Essay On Increase In Population

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The Effects of Population Increase on the Environment

As inevitable as death and taxes, the population of the world will continue to grow until the government intervenes. The gross increase in population will generally lead to adverse effects on the environment. In the anthology, A Forest of Voices, an entry titled ?Is It Too Late?? by Anthony Weston deals with the history of legislation for the protection of the environment and stories of it?s destruction that are all too real. Seemingly, as the population increases, so should the level of intelligence for a sample population which would necessarily lead to a certain form of protection to the environment.

It would seem quite apparent that an increase in population has a causal...show more content...

It was not until 1973 that a law enacted to protect the species that were extinction. It took three dozen species to go extinct in the decade before the Endangered Species Act went into legislation to stop ignorance from diminish the wildlife in the United States (Weston 355). This shows that it takes a gross lack of intelligence (which I will equate, for arguments sake, with a lack of awareness or an abundance of arrogance) to show the public that maybe we should not be killing animals that are near extinction.

To begin discussion about the destruction, it must be taken into account that thehuman race is arrogant by nature. It could be called mankind?s fatal flaw. This can be shown through the colonization of America. In the beginning, America was truly the untouched beauty. Buffalo were in overabundance in the Great Plains, and in New England, lobsters were so common that they were used for not only eating, but for potato fertilizer (Weston 354). Now it is not the case, the Buffalo are confined to few sanctuaries across the U.S. and lobster, not as common anymore, are considered somewhat of a delicacy in many restaurants. It may seem trivial, but the reason that ?civilized? man came to America is because of arrogance. Now, to the best of my knowledge, the Mayflower brought the outcast Puritans from England to America. The Puritans were a people of conviction; otherwise they would have dealt with the lack of religious

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Population causes a heated debate among many people. The world's population has exceeded 6.5 billion and continues to increase about another 76 million each year. The three most populated countries are China, India, and the United States. Scientists have become worried that the population will double within the next 50 years, exceeding 12 billion people. With scarce natural resources and the strain that a doubling in population will cause on food availability, people become more wary about population control. What is population control? Population Control is the practice of limiting population increase, usually by reducing the birth rate (www.wikipedia.org).

The first country to adopt a...show more content...

Samuel states in his article, "The Development of India's Policy of Population Control": "This policy has not yet received the attention merited by its importance for India's development."

China leads India in population by about 2 million people, putting China at the top of the list with 1.3 billion people, roughly 20 per cent of the world's population (www.wikipedia.org). What has China done in the effort to slow the ever growing population? In 1979, China introduced a policy limiting one child per family. This was unprecedented. In 1986, the limit increased to two children per family, as long as the family was non–Han. (Han is the ethnic majority in China). Some rural Han families were also allowed to have two children, as long as the firstborn child was a female. The goal in doing this was to limit the population to below 1.37 billion by the year 2010. Some families refused to adhere to the family limitation policies. For example, they sabotaged government mandated contraceptives and paid doctors to claim to have performed abortions.

It has been 28 years since the policy was set, and there have been some gender fluctuation within the Chinese population. At first, the Chinese families only wanted male children in order to carry on the family name and honor. Many families with daughters born wanted abortions or simply killed the females after birth. In 1995, 1,166 male children were born for every

Essay on World Population
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World Population
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Causes of Overpopulation Essay

According to the U.S Census Bureau the current world population is estimated to be about 6,770,332,394 people and still growing exponential. Also the world population is suppose to be over 8 billion people by 2025, and 9.5 billion by 2050 (U.S. Census Bureau). The only way to prevent this problem from becoming a world epidemic is by truly understanding some of the causes of the problem and what this problem might bring to the future of mankind.

The world population growth is moving exponentially up in a J curve, which is normal for populations in nature with abundant resources. Surprisingly the human population has not yet reached the carrying capacity (Michigan U.). 11,000 years ago during the time of the agricultural revolution...show more content...

According to Carl Haub, the total number of people to ever be born is approximately 106 billion people up until 2002. With nearly 7 billion people alive today that is about 6% of the total people who ever lived (Curtin). Today thepopulation growth rate is around 1.3%. the peak of population growth was between 1965–1970 when the growth rate was about 2.1%.

