between 20degN and 60 deg N latitude

Population Concentrations

bull 23 countries = 75 of world population (172)

bull 10 Countries have pops Greater than 100M

bull China India United States Indonesia Brazil

>

World and Country Population Totals

Distribution and Structure 34 of people live on 5 of earths surface

Total 66 billion on planet as of 2007World Clock

Five most populous regions and countriesREGION POPULATION COUNTRY POPULATION

bull East Asia 15 billion China 1254 billion

bull South Asia 12 billion India 986 millionbull Europe 750 million US 274 millionbull SE Asia 500 million Indonesia 206 millionbull East N Am 120 million Brazil 168 million

Factors that Shape Distribution

bull Accessibility bull Topographybull Soil Fertility bull Climate

bull Weather bull Water bull Political

History bull Economic

History

Ecumene

Expansion of the Ecumene 5000 BC - AD 1900

Ecumene or portion of the earthrsquos surface that has permanent human settlement has expanded to cover most of the earthrsquos land area

Population Density

bull Density numerical measure of the relationship between the number of people and some other unit of interest (typically space)

Population Density

bull 2 Main Types of Densities ndashCrudeArithmetic ndashPhysiological

Arithmetic Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of land area US = 76mi2 NYC=1000000mi2 Australia = 7mi2

Physiological Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of arable (farmable) land

CrudeArithmetic Density

bull Total number of people divided by the total land are (also called Population Density)

Limitationsbull Assumes Uniformitybull One dimensional bull Tells little about opportunities or

obstacles contained in the relationship of people to land

Assumes Uniformity

Example New York State bull 407731 People Per Sq Mile

(6th)bull Remove NY City Population

of 8 Million bull And area of NYC 368 sq mibull Density = 24019 People

Per Sq Mile

Population Density of Georgia

Physiological Density

bull Ratio of population to a given unit of cultivated land

bull Number of people dependant on each unit of cultivated land

bull Excludes agriculturally non-productive land

bull Reflects the ldquoburden of dependencyrdquo or ldquocarrying capacityrdquo

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 4: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Population Geographybull Distribution of World Populationbull Population Statisticsbull Population Pyramidsbull Demographic Transition Theorybull Population Control bull Overpopulation

(Malthus and Neo-Malthusians)

Population

bull Demography The study of the Characteristics of human population ndash Demographers look statistically at

how people are distributed spatially by age gender occupation fertility health etc

bull The distribution of the worlds population is in one word ldquounevenrdquo

A little information about world Population

bull 80 of pop Lives within 500 Mi of an ocean

bull World inhabitants live on only 10 of the land

bull 90 of pop Lives North of the Equator

bull 65 lives between 20degN and 60 deg N latitude

Population Concentrations

bull 23 countries = 75 of world population (172)

bull 10 Countries have pops Greater than 100M

bull China India United States Indonesia Brazil

>

World and Country Population Totals

Distribution and Structure 34 of people live on 5 of earths surface

Total 66 billion on planet as of 2007World Clock

Five most populous regions and countriesREGION POPULATION COUNTRY POPULATION

bull East Asia 15 billion China 1254 billion

bull South Asia 12 billion India 986 millionbull Europe 750 million US 274 millionbull SE Asia 500 million Indonesia 206 millionbull East N Am 120 million Brazil 168 million

Factors that Shape Distribution

bull Accessibility bull Topographybull Soil Fertility bull Climate

bull Weather bull Water bull Political

History bull Economic

History

Ecumene

Expansion of the Ecumene 5000 BC - AD 1900

Ecumene or portion of the earthrsquos surface that has permanent human settlement has expanded to cover most of the earthrsquos land area

Population Density

bull Density numerical measure of the relationship between the number of people and some other unit of interest (typically space)

Population Density

bull 2 Main Types of Densities ndashCrudeArithmetic ndashPhysiological

Arithmetic Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of land area US = 76mi2 NYC=1000000mi2 Australia = 7mi2

Physiological Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of arable (farmable) land

CrudeArithmetic Density

bull Total number of people divided by the total land are (also called Population Density)

Limitationsbull Assumes Uniformitybull One dimensional bull Tells little about opportunities or

obstacles contained in the relationship of people to land

Assumes Uniformity

Example New York State bull 407731 People Per Sq Mile

(6th)bull Remove NY City Population

of 8 Million bull And area of NYC 368 sq mibull Density = 24019 People

Per Sq Mile

Population Density of Georgia

Physiological Density

bull Ratio of population to a given unit of cultivated land

bull Number of people dependant on each unit of cultivated land

bull Excludes agriculturally non-productive land

bull Reflects the ldquoburden of dependencyrdquo or ldquocarrying capacityrdquo

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 5: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Population

bull Demography The study of the Characteristics of human population ndash Demographers look statistically at

how people are distributed spatially by age gender occupation fertility health etc

bull The distribution of the worlds population is in one word ldquounevenrdquo

A little information about world Population

bull 80 of pop Lives within 500 Mi of an ocean

bull World inhabitants live on only 10 of the land

bull 90 of pop Lives North of the Equator

bull 65 lives between 20degN and 60 deg N latitude

Population Concentrations

bull 23 countries = 75 of world population (172)

bull 10 Countries have pops Greater than 100M

bull China India United States Indonesia Brazil

>

World and Country Population Totals

Distribution and Structure 34 of people live on 5 of earths surface

Total 66 billion on planet as of 2007World Clock

Five most populous regions and countriesREGION POPULATION COUNTRY POPULATION

bull East Asia 15 billion China 1254 billion

bull South Asia 12 billion India 986 millionbull Europe 750 million US 274 millionbull SE Asia 500 million Indonesia 206 millionbull East N Am 120 million Brazil 168 million

