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![Page 1: Unit 8 Reflects change from agrarian to industrial culture Continues to grow exponentially at rate of (≈227,000 people/day) Growth is unevenly.](https://reader035.fdocuments.in/reader035/viewer/2022070418/5697bff31a28abf838cbc1fa/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
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Our numbers expand, but Earth’s natural
systems do not
Lester R. Brown
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The Human Population and its Impact
Unit 8
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Human Population Growth
Reflects change from agrarian to industrial culture
Continues to grow exponentially at rate of
(≈227,000 people/day) Growth is unevenly distributed
across globe
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3 Factors for Human Population Growth
Ability to expand into almost all climate zones, habitats
Ability to grow more food per unit of land
Drop in death rates due to improved sanitation, medicines
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Cultural Carrying Capacity
Maximum number of people living comfortable and sustainably
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Factors Affecting Human Population Size
Births Deaths Migration
Population Change =
(births + immigration) – (deaths + emigration)
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Crude Birth Rate (CBR) number of live births per 1000 people in
a population in a given year
Crude Death Rate (CDR) Number of deaths per 1000 people in a
population in a given year
Demographic Quantities
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Crude BirthRate CBR
Crude Death Rate CDR
World
All developedcountries
All developingcountries
Developingcountries
(w/o China)
21
9
1110
248
299
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Africa
LatinAmerica
Asia
Oceania
UnitedStates
NorthAmerica
Europe
38
14
23
6
20
7
18
7
15
9
14
9
10
11
© 2
004
Bro
oks/
Col
e –
Tho
mso
n Le
arni
ngCBR
CDR
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Demographic Quantities
Zero Population Growth (ZPG) births + immigration = deaths + emigration
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Rate of the World’s Annual Population Change
Annual rate of population change (%)
Birth Rate – Death Rate
1000X 100
Birth Rate – Death rate
10
or…
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Developing vs Developed Countries
China and India- 37% of global population
US- 4.5% of global populationDeveloping countries > 95%
growth between 1998-2025
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<1%
1-1.9%2-2.9%
3+%Data notavailable
WorldPopulation Growth
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© 2
004
Bro
oks
/Co
le –
Th
om
son
Lea
rnin
gChina
India
USA
Indonesia
Brazil
Pakistan
Russia
Bangladesh
Japan
Nigeria
2002 2025
1.28 billion1.5 billion
1 billion1.4 billion
288 million
346 million
217 million282 million
174 million
219 million
144 million
242 million
144 million129 million
134 million
178 million
127 million
121 million
130 million205 million
The worlds 10 most populous countries (2002)
37%
4.6%
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CHINA
INDIA
BANGLADESHTHAILAND
INDONESIA
JAPAN
PACIFICOCEAN
PHILIPPINES
NEWGUINEA
BORNEO
INDIAN OCEAN
SRI LANKA
NEPAL
PAKISTAN
Beijing
Shanghai
Hong Kong
Tibet
Delhi
CalcuttaBhopal
Bombay
State ofKerala
Bangkok
Where are they?
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Global Fertility Rates
2 types: Replacement Level Fertility: number of
children to replace reproductive couple -2.1 in developed countries -2.5 in developing countries -population momentum: future increase
in population due to large number of people entering into childbearing years (despite those couple having few children)
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Global Fertility Rates (cont’d)
Total Fertility Rate (TFR): estimate of average number of
children a woman will have in her lifetime -most useful measure for projecting
future population growth
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TFR Facts
2000: TFR= 2.9* Highest TFR: Africa= 5.3 TFR= 2.3; world population= 8
billion in 2025 *if TFR remained at 2.9, human
population would reach 694 billion by 2150
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World
Developedcountries
Developingcountries
Africa
LatinAmerica
Asia
Oceania
NorthAmerica
Europe
5 children per women
2.8
2.5
1.6
6.53.1
6.6
5.2
5.9
2.7
5.9
2.6
3.8
2.5
3.5
2.1
2.6
1.4
1950 2002
© 2
004
Bro
oks/
Col
e –
Tho
mso
n Le
arni
ng
There has been a
decline in total
fertility rates.