Many factors affect the growth of the populations including birth/death rate, age of overall population, resources, environment, and distribution. The most important is birth rates and death rates. Before modern medicine and urbanization the birth rate was very high but the death rate was about the same. In that time having a large family would improve status and life because of the extra help with needs. But today in developed countries with urban environments means a large family equals higher cost, lower standard of living, and lower status. In Thailand, where schooling is expensive, people saw that having more children caused having to spend more money on school. When this happened the births per woman went down from about 6 to around 2 in only ten years (Michigan U). The age distribution of developed countries is close to equilibrium due to the economic constraints. This means there are less young people to produce off spring, slowing the overall growth. In developing countries the age distribution is shaped like a pyramid, meaning many young people in turn causing more off spring and high population

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Population Growth And The Population Essay

Population Growth

Introduction Population growth is the increase in the number of people through birth rate and immigration rate within a specific population with respect to the decrease within the population though emigration rate and death rate. But do all individuals play a major factor in determining population growth? No, contributions to population growth vary based on each individual present within the population (Graham 1985). For example, different ages of individuals hold different weights that others. This can help is compare the specific age ranges within a group and will help us lead to further analysis (Werner and Caswell 1977). With this being said, populations are dependent on different trends and demographic factors that are occurring that that time within the specific population that is being studied. Some of these factors include gender and race. These can the predict trends in life expectancy and survivorship of different populations (Boucekkine, David, and Licandro 2002) . Discrepancies between races and gender roles have been smuggled over the years (Duncan 1961). Although, they still hold weight in some studies within ecology such as life expectancy. African Americans have shown that they have a lower age average than what American. This could possible be due to various reason such as health risks like hypertension and cardiovascular disease (Brondolo, Rieppi, and Kelly et al 2003). In this lab report, we are going to be focus in on targeting the

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Population Growth

Population Growth is becoming a huge issue in our country and world today. The reason that it has become such a pressing issue is that our growing population needs a growing economy and has growing needs. As our population grows, the needs of the population become bigger. Very large population becomes a problem when there isn't enough space to live, and not enough food and supplies to live off of. We can predict population size in the future by examining the recent past. This can give us good ideas about what we will have to do to accommodate all of the people in the US and the world, or start to put restrictions on babies being born like our fellow country China. In this activity we were given the ...show more content...

The errors in the linear model were random, but not off by much each different year. The population wasn't off by more than 2,000 people at most in one year. Using the linear model we made some predictions like what will the population being the year 2000? By putting the equation into the calculator and going into the table, we predicted that in the year 2000 the population would be 2.76 billion. Anotherprediction that was made was what will the population be when I retire. Most people retire when they are about sixty– five, so that would be in the year 2045. The population in 2045 is predicted to be 3.8 billion according to the linear model. The population will double from the current population in the year 2114. The population will then be 5.52 billion. One thing that I am concerned about is how high the population will be when my children are growing up. I plan to have children when I am about 27 so when my child is about 20, the year will be 2027 and the population will be 3.4 billion. Next we did the same procedure for the world population. In this case, the exponential model fit the data more efficiently. The equation was 2,552,666,405 = 1.018,677,273^x, r = .998328246. The world population for the year 2000 is will be 6.44 billion. Upon retiring the world population will be 1.5 trillion people. Comparing the two models the exponential model makes sense because the population is growing at such a rapid rate. The

Population Growth Essay
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Population Growth Imagine the earth as a rubber band and you put it around a roll of paper, paper being the people. The more paper you ad the more stretched the rubber band gets until it just snaps. Earth represents the food water and oxygen needed to live and when that burst, life ceases to exist. Population growth is due to three reasons, high birth rate, low mortality rates, and increase in food production. Populations numbers are more rapidly eating away at natural resources and in the future there will be no more to go around. China's idea is to make laws forbidding no more than one child. Couples should be responsible for the number of kids they have and not be forced by law.

China has tried to solve the potential dilemmas by introducing...show more content...

Others believe this is an irresponsible position as that many people will consume too many of our natural resources. If the resources are gone then the disease hits afterward the people that survive will not be able to live because either the resources are gone or contaminated. Americans are educated on this issue, but do not feel the concern for overpopulation as the average number of kids that a US couple has is 2. This is the average that scientists say that we need to keep our population sustained. In other cultures that average is higher so therefore, the concern is greater about overpopulation. The African continent is currently where the growth population is most concerning because the average number of children a family has there is 4.