Factors that Shape Distribution

bull Accessibility bull Topographybull Soil Fertility bull Climate

bull Weather bull Water bull Political

History bull Economic

History

Ecumene

Expansion of the Ecumene 5000 BC - AD 1900

Ecumene or portion of the earthrsquos surface that has permanent human settlement has expanded to cover most of the earthrsquos land area

Population Density

bull Density numerical measure of the relationship between the number of people and some other unit of interest (typically space)

Population Density

bull 2 Main Types of Densities ndashCrudeArithmetic ndashPhysiological

Arithmetic Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of land area US = 76mi2 NYC=1000000mi2 Australia = 7mi2

Physiological Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of arable (farmable) land

CrudeArithmetic Density

bull Total number of people divided by the total land are (also called Population Density)

Limitationsbull Assumes Uniformitybull One dimensional bull Tells little about opportunities or

obstacles contained in the relationship of people to land

Assumes Uniformity

Example New York State bull 407731 People Per Sq Mile

(6th)bull Remove NY City Population

of 8 Million bull And area of NYC 368 sq mibull Density = 24019 People

Per Sq Mile

Population Density of Georgia

Physiological Density

bull Ratio of population to a given unit of cultivated land

bull Number of people dependant on each unit of cultivated land

bull Excludes agriculturally non-productive land

bull Reflects the ldquoburden of dependencyrdquo or ldquocarrying capacityrdquo

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 6: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

A little information about world Population

bull 80 of pop Lives within 500 Mi of an ocean

bull World inhabitants live on only 10 of the land

bull 90 of pop Lives North of the Equator

bull 65 lives between 20degN and 60 deg N latitude

Population Concentrations

bull 23 countries = 75 of world population (172)

bull 10 Countries have pops Greater than 100M

bull China India United States Indonesia Brazil

>

World and Country Population Totals

Distribution and Structure 34 of people live on 5 of earths surface

Total 66 billion on planet as of 2007World Clock

Five most populous regions and countriesREGION POPULATION COUNTRY POPULATION

bull East Asia 15 billion China 1254 billion

bull South Asia 12 billion India 986 millionbull Europe 750 million US 274 millionbull SE Asia 500 million Indonesia 206 millionbull East N Am 120 million Brazil 168 million

Factors that Shape Distribution

bull Accessibility bull Topographybull Soil Fertility bull Climate

bull Weather bull Water bull Political

History bull Economic

History

Ecumene

Expansion of the Ecumene 5000 BC - AD 1900

Ecumene or portion of the earthrsquos surface that has permanent human settlement has expanded to cover most of the earthrsquos land area

Population Density

bull Density numerical measure of the relationship between the number of people and some other unit of interest (typically space)

Population Density

bull 2 Main Types of Densities ndashCrudeArithmetic ndashPhysiological

Arithmetic Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of land area US = 76mi2 NYC=1000000mi2 Australia = 7mi2

Physiological Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of arable (farmable) land

CrudeArithmetic Density

bull Total number of people divided by the total land are (also called Population Density)

Limitationsbull Assumes Uniformitybull One dimensional bull Tells little about opportunities or

obstacles contained in the relationship of people to land

Assumes Uniformity

Example New York State bull 407731 People Per Sq Mile

(6th)bull Remove NY City Population

of 8 Million bull And area of NYC 368 sq mibull Density = 24019 People

Per Sq Mile

Population Density of Georgia

Physiological Density

bull Ratio of population to a given unit of cultivated land

bull Number of people dependant on each unit of cultivated land

bull Excludes agriculturally non-productive land

bull Reflects the ldquoburden of dependencyrdquo or ldquocarrying capacityrdquo

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 7: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Population Concentrations

bull 23 countries = 75 of world population (172)

bull 10 Countries have pops Greater than 100M

bull China India United States Indonesia Brazil

>

World and Country Population Totals

Distribution and Structure 34 of people live on 5 of earths surface

Total 66 billion on planet as of 2007World Clock

Five most populous regions and countriesREGION POPULATION COUNTRY POPULATION

bull East Asia 15 billion China 1254 billion

bull South Asia 12 billion India 986 millionbull Europe 750 million US 274 millionbull SE Asia 500 million Indonesia 206 millionbull East N Am 120 million Brazil 168 million

Factors that Shape Distribution

bull Accessibility bull Topographybull Soil Fertility bull Climate

bull Weather bull Water bull Political

History bull Economic

History

Ecumene

Expansion of the Ecumene 5000 BC - AD 1900

Ecumene or portion of the earthrsquos surface that has permanent human settlement has expanded to cover most of the earthrsquos land area

Population Density

bull Density numerical measure of the relationship between the number of people and some other unit of interest (typically space)

Population Density

bull 2 Main Types of Densities ndashCrudeArithmetic ndashPhysiological

Arithmetic Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of land area US = 76mi2 NYC=1000000mi2 Australia = 7mi2

Physiological Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of arable (farmable) land

CrudeArithmetic Density

bull Total number of people divided by the total land are (also called Population Density)