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High
Medium
Low
12
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
3
21950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 2050
High10.9
Medium9.3
Low7.3
Year
Po
pu
lati
on
(b
illi
on
s)Population Projections
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Case Study: U.S. Population 2012- 310 mil (US pop in 1900 was 79 mil; took 139 yrs to add first 100 mil; 52 yrs to add next 100 mil; 39 yrs to add 3rd 100 mil) TFR= 2.1 Has highest fertility rate and highest
immigration rate of any industrialized country
(rate of growth has declined, but population is still growing faster than developed countries and China)
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U.S. Population Growth
1.66 million more births than deaths
800,000- 1,000,000 legal immigrants
-53% from Latin America -25% from Asia -14% from Europe 300,000 illegal immigrants (est
11 million) Projected growth by 2050: 41%
to 86% (Pacific NW growth is higher than
India!)
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32
30
2826242220181614
0
Bir
ths
per
th
ou
san
d p
op
ula
tio
n
1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2010
Year
Demographictransition Depression
End of World War II
Baby Boom Baby bust Echo Baby Boom
Birth Rates in the U.S.
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United States Mexico Canada
Population(2002)
Projected population(2025)
346 million
Infant Mortality Rate
Lifeexpectancy
Total FertilityRate (TFR)
% populationunder age 15
% populationover age 65
Per CapitaGNI PPP
288 million102 million
31 million
132 million36 million
6.625
5.3
2.12.9
1.5
21%33%
19%
13%
13%5%
$8,790
77 years75 years
79 years
$34,110
$27,170
© 2004 Brooks/Cole – Thomson Learning
Comparison of Basic
Demographic Data
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Reasons for Projected U.S. Growth
Large numbers of baby boom woman still in child-bearing years
Increase in number of unmarried mothers
High levels of immigrants Inadequate family-planning
services
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Factors Affecting Total Fertility Rates
Importance of children in workforce (developing countries)
Cost of raising and educating children (developed countries)
Pension systems (reduces parents’ need for child support in their old age)
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Factors Affecting Total Fertility Rates (cont’d)
Urbanization (better access to family planning )
Educational, employment opportunities for women (more education-fewer children)
Average age at which woman has first child
Religious beliefs, traditions, and cultural norms
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Factors Affecting Death Rates
(also responsible for increased growth rates)
Increased food supply Better nutrition Medical advances in
immunizations, antibiotics Improved sanitation, cleaner
water(“It’s not that people stopped breeding
like rabbits, it’s just that they stopped dying like flies” UN)
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Developed Countries
50
40
30
20
10
01775 1800 1850 1900 1950 2000 2050
Ra
te p
er
1,0
00
pe
opl
e
Year
Rate ofnatural increase
CrudeBirth Rate
CrudeDeath Rate
Rate of natural increase = Crude Birth Rate –Crude Death Rate
© 2004 B
rooks/Cole – T
homson Learning
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Developing Countries50
40
30
20
10
01775 1800 1850 1900 1950 2000 2050
Ra
te p
er
1,0
00
Pe
op
le
CrudeBirth Rate
Rate of natural increase
CrudeDeath Rate
Year
© 2004 B
rooks/Cole – T
homson Learning
Rate of natural increase = Crude Birth Rate – Crude Death Rate
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Indicators of Overall Health of a Country
1. Life expectancy: years a newborn infant can
expect to live -77 years (developed countries) -64 years (developing countries-
without AIDS, war) -globally: 48 yrs (1955), 66 yrs
(1998), 73 yrs (2025) -Africa: less than 50 yrs
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Indicators of Overall Health of a Country (cont’d)
2. Infant mortality rate: # of babies/1000 that die before their 1st birthday
-best measure of society’s quality of life
-reflects level of nutrition (undernutrition, malnutrition), health care
(4 million infants die each year of preventable
causes)
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<1010-3536-70
100+Data notavailable
Infant deaths per 1,000 live births
71-100
Infant Mortality Rates in 2002
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Reasons for U.S. Infant Mortality
Inadequate health care for poor women
Drug addiction among pregnant women
High birth rate among teenage women
-US has highest teenage pregnancy rate in world
-babies born to teenagers is low (most
important factor in infant deaths)
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Population Age Structure
Age structure diagrams: proportion of the
population at each age level 3 main age categories: -prereproductive: 0-14 -reproductive: 15-44 -postreproductive: 45+ Age distribution has long-lasting
economic and social impacts
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Ages 0-14 Ages 15-44 Ages 45-85+
Rapid GrowthGuatemala
NigeriaSaudi Arabia
Slow GrowthUnited States
AustraliaCanada
Male Female
Zero GrowthSpain
AustriaGreece
Negative GrowthGermanyBulgariaSweden
Population Age Structure
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How Does Age Structure Affect Population Growth?