Thirty eight percent of all Americans think that population isn't an issue and that we will find a way to stretch out resources and find a solution. This is worrisome because that logic is thinking there's endless supply of resources. When in fact our natural resources are depleting more than

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Increasing Population Growth In The United States

Population around the world is growing rapidly each year, which is unfortunately causing negative impacts on the environment. Each day the air around us is becoming more polluted as the amount of carbon dioxide emitted into the atmosphere caused by human activities increases each day. As population continues to gradually increase, it is causing harmful effects in terms of air pollution. An increase in the number of people directly varies with the pollution that is emitted into the environment. Moreso, the human population is polluting the air due to the use of vehicles such as cars, trucks, and planes which use gasoline or natural gas to produce electricity in order to power the vehicles which is causing pollution to exude into the...show more content...

"For instance, even on the last Diwali day which fell on October 18, smoke caused due to the bursting of fire crackers was alarming in Delhi where it was banned by the court." The use of fireworks can cause vast amounts of air pollution. Additionally, humans are not aware of the serious impacts that air pollution can cause. If the population continues to increase around the world, then the amount of air pollution is going to continue to increase. A majority of the individuals globally pollutes the air in some way. Air pollution can have a serious impact on the health of the human population. "Air pollution kills 3.3 million people a year worldwide, including 55,000 Americans, according to a new study by an international group of scientists." This is becoming a serious problem. An immense amount of deaths in the world is caused by the polluted air that humans are breathing. One of the major causes of air pollution is the use of vehicles among humans. Large vehicles such as trucks, planes, and cars emits large amounts of carbon dioxide into the air. Correspondingly, this causes extensive amounts of pollution to enter into the atmosphere; therefore, in order to prevent further deaths and health problems due to air pollution, the use of vehicles needs to be cut down to avoid the extensive amounts of carbon dioxide to enter into the atmosphere. This issue of the effect of overpopulation on air pollution needs to be addressed to the public in order to prevent Get more content

Effects Of Population Pollution Essay

The Population Problem Essay

The Population Problem

Two hundred years ago, Thomas Malthus, in An Essay on the Principle of Population, reached the conclusion that the number of people in the world will increase exponentially, while the ability to feed these people will only increase arithmetically (21). Current evidence shows that this theory may not be far from the truth. For example, between 1950 and 1984, the total amount of grain produced more than doubled, much more than the increase in population in those 34 years. More recently though, these statistics have become reversed.

From 1950 to 1984, the amount of grain increased at 3 percent annually. Yet, from 1984 to 1993, grain production had grown at barely 1 percent per year, a decrease in grain production per...show more content...

More people means more waste, more pollution, and more development. With this taken into consideration, it seems that Hardin's teachings should no longer fall on deaf ears. When discussing the issue of population, it is important to note that it is one of the most controversial issues facing the world today.Population growth, like many other environmental issues, has two sides. One side will claim that the population explosion is only a myth, while the other side will argue that the population explosion is reality. Because of this, statistics concerning this subject vary widely. But, in order to persuade, it is necessary to take one side or the other. Thus, statistics may be questioned as to their validity, even though the statistics come from credible sources.

Lifeboat Ethics

The United States is the most populous country in the world, behind only China and India. Unlike China and India though, the United States is the fastest growing industrialized nation. The United States' population expands so quickly because of the imbalance between migration and immigration, and births and deaths. For example, in 1992, 4.1 million babies were born. Weighing this statistic against the number of deaths and the number of people who entered and left the country, the result was that the United States obtained 2.8 million more people than it had gotten rid of (Douglis 12). Population increases place great strain on the American society and more particularly it

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Globalization

and

the Effects

on

Population: A

Look at Projections, Theories, and Global Population Practices. "We in the West do not refrain from childbirth because we are concerned about the population explosion or because we feel we cannot afford children, but because we do not like children." Germaine Greer, an Australian feminist writer, may or may not have been entirely serious when she wrote this statement, but the statement is an insightful one nonetheless. Greer hits on three major underlying themes that affect the study of global population trends. The first and often most important concern in population studies is that of a "population explosion." Other important factors including the economic impact on population...show more content...