Limitationsbull Assumes Uniformitybull One dimensional bull Tells little about opportunities or

obstacles contained in the relationship of people to land

Assumes Uniformity

Example New York State bull 407731 People Per Sq Mile

(6th)bull Remove NY City Population

of 8 Million bull And area of NYC 368 sq mibull Density = 24019 People

Per Sq Mile

Population Density of Georgia

Physiological Density

bull Ratio of population to a given unit of cultivated land

bull Number of people dependant on each unit of cultivated land

bull Excludes agriculturally non-productive land

bull Reflects the ldquoburden of dependencyrdquo or ldquocarrying capacityrdquo

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 8: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

World and Country Population Totals

Distribution and Structure 34 of people live on 5 of earths surface

Total 66 billion on planet as of 2007World Clock

Five most populous regions and countriesREGION POPULATION COUNTRY POPULATION

bull East Asia 15 billion China 1254 billion

bull South Asia 12 billion India 986 millionbull Europe 750 million US 274 millionbull SE Asia 500 million Indonesia 206 millionbull East N Am 120 million Brazil 168 million

Factors that Shape Distribution

bull Accessibility bull Topographybull Soil Fertility bull Climate

bull Weather bull Water bull Political

History bull Economic

History

Ecumene

Expansion of the Ecumene 5000 BC - AD 1900

Ecumene or portion of the earthrsquos surface that has permanent human settlement has expanded to cover most of the earthrsquos land area

Population Density

bull Density numerical measure of the relationship between the number of people and some other unit of interest (typically space)

Population Density

bull 2 Main Types of Densities ndashCrudeArithmetic ndashPhysiological

Arithmetic Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of land area US = 76mi2 NYC=1000000mi2 Australia = 7mi2

Physiological Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of arable (farmable) land

CrudeArithmetic Density

bull Total number of people divided by the total land are (also called Population Density)

Limitationsbull Assumes Uniformitybull One dimensional bull Tells little about opportunities or

obstacles contained in the relationship of people to land

Assumes Uniformity

Example New York State bull 407731 People Per Sq Mile

(6th)bull Remove NY City Population

of 8 Million bull And area of NYC 368 sq mibull Density = 24019 People

Per Sq Mile

Population Density of Georgia

Physiological Density

bull Ratio of population to a given unit of cultivated land

bull Number of people dependant on each unit of cultivated land

bull Excludes agriculturally non-productive land

bull Reflects the ldquoburden of dependencyrdquo or ldquocarrying capacityrdquo

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 9: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Factors that Shape Distribution

bull Accessibility bull Topographybull Soil Fertility bull Climate

bull Weather bull Water bull Political

History bull Economic

History

Ecumene

Expansion of the Ecumene 5000 BC - AD 1900

Ecumene or portion of the earthrsquos surface that has permanent human settlement has expanded to cover most of the earthrsquos land area

Population Density

bull Density numerical measure of the relationship between the number of people and some other unit of interest (typically space)

Population Density

bull 2 Main Types of Densities ndashCrudeArithmetic ndashPhysiological

Arithmetic Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of land area US = 76mi2 NYC=1000000mi2 Australia = 7mi2

Physiological Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of arable (farmable) land

CrudeArithmetic Density

bull Total number of people divided by the total land are (also called Population Density)

Limitationsbull Assumes Uniformitybull One dimensional bull Tells little about opportunities or

obstacles contained in the relationship of people to land

Assumes Uniformity

Example New York State bull 407731 People Per Sq Mile

(6th)bull Remove NY City Population

of 8 Million bull And area of NYC 368 sq mibull Density = 24019 People

Per Sq Mile

Population Density of Georgia

Physiological Density

bull Ratio of population to a given unit of cultivated land

bull Number of people dependant on each unit of cultivated land

bull Excludes agriculturally non-productive land

bull Reflects the ldquoburden of dependencyrdquo or ldquocarrying capacityrdquo

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 10: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Ecumene

Expansion of the Ecumene 5000 BC - AD 1900

Ecumene or portion of the earthrsquos surface that has permanent human settlement has expanded to cover most of the earthrsquos land area

Population Density

bull Density numerical measure of the relationship between the number of people and some other unit of interest (typically space)

Population Density

bull 2 Main Types of Densities ndashCrudeArithmetic ndashPhysiological

Arithmetic Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of land area US = 76mi2 NYC=1000000mi2 Australia = 7mi2

Physiological Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of arable (farmable) land

CrudeArithmetic Density

bull Total number of people divided by the total land are (also called Population Density)

Limitationsbull Assumes Uniformitybull One dimensional bull Tells little about opportunities or

obstacles contained in the relationship of people to land

Assumes Uniformity

Example New York State bull 407731 People Per Sq Mile

(6th)bull Remove NY City Population

of 8 Million bull And area of NYC 368 sq mibull Density = 24019 People

Per Sq Mile

Population Density of Georgia

Physiological Density

bull Ratio of population to a given unit of cultivated land

bull Number of people dependant on each unit of cultivated land

bull Excludes agriculturally non-productive land

bull Reflects the ldquoburden of dependencyrdquo or ldquocarrying capacityrdquo

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 11: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Population Density

bull Density numerical measure of the relationship between the number of people and some other unit of interest (typically space)

Population Density

bull 2 Main Types of Densities ndashCrudeArithmetic ndashPhysiological

Arithmetic Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of land area US = 76mi2 NYC=1000000mi2 Australia = 7mi2

Physiological Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of arable (farmable) land

CrudeArithmetic Density

bull Total number of people divided by the total land are (also called Population Density)

