The demographic Titanic is going to hit the iceberg. We may be thankful that some people on the ship are building lifeboats while there is still time.
In 1968, Stanford biologist Paul Ehrlich published The Population Bomb, a book extrapolating global population growth data to predict a catastrophe as humanity’s demand for resources outstripped supply. The book became a bestseller and catapulted Ehrlich to worldwide fame. But today, just over a half-century later, humanity faces a different challenge. We are in the early stages of a population crash.
Ehrlich’s basic math wasn’t necessarily flawed. In 1968, the world population was 3.5 billion, and today the total number of humans has more than doubled to just over 8 billion. Anyone with a basic understanding of exponential growth can appreciate that if human population doubles every 50 years, within only a few millennia, an unchecked ball of human flesh would be expanding in all directions into the universe at the speed of light. Which means, at some point, Malthusian checks will apply.
But where extrapolation yielded panic, reality has delivered something completely different. Today population growth is leveling off almost everywhere on earth, and the cause of that decline started, ironically, back in the 1960s when Ehrlich wrote his book. The reasons for this are subtle, because the only ultimate determinant of population growth is the average number of children a generation of women are having, and the impact of that and other variables take decades to play out.
In the late 1960s, the United States, along with most Western nations, had just moved out of its baby boom years, that period from 1946 through 1964, when women were still having lots of babies. Having grown up during the Great Depression, followed by a world war, the choice to have large families may have been a response to the adversity these women and men experienced as they came of age. That theory is borne out by subsequent history.
Over the past 50 years, in a pattern that has been repeated around the world, as prosperity increased, the average number of children per woman of childbearing age has decreased. The chart below provides hard evidence of this correlation. Tracking data per nation, the vertical axis is the average number of children per woman. The horizontal axis is the median income. A clear pattern emerges. In extremely poor nations, birth rates remain at Ehrlichesque levels. But once a nation’s median income rises barely above poverty, at around $5,000 per year, the average number of children per woman drops below replacement level.
South Korea’s current fertility per woman, for example, is a dismal 0.81, and those are extinction-level numbers. At that rate of reproduction, for every 1 million Koreans of childbearing age today, there will only be 66,000 great-grandchildren. South Korea is on track to disappear in less than a century.
This collapse is just now becoming apparent in overall population numbers because it is only when a numerically superior older generation, the product of fecundity, begins to die that absolute totals begin to drop. As baby boomers, known to demographers as the “pig in the python,” reach the end of their lifespans, the consequences of the decade decline in birth rates will finally be reflected in dramatic downward shifts in total population. That process is...
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The only way to end the decline is by not allowing women to work out of home, unless they are infertile. And not allowing them, or anyone else who doesn't pay taxes, to vote. Further, limiting taxes to landowners.
ReplyDeleteDon't expect that to happen. If it did happen, it would be in China, or Russia, not in the West.
all you need to know about the population crash can be garnered from watching one episode of the "View"
ReplyDeleteVery true. Who would want ti mate with any of those those idiots
DeleteAnd since Western Civilization isn't dying fast enough on that basis, the leftards/Bidet are trying to start a race war here and a nuclear war with Russia/china.
ReplyDeleteNobody has been proven wrong more often than Paul Ehrlich and no book proven wrong more often than his Population Bomb.
ReplyDeleteAnd, seriously, there's nothing in this linked article that isn't old news. As a society becomes more modernized and median income goes up, people become less dependent on having a bunch of kids to support them in their old age and the tendency to have lots of kids goes down. The pill only made that easier.
As for the dreaded baby boomers "pig in the python", even at its peak, the number of children per 1000 population in the boom never approached that of 1900. With only the exception of the period between 1939 and 1965, the birth rate in the US has been in continuous decline, but still never reached the level of even 1919. Look at the US Census Bureau graph on Wikipedia's article.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mid-20th_century_baby_boom
Last week, the story was we’re over 8 billion.
ReplyDeleteWhite people stop breeding! Over population! Disaster eminent!
We need to import black, and brown, population crash eminent!
Ever notice how one story always follows the other?
Which continent are we talking about here? Seriously doubt that the more vibrant parts are NOT in decline.
ReplyDeleteIf by "vibrant parts" you mean the $hithole countries where there's nothing to do but screw or rape, then yes. Problem is the "vibrant" populations are spreading their cancer into our part of the world and they bring NOTHING good with them.
DeleteMy Dad vwas right, you can have kids or money, not both.
ReplyDeleteHaving children is one of the few things where what's best for society and what's best for the individual clashes. It is financially better for the individual to not have children, but disastrous for society.
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