Population Growth, "Explosion", and the Forces of Globalization

By the mid 1950's it was already evident that a large population growth was occurring worldwide. Basic demographic statistics show unprecedented population growth in the twentieth century. "In 1900 global population was 1.7 billion, in 1950 it reached 2.5 billion," long term projections from the United Nations estimate that human population will reach the 6 million mark by the end of the twentieth century and furthermore they project a growth to a population of approximately 11.6 billion around the year 2200 . Most scholars, and even the United Nations statisticians themselves, will acknowledge that such long–term projections are at best simply nothing more than guesses. Despite this fact, these projections must still be acknowledged in order to plan for a future in which 11 billion people may have to share the scarce land and resources left in our world. The debate over population growth is one that is fierce, often over exaggerated, and clearly centered around the Malthusian dilemma. Alarmists will warn that the population is far outgrowing our food sources, therefore population growth must be the main cause of hunger. "In 1985, at the height of a major African drought, Colorado governor Richard D. Lamm wrote in the New York Times that the United States should stop giving emergency relief to African countries that failed to reduce

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Walking through the train station seemed more difficult than wading through tar. You couldn't get anywhere due to the sheer volume of people in your way. The sun's intense heat was punishing the earth's unshielded surface and was boiling the station's inhabitants from the inside. A hot, sticky, overcrowded mess. Suddenly, everyone erupted into a full sprint; the train was leaving. Thousands of people formed a Tsunami behind me, tearing down anything that stood in their way. The stampede vibrated between my ears, rattling my eardrums like a baby's toy. It was a scramble to get on. The crowd forced me forwards with the power of a million bulls. I could barely keep myself upright. Sandwiched between thousands of others, I had extreme doubt I would...show more content...

Where do we apply the force to get the wheels turning? How do we lift these ideas off the ground? One by one. Currently, organisations such as Oxfam and Unicef are making an effort to fix all the issues in one foul swoop: lack of education, pollution, birth control availability, spreading of disease and more. Recently Oxfam and Unicef have focused their energies on alleviating diseases such as the Zika virus and Malaria in developing countries and at the same time trying to provide adequate shelter and warmth for these same places. This is impossible to do. We need to focus on one issue at a time, solve that, then move on. Otherwise, we will get nowhere, just as we are doing now. Not enough funding, resources and time are available to fix everything at once. By focusing all our energy on one solution, we allow ourselves to move quicker and more efficiently. Just as the WHO is doing, providing birth control for those countries in need and UNESCO is doing, providing education to the developing world. Globally increasing numbers in lower secondary education by 27% and more than doubling numbers in sub–Saharan Africa. Without this shift in mindset, these issues will surely get out of hand very quickly. Eventually leading us to abandon our old ways of living for a new and better way or, to our inevitable

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Satire
Overpopulation

Advantages And Disadvantages Of Population Growth

0n 11 June every year, international community celebrates the world population day, which was declared by the UN in 1981, to raise awareness about global population issues. The number of people living in a specific territory, whether citizens or not, are considered as the population of that country, and the size of the globalpopulation is growing rapidly. Working together, the world can face the challenges posed by growing population and make the world better place for people.

The growth of world population is unprecedented. In 1810, the world population was estimated as 1 billion, and it became 7 billion in 2010, about 1.2 present growth in 50 years, but analysts believe that population will become more than 9 billion by the year 2050....show more content... When countries cannot feed the rapidly expanding population, it leads to malnutrition and spread of diseases. Moreover, overpopulation creates problem of unemployment, high rate of crimes and rapid spread of diseases. Nevertheless, some countries consider a larger population as a strength and national power as it creates big market and increases domestic demand, facilitating the growth of domestic industry. For example, China, which has the world largest population of 1.5 billion, uses its huge population to enhance its national Get

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Population Growth

Over time, human population has increased and unfortunately has caused a lot of problems to the economy as well as to the environment. Many of the issues that population growth has affected are climate changes, consumption and waste, family planning, poverty, food and hunger, and changes to the economy. According to data researched by the United Nations, "the worldpopulation will reach 8 billion to 10 billion by the year 2030" (Livi–Bacci: 1992:31–32 cited in Robbins, 2010:130). Eight to ten billion is a lot of people living in the world, which unfortunately might cause more problems than solutions to these issues. The book written by author Richard H. Robbins, Global Problems and the Culture of Capitalism, includes an...show more content...