Limitationsbull Assumes Uniformitybull One dimensional bull Tells little about opportunities or

obstacles contained in the relationship of people to land

Assumes Uniformity

Example New York State bull 407731 People Per Sq Mile

(6th)bull Remove NY City Population

of 8 Million bull And area of NYC 368 sq mibull Density = 24019 People

Per Sq Mile

Population Density of Georgia

Physiological Density

bull Ratio of population to a given unit of cultivated land

bull Number of people dependant on each unit of cultivated land

bull Excludes agriculturally non-productive land

bull Reflects the ldquoburden of dependencyrdquo or ldquocarrying capacityrdquo

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 12: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Population Density

bull 2 Main Types of Densities ndashCrudeArithmetic ndashPhysiological

Arithmetic Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of land area US = 76mi2 NYC=1000000mi2 Australia = 7mi2

Physiological Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of arable (farmable) land

CrudeArithmetic Density

bull Total number of people divided by the total land are (also called Population Density)

Limitationsbull Assumes Uniformitybull One dimensional bull Tells little about opportunities or

obstacles contained in the relationship of people to land

Assumes Uniformity

Example New York State bull 407731 People Per Sq Mile

(6th)bull Remove NY City Population

of 8 Million bull And area of NYC 368 sq mibull Density = 24019 People

Per Sq Mile

Population Density of Georgia

Physiological Density

bull Ratio of population to a given unit of cultivated land

bull Number of people dependant on each unit of cultivated land

bull Excludes agriculturally non-productive land

bull Reflects the ldquoburden of dependencyrdquo or ldquocarrying capacityrdquo

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 13: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Arithmetic Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of land area US = 76mi2 NYC=1000000mi2 Australia = 7mi2

Physiological Density ndash the total number of people per a unit of arable (farmable) land

CrudeArithmetic Density

bull Total number of people divided by the total land are (also called Population Density)

Limitationsbull Assumes Uniformitybull One dimensional bull Tells little about opportunities or

obstacles contained in the relationship of people to land

Assumes Uniformity

Example New York State bull 407731 People Per Sq Mile

(6th)bull Remove NY City Population

of 8 Million bull And area of NYC 368 sq mibull Density = 24019 People

Per Sq Mile

Population Density of Georgia

Physiological Density

bull Ratio of population to a given unit of cultivated land

bull Number of people dependant on each unit of cultivated land

bull Excludes agriculturally non-productive land

bull Reflects the ldquoburden of dependencyrdquo or ldquocarrying capacityrdquo

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 14: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

CrudeArithmetic Density

bull Total number of people divided by the total land are (also called Population Density)

Limitationsbull Assumes Uniformitybull One dimensional bull Tells little about opportunities or

obstacles contained in the relationship of people to land

Assumes Uniformity

Example New York State bull 407731 People Per Sq Mile

(6th)bull Remove NY City Population

of 8 Million bull And area of NYC 368 sq mibull Density = 24019 People

Per Sq Mile

Population Density of Georgia

Physiological Density

bull Ratio of population to a given unit of cultivated land

bull Number of people dependant on each unit of cultivated land

bull Excludes agriculturally non-productive land

bull Reflects the ldquoburden of dependencyrdquo or ldquocarrying capacityrdquo

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 15: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Assumes Uniformity

Example New York State bull 407731 People Per Sq Mile

(6th)bull Remove NY City Population

of 8 Million bull And area of NYC 368 sq mibull Density = 24019 People

Per Sq Mile

Population Density of Georgia

Physiological Density

bull Ratio of population to a given unit of cultivated land

bull Number of people dependant on each unit of cultivated land

bull Excludes agriculturally non-productive land

bull Reflects the ldquoburden of dependencyrdquo or ldquocarrying capacityrdquo

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 16: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Population Density of Georgia

Physiological Density

bull Ratio of population to a given unit of cultivated land

bull Number of people dependant on each unit of cultivated land

bull Excludes agriculturally non-productive land

bull Reflects the ldquoburden of dependencyrdquo or ldquocarrying capacityrdquo

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 17: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Physiological Density

bull Ratio of population to a given unit of cultivated land

bull Number of people dependant on each unit of cultivated land

bull Excludes agriculturally non-productive land

bull Reflects the ldquoburden of dependencyrdquo or ldquocarrying capacityrdquo

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 18: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

bull United States = 404 people are supported by 1 sq mile of arable land

bull Egypt = 9073 people per sq Mile

Why is Physiological Density More meaningful than CrudeArithmetic Density

Physiological Density

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 19: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Answer bull Physiological gives us a better

picture of the populations strain on the countryrsquos resources

EXAMPLEUnited States Crude Density = 78 per sq mi Physiological = 404 per sq mi Egypt Crude Density = 185 per sq mi Physiological = 9073 per sq mi

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 20: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Population Density ndash Egypt

bullAll but 5 of Egyptian people live in the Nile river valley

bull It is the only area in the country that receives enough moisture to allow intensive cultivation of crops

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 21: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Growth

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 22: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

GrowthIn order to understand population growth and change we must first create an understanding of 2 significant factors

- Fertility and Mortality

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 23: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Measuring Population

bull GeographersDemographers most frequently measure population change in a country through 3 measures