Rapid growth: wide base of preproductive age (0-14)
2010: 27% of global population was under 15 (1 in 4 on planet)
-30% in developing countries -16% in developed countries -44% in Africa
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Case Study: American Baby Boom/Bust
1946-1964: 79 million people were added to U.S.:
-dominated demand for goods, services -decides who is elected to office -decides what laws are passed -seniors (65 ↑) fastest growing age group (“Graying
of America”)
-will pass on higher unemployment, taxes to millennial generation (born since 1980 AKA you guys)
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194541.9 workers40
30
20
10
0
195016.5
20751.9
1945 2000 2050 2075
Nu
mb
er
of
Wo
rke
rs S
up
po
rtin
ge
ach
So
cia
l Se
curi
ty B
ene
fici
ary
Year
To maintain current ratio of workers to retirees,US will need to absorb 10.8immigrants each year through2050
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Population Decline
Gradual decline: negative effects are manageable
Rapid decline: -threaten economic growth -labor shortages (health-care
workers) -budget strains on pension
plans, health- care costs ex. Japan, Russia, Germany, Italy,
Greece, Portugal
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40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
01950 1970 1990 2010 2030 2050 2070 2090 2110 2130 2150
Year
Ag
e D
istr
ibu
tio
n (
%)
Under age 15 Age 60 or over Age 80 or over
Global Aging
Rapid population decline can lead to severe economic and social problems.
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Case Study: The Graying of Japan
1949: TFR of 4.5 1998: TFR of 1.4 -resists increased immigration
(fear of social cohesiveness) -must depend on automation and women working outside of home
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Population Decline and AIDS
1981-2009: 27 million people died of AIDS/ 2 million every year (WHO)
-22,000 in US; 39,000 in China; 350,000 Africa
-results in loss of productive workers -drastically alters age structure -creates large number of orphans
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The Environment and Population
1995: 27 million international refugees moved due to environment degradation (drought, desertification, deforestation, soil erosion, resource shortages)
1988-1998: 50 million left homeless due to natural disasters (earthquakes, hurricanes, floods, landslides)
US, Australia, Canada accept large #’s of refugees
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Why Slow Population Growth?: Opposing Views
Asking the wrong question What is the earth’s
optimum sustainable population?
Earth is not over-
populated. Longer life span
today proof of capability to sustain greater population
Population regulation is a violation of personal freedom Should be able to
have as many children as we want.