(Malthus 1798 cited in Robbins, 2010:132). This view was known as the "Malthusian trap" (Mshahara, 2017). Everything is related to one another, and if one thing changes, then usually the other things will too. As Robbins expressed that Malthus' view was seen in Europe, the demand for food decreased, the population decreased, mortality decreased, and then right after, a rise in population occurred (Robbins, 2010: 157). Another issue that has caused the environment to change is deforestation. The land gets cleared for agriculture purposes, to provide room for growing crops, grazing livestock and urban uses. As explained by Robbins, agriculturists would clear a few acres of land by cutting down the trees and burning them in a process known as "slash and burn" (Robbins, 2010: 157). As individuals can see, population growth has done some negative changes to the earth. Another result that has occurred from population growth is a change in consumption and waste. This subject has arguments on population growth hindering economic development as well as not affecting it at all. As argued by Robbins, (Robbins 2010: 133–134) population growth has caused a high demand for resources, such as water, food, and fuel. With population growing, that is why some communities are dealing with famine, poverty and an increase in mortality rates. According to Massimi Livi–Bacci, (Livi–Bacci, 1992: 145 cited in Robbins, 2010: 134) population growth has not had an effect on the economy. Get

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Population Growth
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The Importance Of Overpopulation

This overpopulation problem is quite serious, because land, in addition to food, will become problematic. To feed another two billion people, there will be a need for additional farming land the size of Brazil (Kuo, 2012, p. 25). Land is one thing the planet cannot make more of. While there is no way to make new land, the growing population is contributing to the destruction of land. Weeks (2015), suggests "human activities are damaging land, forests, fisheries and other resources faster than they can recover" (p. 5). With these resources unable to keep up with the demand of the current population, an increase in the population will magnify the destruction of land and the depletion of resources. Consequently, with continued population expansion, territory expansion is also seen. These expansions also create problems with wildlife. Subsequently, many habitats are demolished and wildlife misplaced or destroyed in the clearing of land. Data shows a 50 percent decrease in the population of many animals due to "land degradation, overfishing, overharvesting, and climate change" (Weeks, 2015, p. 3). Taking land away from wildlife will lead to an elimination of another food source. There is a direct link of the loss of wildlife to overpopulation. According to Marshall Marcus (2016), a vast rise in animal excitation worldwide is contributed to a rapidly growing human population (p. 29). Apart from the lack of land, what land is available is being polluted. Marcus (2016)

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Population Growth and Standard of Living

Recently, the human population on this planet surpassed an amazing milestone. In the year 2000 it hit 6 billion, and without a sign of slowing down, continue to increase at an unprecedented pace. After taking nearly 3 million years to reach our first 1 billion, it has taken us only 11 years to raise our population the most recent billion (from 5 to 6). This rate of growth can be graphically interpreted as a J–shape pattern. If the past is any indication of the future, this means that while our rate of growth is high right now (a net increase of almost 87 million annually), it will continue increase to no end. But is there a limit to how big the population on Earth can truly be? While many agree...show more content...

We also are currently having trouble supplying adequate housing, health care, education, and many other components of a reasonablestandard of living. "If we cannot provide these amenities now for 6 billion people in the world, can we expect to provide them for 8 to 10 billion in the 21st century." (Southwick, 161)

On the opposite end of the argument lie optimistic ecologists like Julian Simon. Simon believes that there is no population crisis and no environmental crisis that is due to the rapid growth of humans. He believes, in what many scientists call, a "tech fix". "He asserts that population growth, economic growth, and a resource rich–world coupled with modern technology will produce greater prosperity and better health for increasing numbers of people." (Soutwick, 160) Simon's theory has come true before. For example, when the growth of our human population started to slow during the time of the nomad, humans realized agriculture could support more people, and thus, the Agricultural Revolution took place. In addition, "advances in agricultural and industrial technology have effectively increased the size of the globe over the last two centuries, in terms of the maximum population which it will support." (Dolan, 58) That is to say, a tech fix for 8 billion people down the road might not be as easy, but there are plenty of brilliant minds currently in the world who could ultimately figure out a solution to the problems that an increase in population