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 24: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Measuring Population

ndashCrude Birth Rate (CBR)ndashCrude Death Rate (CDR)ndashNatural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Natural means excluding migration

bull Crude means looking at society as a whole

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 25: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Crude Birth Rate

bull Total number of live births in a year for every 1000 people alive ndashCBR of 20 means that for every 1000 people in a country 20 babies are born over a one-year period

ndashCBR for United States 2005 = 141

CBR = number of live births divide population x 1000

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 26: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Crude Death Rate

bull Total number of deaths in a year for every 1000 people

bull CDR for United States 2005 = 82

CDR = number of deaths divide population x 1000

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 27: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Percentage by which a population grows in a year

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 28: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Natural Increase Rate (NIR)

bull Computed CBR ndash CDR after first converting the two measures from numbers per 1000 to ( per 100)

bull CBR = 20 CDR = 5 bull 20 ndash 5 = 15 per 1000 or 15

(15divide1000 x100)

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 29: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Natural Increase

bull World NIR for the 1st Half of the 20th Century = 13ndashPeaked at 22 in 1963ndashDeclined sharply during the past decade

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 30: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Natural Increase

bull 80 million people are added to the worldrsquos population annually

bull High of 87 million in 1989bull Small changes in the NIR

are very dramatic because the affects such a large base (7 Billion)

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 31: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Rates of Natural Increase

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 32: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Natural Increase = CBR - CDR

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 33: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 34: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Demographic Equations

Growth Rate () = (Birth Rate ndash Death Rate) +ndash Migration

(Rate of Natural Increase)

Population Doubling Time (yrs) = 72 Rate of Natural Increase

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 35: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Fertility bull Total fertility rate (TFR) average

number of children a woman will have throughout her childbearing years (15-49)

bull TFR attempts to predict the future (assumptions of future fertility on current)

bull World TFR is around 3ndashSub Saharan Africa gt6ndashEurope lt2

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 36: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Total Fertility Rate (TFR)

Amount of children a women will have on average during her child bearing years

High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of childrenFertility Rate = __number of live births during time period__ X 1000

total population of females age 15-44 at mid-point of time period

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 37: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

21 is generally regarded as the replacement rate (the rate at which a population neither grows nor shrinks) in the developed world In less developed countries this rate should be higher to account for so many children not reaching childbearing age

Total Fertility Rate - the average number of children a women will have in her childbearing years This rate varies from just over 1 (Japan Italy) to around 7 (Niger Mali) The US rate is 2

England amp Wales

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 38: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Total Fertility Rate

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 39: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Influences on Birth Rates

bull Family planning programsbull Contraceptive technologybull Role of mass mediabull Educationopportunities for womenbull Child mortality ratesbull Affluencewealth

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 40: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Mortality

bull Infant mortality rate (IMR) annual of deaths of infants under one year of age compared with total live births (usually deaths per 1000)

Infant Mortality Rate (IMR) = __number of infant deaths during time period__ X 1000 number of live births during time period

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 41: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Infant Mortality Rate ndash the number of deaths of children under the age of one per thousand live births The rate ranges from as low as 3 (Singapore Iceland) to as much as 150 (Sierra Leone Afghanistan) The US rate is just over 6 High infant mortality tends to result in higher fertility rates as families seek ldquoinsurancerdquo for the loss of children

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 42: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Mortality

bull Exceeds 100 in some LDCrsquos (10)ndashW Europe lt 1

bull Generally a reflection of a countryrsquos healthcare system

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 43: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

World Death Ratesbull Infectious diseases

ndash HIVAIDSndash SARS

bull Degenerative diseasesndash Obesityndash Tobacco use

bull Epidemiological transitionndash Communicable diseasespathogens in less

developed countriesndash Degenerative diseases in more developed

countries (obesity heart disease diabetes cancer)

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 44: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 45: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Epidemiologic Transitionbull Stages 1 and 2

ndash Infectious and parasitic disease

ndash ldquonatural checksrdquo according to Malthus

bull Stages 3 and 4ndash Degenerative and human

created diseasendash Increase in chronic

disorders associated with aging (heart attack etc)

bull Possible Stage 5ndash Reemergence of infectious

and parasitic disease

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 46: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Life Expectancy

bull Average number of years a newborn infant can expect to live at current mortality levels

bull W Europe = late 70rsquosbull Sub Saharan Africa = Late

30rsquos

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 47: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Life Expectancy

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 48: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Doubling Timebull How long will it take for a population of a

given area to double in sizebull Doubling time assumes the population willgrow at a given annual ratebull Approximated by dividing the annual rateof population into 72

World = 50MDC = 550LDC = 40Honduras = 22Denmark = 700Russia = never

Example Bangladesh 72RNI =gt 72209 = 344 years

Bangladesh with a population of 1443 million people in 2005 will have approximately 2886million people in 2039 if the population continues to grow at current rates

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 49: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

The Demographic

Transition

Model

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 50: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Model that shows changes in natural increase fertility and mortality rates

bull A process with several stages

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 51: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Demographic Transition Modelwwwprborgpdf04transitionsinWorldPoppdf

The demographic transition consists of four stages which move from high birth and death rates to

declines first in death rates then in birth rates and finally to a stage of low birth and death rates

Population growth is most rapid in the second stage

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 52: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

The Demographic Transition Model

bull Every country in the world is in one of the stages

bull The process has a beginning middle and end

bull Once a country moves to a stage it does not revert back

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 53: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Demographic Transition Model

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 54: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