Cannot provide basic necessities for everyone today Raising the death
rates for humans Increasing
environmental harm
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FYI: For Your Consideration
Some computer models suggest that the Earth could support 20-48 billion people if everyone existed at a survival level:
-grain-only diet -cultivate all arable land -mine the Earth’s crust to a depth of a mile
Some scientists suggest that the key factor isn’t overpopulation, but overconsumption: affluence leading to over-consumption of resources per person
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How to Slow Population Growth
Reduce poverty by promoting economic development
Elevate the status of womenEncourage family planning
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Economic Development Occurs in Stages
Demographic transition: hypothesis of population change as countries become more industrialized:
1) death rates drop 2) birth rates decline
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Demographic Transition
1. Pre-industrial stage: harsh living conditions, high infant mortality and death rates; population growth is small (if at all)
2. Transitional stage: start of industrialization, ↑ food production, ↓ death rate; pop. growth is
rapid- China, India3. Industrialized stage: birth rates↓, ↑ access to
birth control, reduced infant mortality, higher cost of raising children; pop. growth
slows 4. Post-industrial: further decline in birth rate,
ZPG -37 countries, including western Europe, Japan
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Low
High
Rel
ativ
e p
op
ula
tio
n s
ize
Bir
th r
ate
and
dea
th r
ate
(nu
mb
er p
er 1
,000
per
yea
r) 80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
Stage 1Preindustrial
Stage 2Transitional
Stage 3Industrial
Stage 4Postindustrial
Lowgrowth rate
Increasing growth rate
Very highgrowth rate
Decreasinggrowth
rate
Lowgrowth rate
Zerogrowth
rate
Negativegrowth
rate
Birth rate
Total population
Death rate
Time
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Demographic Transition (cont’d)
Developing countries: transitional stage
-pop growth outstrips economic growth (demographic trap)
-lack skilled workers to produce high-tech products -lack capital, resources for
economic development
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Elevating the Status of Women Females make up ½ of global pop, but have
fewer opportunities for education (economic opportunities)
Females do most of the world’s domestic work (growing food, hauling wood and water), child care, and health care (unpaid)
Benefits of educating females: -ability to control fertility (tend to have
fewer children) -earn an income -societies that do not suppress women
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4:45 A.M.Wake,wash, andeat
5:00 A.M.-5:30 A.M.Walk tofields
3:00 P.M.-4:00 P.M.Collectfirewood
4:00 P.M.-5:30 P.M.Pound andgrind corn
5:30 AM.-3:00 P.M.Work infields
5:30 P.M.-6:30 P.M.Collectwater
6:30 P.M.-8:30 P.M.Cook forfamily andeat
8:30 P.M.-9:30 P.M.Washdishesand children
9:30 P.M.Go to bed
Typical Workday for a Woman in Africa
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Promoting Family PlanningMajor factor in reducing birth rateReduced # of abortionsReduced # mother and fetus deaths (600,000 women die from pregnancy-
related causes)Drop in TFR by ≈ 55% in developing
countries (6 in 1960 to 3.2 in 2000) Financial benefit: each dollar spent in
developing countries saves $10-$16 in social services
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Use of Rewards and Penalties in Reducing Births
Penalties (China): higher taxes, eliminating tax deductions for third child, loss of health benefits and food allotments
Rewards: reinforcement of trends toward smaller families (social acceptance), increasing a poor family’s economic status
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India’s Failed Family Planning Program
Bureaucratic inefficiency.Low status of women.Extreme poverty.Lack of administrative financial
support. Disagreement over the best ways to
slow population growth.
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China’s Family Planning Program Currently, China’s TFR is 1.6 children
per women. China has moved 300 million people
out of poverty. Problems:
-Strong male preference leads to gender
imbalance (by 2030, 30 million males will not be
able to find brides)-Average population age is increasing without
children to support elders
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The Rule of 70
Used to estimate doubling time of any population growing exponentially
Formula: Doubling time (yrs) = 70 %
growth rate
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Rule of 70 Example
in 2010, the population of Upper Fremont is 200,000 and growing at a rate of 2% each year. (a) If the rate of growth remains constant,
calculate the population in 2045 -doubling time = 70 = 35 yrs 2 -2045-2010 = 35 yrs - answer: 400,000 What will the population be in 2080?
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Chapter 6, 22 Human Population Exam Focus
3 factors for exponential pop growth Definition of cultural carrying capacity 3 main factors affecting pop. Size (know the
equation) ZPG (what it stands for and know the equation) TFR (what it stands for and what it means) CBR; CDR (know formula) Replacement Level Fertility 4 stages of demographic transition Most useful indicators of overall health of a
population
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Human Population Exam Focus Population momentum Relative growth rates of developed vs
developing countries Cases of India and China (why hasn’t India’s
family planning been successful?; results of China’s population control)
Reasons for infant mortality in US Predicted outcome of “Boomer” generation
reaching 65 Age structure graphs and examples of each Ways to slow population growth Key factors that women to have fewer children Family planning Affect of AIDS on global population