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Essay on Population Growth and Standard of Living

Urbanization Of Urban Population Growth Essay

1.Introduction

The century is witnessing a greater migration of the world's population into urban dwellers. This movement of people into major towns and cities of the world is caused by rapid sprawl and it is observed in developed and developing countries. The increasing population observed is inevitable; therefore the solution to urban problems depends essentially on effective planning, infrastructural management and development. Usually, unplanned population growth is associated with population demands that supersede infrastructure and service capacity, leading to the degradation of the environment. (Asoka et al., 2013).

Urbanization is very important, but development is carried out at the expense of deforestation, destruction of biotope, fragmentation of ecosystems, shrinking of the open space among many other things. Acity should be a complex system that entails several interactive sub–systems, it should be affected by various factors including governmental land policies, population growth, transportation infrastructure, market behavior to mention just a few. In spite of their regional economic importance, urban population growth has a substantial impact on the neighboring urban ecosystem (Yuan, Sawaya et al. 2005).

Land use and transportation systems can be considered as the two most vital subsystems determining the long term urban form and structure. Meanwhile, urban growth is one of the most important topics in urban studies, and its main driving forces are

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Human population growth is becoming a huge issue in our world today. The population is increasing rapidly. The reason that it is becoming a concern is because it has affected the economic, environmental, and social aspects of our world. In the film Frontline: Heat, we can see how there might not be a future for our planet unless we are able to reduce the emissions and make our world a safe place. Not only for the present but also for future generations so that they are able to live long and healthy lives. An increase in human population can influence our economy. Some of the factors that are affected are unemployment, poverty and the restriction of economic expansion. When the population increases, the cost of health, education,...show more content...

The revenues are not enough to provide for the population growth. This affects families to save less because they are spending all of their income on basic needs and cannot afford to educate their children, which produces poverty in the next generation. This results in low qualification and low chance of employment for children when they reach the working age. Due to this, industries and services cannot develop. With the increase of population, the volume of employment and unemployment increases. The number of unemployed depends on the size of the active population called the Labour Force. If the growth rate of the population is higher than the job opportunities available to the labour force, unemployment will occur. When there is an increase in population, society is solely focused on providing the basic needs. This results in the lack of obtaining education and because of this they cannot help the economy expand. Also, there are more consumers with the increase of population than producers, causing the restriction of economic expansion. Not only is our economy impacting the population, but so is the environment. "Population is the number one threat to our environment".

(Population Growth

Impacts on the Environment website). Our population is rising beyond the earth's ability to maintain a reasonable quality of life. This enlarged population has also increased the land uses, resource uses and pollution problems. A raise in land use

Human Population Growth
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Importance Of Population Growth

The Economic Considerations of the World's Growing Population Introduction

Every four and a half days the world gains one million people, roughly the equivalent to the population of Dallas, Texas (Weisman). In other words, the world's population is growing at an unparalleled rate, which creates a wide spectrum of unforeseen, intertwined issues. While some argue that population growth has a predominantly positive impact on the economy, as it leads to economic growth, research demonstrates the complex relationship between population growth and its often adverse effects on economy. The steep increase in human population presents environmental strains on production of agricultural, goods, and energy, proving detrimental to local and global economies. Furthermore, major growth in a country's population increases the number of jobs needed as more people enter the workforce, but many countries, especially those that are still developing, can't keep up. Many less developed countries are already enduring the effects of eighty percent of their population being unemployed, underemployed, or vulnerably employed and are facing the prospect of doubling or possibly tripling in population by 2050 ("Population and Poverty"). This sustained growth in human population presents inevitable, severe problems to economies around world.

Economist Perspective

Although many hold the belief that population growth is vital economic growth, as the increase of people causes increase in workforce, Get

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Population Growth Rate: Highest to Lowest Rate

Nigeria: 1st Egypt: 2nd Mexico: 3rd India: 4th USA: 5th China: 6th Italy: 7th

1.How do you suppose living conditions differ between the countries furthest along in the demographic transition compared to the country earliest in the transition? How would living conditions in these two countries affect both birth and death rates?