The Demographic Transition

bull The Demographic Transitionndash 1 Low growth ndash 4 Low

growthndash 2 High growth ndash 5 Negative

growthndash 3 Moderate growth

bull Population pyramidsndash Age distributionndash Sex ratio

bull Countries in different stages of demographic transition

bull Demographic transition and world population growth

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 55: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Demographic Transition Modelbull Stage one

ndash Crude birthdeath rate highndash Fragile population

bull Stage twondash Lower death ratesndash Infant mortality ratendash Natural increase high

bull Stage threendash Indicative of richer developed countriesndash Higher standards of livingeducation

bull Stage Fourndash CBR and CDR are at equilibrium or almost =ndash ZPG= Zero Pop Growth ndash Most Northern and Western Euro countries

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 56: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Most of human occupancy of Earth occurred in Stage 1

bull CBR and CDR would rise and fall but typically stayed at very high levels

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 57: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Therefore the natural increase was virtually zero

bull Population remained unchanged (around 500000)

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 58: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Between 800 BC and 1750 AD population jumped from 5Million to 800 Million thanks to agricultural revolution

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 59: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)

bull Humans remained at Stage 1 because of the unpredictability of the food supply

bull No Country is currently in Stage 1

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 60: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Human Numbers Through Time AD 0

bull 2000 years agoat the dawn of the first millennium AD the worlds population was around 300 million people

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 61: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000

bull 1000 years laterthe population had risen by as little as 10 million And well into the second millennium it grew less than 01 percent each year The numbers in Europe even fell in the 1300smdashstruck down by the Black Plague But beginning in the late 18th century the Industrial Revolution would raise living standards and spur growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 62: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull Around 1750 the natural increase jumped from 05 to 5

bull Caused by several countries moving into Stage 2

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 63: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)

bull In Stage 2 the CDR suddenly plummets while the CBR remains at roughly the same level (high)

bull Causes a High Natural Increase = rapid population growth

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 64: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull Cause of drop in CDR was the Industrial Revolution (made life bettereasier)

bull 1800 in Europe and N America

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 65: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)

bull 1950 in Africa Asia and Latin America

bull Other countries moved into Stage 2 quicker because of the late 20th Century Medical Revolutions that were implanted into the LDCrsquos

bull LDCrsquos were given ldquoDeath Controlrdquobull Edward Jenner 1796 Smallpox

vaccine

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 66: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Human Numbers Through Time 1800

bull 800 years laterthe population had climbed to the landmark level of one billion people Almost 65 percent of all people lived in Asia 21 percent in a prospering Europe and less than 1 percent in North America

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 67: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)

bull Movement from Stage 2 to Stage 3 occurs when the CBR begins to drop sharply

bull CDR is still dropping but not as sharply as CBR

bull Pop Still grows ndash just at a modest rate bull Europe and North America Enter 1st

Half 20th Century bull Asia Latin America in recent years

Africa ndash Not yet

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 68: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer

childrenbull Parents understand the decline in

mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming

jobsbull In urban areas children are not

economic assetsbull Urban homes are smaller

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 69: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)

bull CBR = CDR = Natural Increase of 0 (called zero population growth ZPG)

bull Can still occur when CBR is higher than CDR because some women die before reaching childbearing years

bull Total Fertility Rate (TFR) 21 = ZPG

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 70: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Time

Stage 1 Stage 2 Stage 3 Stage 4

Naturalincrease

Birth rate

Death rate

Source Population Reference Bureau and United Nations World Population Projections to 2100 (1998)

Demographic Transition Model

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 71: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4

bull Women in Stage 4 work bull Childcare is needed in order to workbull Birth control bull Upscale Activities

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 72: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

StagePhase 45 in other Countries

Eastern Europe (especially Russia)bull Negative Natural Increase bull High Death Rates poor pollution

controls during communist control bull Low Birth Rates

ndash ldquoFamily Planningrdquo remains from communism

ndash In Russia women average 35 abortions ndash Pessimism about the future

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 73: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

To Reviewhellip

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 74: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

bull Pre-industrialbull CBR and CDR high

and fluctuate according to natural events and disasters

bull Population is a constant and young pop

Stage One

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 75: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Stage Twobull Death rates

drophellip improvements in food supply sanitation etc

bull Birth rates do not drophellip causes an imbalance so there is a large increase in population

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 76: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Stage Threebull Birth rates fall

ndash Access to contraception

ndash Increase in wagesndash Urbanizationndash Move away from

subsistence agriculture

ndash Education of women

bull Population growth begins to level off

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 77: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Stage Fourbull Low birth AND low

deathbull Birth rates may drop

below replacement levels (Japan and Italy) which may lead to negative population growth (Stage 5)

bull Large group born during stage 2 ageshellip creates a burden on the smaller working population

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 78: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Soooohellipbull A cycle in a way from 1 to 4

bull Difference= in Stage 1 CBR and CDR are highhellip in Stage 4 they are low

bull Difference= total population of a country is higher in Stage 4 than in Stage 1

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 79: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

The Demographic Transition in England

bull Now Stage 4bull Historically

ndash Stage 1 ndash Low growth until 1750

ndash Stage 2 ndash High growth 1750-1880

ndash Stage 3 ndash Moderate growth 1880-early 1970rsquos

ndash Stage 4 ndash Early 1970rsquos-present Long time below the 21 Total Fertility Rate needed for replacement

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 80: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Problems with the Demographic Transition

Model

bull based on European experience assumes all countries will progress to complete industrialization

bull many countries reducing growth rate dramatically without increase in wealth

bull on the other hand some countries ldquostuckrdquo in stage 2 or stage 3

bull it is not an exact science

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 81: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only

dependent on CBR and CDR but also on in and out

migration

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 82: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at such a rapid rate