The living condition for countries earlier in the demographic transitions such as health and food supply are improving. Thus better health conditions decrease death rates and more food supply can lead to increasing birth rates. Since living conditions (health and...show more content... Italy reached a stable population much earlier than Nigeria. While the total population for Italy stayed small, Nigeria has approximately 7–9 times more population for each age group. Italy is further in the demographic transition and already had a declining growth rate keeping the population fairly small. In contrast, Nigeria is barely a developing country with a much higher growth rate thus creating a greater ending population. In terms of land and rural area, Nigeria has more land to expand and sustain this population size.

6. Many Western European countries are giving monetary incentives to employees who have multiple children. Why would they do this? How would a baby boom change Italy's demographics?

Western European countries are giving monetary incentives to employees with multiple children because their population is decreasing and they want the population to increase. The average birth rate is 1.28 children per woman, not enough children are born to replace their parents. A baby boom would increase the population in Italy, that generation will then have more babies and cause an increase in population. 7. What would Egypt have to do in order to reach a zero growth rate? What kinds of challenges might the Egyptian government face in trying to implement these measures?

Egypt would have to decrease their average birth rate to around 1.69 children per woman or increase the age group at which they

Essay on Population
Demographics
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Because the world is ever changing, people do not really stop and look at the things happening around them. People do not usually think about how population is interrelated with consumption and how both affect the world in different ways. A population has the ability to expand infinitely so long as there are enough resources in the environment to sustain it. As long as resources are available, populations can grow to large numbers; however, when resources become scarce, populations can also decrease to small groups. If a population is small, consumption is at a low rate. If a population is large, consumption rates are high. When consumption rates are high resources tend to be depleted faster. Many factors go into determining population...show more content...

There are side effects that can be harmful to humans in genetically modified food. Abundant resources can lead to bigger populations; nonetheless, without the proper care going towards growing new resources, there can be a few altercations. High fertility is linked to an abundant amount of resources and increased population size. This occurs because when there are sufficient resources available for consumption, individuals in a population are healthy and able to reproduce and sustain the next generation with these resources. Low fertility is commonly caused by malnourishment due to lack of resources and is likely to decrease the growth of the population because of an increase in mortality rates (Boyd). Due to the genetic modification of our foods, the way we obtain our nourishment is radically affected because the resources are not natural anymore. The vitamins and minerals that would typically be found in the food when it is naturally grown nearly disappear when it is grown artificially. That is why more and more health problems are occurring in individuals. Because all the food people are consuming is easy to acquire, but not at all healthy because of dangerous chemicals like herbicides which can cause birth defects, sterility, hormone disruption, and cancer and side effects such as allergens and nutritional deficiencies. That is why more and more people are getting sick from genetically mutated food. Even though the food production

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Characteristics of the U.S. population in 2025 The United States is the third most populated country in the world. This country holds about 4.5% of the world's population. The U.S. population is currently estimated to have 308.7 million persons. This number is more than double of the population from 1950. Besides the fact of the population has doubled its size, the population has also become qualitatively different from the one from 1950. As noted by the Population Reference Bureau, "The U.S. is getting bigger, older, and more diverse." The growth of the population is the result of the trends over time in the relationship of increased births, decreased deaths, and increased net immigration....show more content... Population, by Age Group: 1950–2050

Besides the total size of the population, one of the most significant demographic characteristics of a population is the age and sex structure. The immigration has had a major influence on both the size and the age structure of the U.S. population. The U.S. population has experienced remarkable growth since 1950. The number of women slightly outnumbered the men. U.S. Population, by Sex, 1950–2050, in Millions

In general, countries experiencing high fertility and rapid population growth, have a "young" population structure and the important policy considerations are if there are enough schools and, sufficient jobs and housing to accommodate this population. Countries with "old" population structures face the problems of structuring and developing retirement and health systems to serve this older population and also they have a considerable reduction the number of the working force. The decline of the work force is one of the most dramatic economic tendencies of the past four decades in the United States. The individual's decision of whether to stay in the workforce or to retire is based on the collaboration of a number of factors including the following: eligibility for Social Security benefits, availability of and benefits under an employer–financed pension plan, work

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Us Population Essay example

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Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.