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 83: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull Second Half of the 20th Century population increase rapidly because few countries were in Stage 1 or 4

bull Today no country is in Stage 1 and few are in Stage 4

bull Most countries are Stage 2 or 3 many countries wonrsquot reach Stage 4 any time soon

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 84: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

Stage 4 is caused by 2 ldquobreaksrdquo1 Drop in the Crude Death Rate2 Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

bull N America and Europe created their first break by creating the Industrial Revolution

bull Therefore society had gradually moved to that point both socially and economically

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 85: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Demographic Transition and World Population Growth

bull However the first break was artificially implanted into many other countries

bull The Regions of Africa Parts of East Asia and others were given the ability to lower their Crude Death Rate

bull This caused a massive change in population without the change in societal structure that came in Europe and North America that would eventually cause the Drop in the Crude Birth Rate

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 86: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate

Change in Social Customsbull People choose to have fewer childrenbull Parents understand the decline in mortality ratesbull More service jobs less farming jobsbull In urban areas children are not economic assetsbull Urban homes are smallerbull Women workbull Birth Control

Does it Seem like these Changes in Social Customs are occurring in the countries that are currently in Stage 2

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 87: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Answer

bull Only Europe Australia and Parts of Asia and North America are in Stage 4

bull Other areas with already large population centers are in Stage 2 or Stage 3

bull The problem lies in how to encourage those areas to reach Stage 4 (PS ndash Why is staying in Stage 2 or Stage 3 a ldquoproblemrdquo)

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 88: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

Bir

th amp

Dea

th r

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Sweden 1740 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

DR

BR

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

50

1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Bir

th amp

Dea

th R

ates

Birth and Death Rates for Mexico 1900 - 2000

Birth Rate Death Rate

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 89: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

bull How do the crude birth rate amp the fertility rate differ

bull Why do some analysts criticize the applicability of the DTM to all parts of the world

Warm-Up 920

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 90: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Warm-Up 920bull What types of geographic questions can be answered by studying a populationrsquos age and gender composition

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 91: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Population Pyramids amp

the Demographic Transition Model

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 92: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Population in Demographic Transition

bull A countryrsquos stage in Demographic Transition gives it a distinctive population structure

bull The Demographic Transition Influences population structure in 2 main ways

bull of population in Each Age Groupbull Distribution of males and females

We can visually see these influences by using Population Pyramids

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 93: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)

bull Bar graphs displayed both horizontally and vertically showing variations within particular subgroups or a population with respect to certain descriptive aspects such as birth or deaths

bull Population pyramids are typically a representation of the population based on its composition according to sex and age

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 94: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Characteristics of Population Pyramids

bull Males = left side of the vertical axis bull Females = right side of the vertical

axis bull Age = order sequentially with

youngest at the bottom and oldest at the top

bull Pyramid allows demographers to identify changes in the age sex composition of a population

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 95: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Population Pyramid Developed Countries

bull A country in stage 4 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of ldquoolder peoplerdquo

bull Smaller of young people

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 96: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Population Pyramid Developing Countries

bull A country in stage 2 of the Demographic Transition Model

bull Large number of young people and a smaller older population

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 97: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Rapid Growth in Cape VerdeCape Verde which entered stage 2 of the demographic

transition in about 1950 is experiencing rapid population growth Its population history reflects the

impacts of famines and out-migration

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 98: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Moderate Growth in ChileChile entered stage 2 of the demographic transition in the

1930s and it entered stage 3 in the 1960s

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 99: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Age Distribution

bull Dependency Ratio number of people who are too young or too old to work compared to the number of people in their productive years

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 100: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Sex Ratio

bull Sex Ratio number of males per hundred females

bull In general more males are born than females

bull Males have higher death rates

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 101: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

3 age groupings

bull 0-14 = Dependentsbull 15-64 = Workersbull 64+ = Dependents bull Stage 2 Countries = 11 bull Stage 4 Countries = 12

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 102: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Sex Ratio

bull Europe and North America = 95100

bull Rest of World = 102100

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 103: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Developing Countries

bull Have large of young people ndashwhere males generally outnumber females

bull Lower of older people ndash where females are typically more numerous

bull High immigration = more males

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 104: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Population Shift

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 105: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

An Aging World

Discussion

What are the implications of an aging population for

1 The US housing market

2 Social security and pension funds

3 Public financing of colleges and universities

4 Global migration flows

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 106: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

OVERPOPULATION

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 107: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Overpopulation bull When consumption of natural resources by people outstrip the ability of a natural region to replace those natural resources

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 108: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Thomas Malthus bull An Essay on the

Principle of Population (1798)

bull Earthrsquos population was growing much more rapidly than the Earthrsquos food supply

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 109: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Thomas Malthus on Population

Malthus predicted

bull population would outrun food supply

bull decrease in food per person

Assumptionsbull Populations grow

exponentiallybull Food supply grows

arithmeticallybull Food shortages and

chaos inevitable

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

1 2 3 4

Population

Food

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 110: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Reasonhellip bull Population increases

geometrically bull Food Supply increases

arithmetically

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 111: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Population J-Curve

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 112: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Reasoninghellip bull Made prediction following Englandrsquos entrance into stage 2 of DT

bull Moral restraint needed to lower CBR or something needs to increase the CDR

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 113: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Neo-Malthusians

bull Problem of overpopulation will be even worse than Malthus predicted

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 114: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

2 Main Reasons

bull Malthus failed to anticipate how many LDCrsquos would reach stage 2

bull Overpopulation outstrips more than just food production

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 115: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Pop

ula

tion a

nd

Reso

urc

e C

onsu

mp

tion

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 116: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact

There has been a dramatic increase inbull individual energy use over time 3000 kcalperson - 300000

kcalpersonbull the power of technology to change the environment think

stone axe versus bulldozer versus atomic bombbull The scope and severity of environmental impacts

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 117: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Population and the EnvironmentI = P x A x T

Impact = Population x Affluence x TechnologyPopulation-influenced environmental problemsbull Global Warming

bull Habitat Loss Endangered Species

bull Resource Depletion

bull Food Shortages Not globally but regionally

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 118: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Criticism of Malthus

bull Assumed world resources are fixed rather than expanding

bull Increased pop could create more resources

bull Marxist argument that there are plenty of resources only an unequal distribution

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 119: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

(1743 ndash 1794)

bull predicted that innovation resulting increased wealth and choice would provide food and resources in the future and lead to fewer children per family

bull believed that society was perfectible

Jean Antoine Condorcet

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 120: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

Malthus and Reality

bull Last half-century has not supported Malthusrsquos theory

bull Food production amp effects of globalization

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)
Page 121: Questions: 1. What services are easier to provide for an area of high population density?

bull Cultural and societal changes moved societies into stages 3 and 4 quicker

bull Consistent drop in the NIR bull Caused by a drop in the CBRndashEconomic Development ndashContraceptives

Malthus and Reality

  • Slide 1
  • Slide 2
  • Human Geography
  • Population Geography
  • Population
  • Slide 6
  • Slide 7
  • A little information about world Population
  • Slide 9
  • Slide 10
  • Population Concentrations
  • World and Country Population Totals
  • Factors that Shape Distribution
  • Ecumene
  • Population Density
  • Population Density (2)
  • Slide 17
  • CrudeArithmetic Density
  • Assumes Uniformity
  • Population Density of Georgia
  • Physiological Density
  • Physiological Density (2)
  • Answer
  • Population Density ndash Egypt
  • Growth
  • Slide 26
  • Measuring Population
  • Measuring Population (2)
  • Slide 29
  • Crude Birth Rate
  • Slide 31
  • Crude Death Rate
  • Slide 33
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR)
  • Natural Increase Rate (NIR) (2)
  • Natural Increase
  • Natural Increase (2)
  • Slide 38
  • Slide 39
  • Effects of Natural Rate on a Large Base Population
  • Demographic Equations
  • Slide 42
  • Fertility
  • Total Fertility Rate (TFR)
  • Slide 45
  • Slide 46
  • Influences on Birth Rates
  • Mortality
  • Slide 49
  • Mortality (2)
  • World Death Rates
  • Adults and Children Living with HIVAIDS mid-2006
  • Epidemiologic Transition
  • Life Expectancy
  • Slide 55
  • Doubling Time
  • Slide 57
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • The Demographic Transition Model
  • Slide 60
  • The Demographic Transition Model (2)
  • Slide 62
  • The Demographic Transition
  • Demographic Transition Model
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (3)
  • StagePhase 1 Low Growth (Pre-Industrial) (4)
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 0
  • Human Numbers Through Time AD 1000
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrial) (2)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism)
  • StagePhase 2 High Growth (Beginning of Industrialism) (2)
  • Human Numbers Through Time 1800
  • StagePhase 3 Moderate Growth (Industrialization Complete)
  • What causes the Crude Birth Rate to Drop
  • StagePhase 4 Low Growth (Post-Industrial)
  • Slide 79
  • Why such a low Fertility Rate in StagePhase 4
  • StagePhase 45 in other Countries
  • To Reviewhellip
  • Stage One
  • Stage Two
  • Stage Three
  • Stage Four
  • Soooohellip
  • The Demographic Transition in England
  • Slide 89
  • Rememberhellip Demographic Transition is not only dependent on CBR a
  • If we are in Stage 4 then why is world population increasing at
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (2)
  • Demographic Transition and World Population Growth (3)
  • Causes for drop in Crude Birth Rate
  • Answer (2)
  • Slide 97
  • Slide 98
  • Warm-Up 920
  • Population Pyramids amp the Demographic Transition Model
  • Population in Demographic Transition
  • Slide 102
  • Population Pyramid (AgeSex Pyramid)
  • Characteristics of Population Pyramids
  • Population Pyramid Developed Countries
  • Population Pyramid Developing Countries
  • Rapid Growth in Cape Verde
  • Moderate Growth in Chile
  • Age Distribution
  • Sex Ratio
  • 3 age groupings
  • Sex Ratio (2)
  • Developing Countries
  • Slide 114
  • Slide 115
  • Slide 116
  • Slide 117
  • Slide 118
  • Population Shift
  • An Aging World
  • Slide 121
  • Overpopulation
  • Slide 123
  • Thomas Malthus
  • Thomas Malthus on Population
  • Reasonhellip
  • Population J-Curve
  • Reasoninghellip
  • Neo-Malthusians
  • 2 Main Reasons
  • Population and Resource Consumption
  • Technology Energy Consumption and Environmental Impact
  • Population and the Environment
  • Criticism of Malthus
  • Jean Antoine Condorcet
  • Malthus and Reality
  • Malthus and Reality (2)