UNIT TWO POPULATION Population Intro n Why important

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UNIT TWO: POPULATION

UNIT TWO: POPULATION

Population Intro n Why important to study? • More people on earth than at

Population Intro n Why important to study? • More people on earth than at any other time in history (6. 5 bill) • World’s pop increased faster in second half of 20 th C than ever before • Almost all global pop growth is occurring in LDCs…poorest countries growing fastest…in some cases leads to famine and human suffering • People are living longer – past 50 yrs global life expectancy has increased by 20 yrs

DEMOGRAPHY n n Demography: study of human pop Most demographers agree world pop growth

DEMOGRAPHY n n Demography: study of human pop Most demographers agree world pop growth is slowing Project pop will plateau at @ 12 bill some time in 21 st C Historically pop growth has been steady but certain events have checked it…. . disease has been and continues to be biggest threat

2. 1 Population Concentrations n Ecumene: portion of earth’s surface occupied by permanent human

2. 1 Population Concentrations n Ecumene: portion of earth’s surface occupied by permanent human settlement • ¾ world pop live on 5% of earth’s surface…. Why? n 2/3 of world pop lives in 4 regions • 1. ) EAST ASIA (E. China, Japan, Taiwan, Koreas n n n China has 20 large urban areas, but 2/3 pop is rural China = world #1 ¾ Japan and Korea = urban

4 Populous Regions - contd • 2. ) SOUTH ASIA (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri

4 Populous Regions - contd • 2. ) SOUTH ASIA (India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka) India = world #2 n ¾ rural n • 3. ) EUROPE – E and W…mostly urban • 4. ) SE Asia (islands of Java, Sumatra, Borneo, Papua New Guinea, Philippines, Vietnam, Thailand) Indonesia = world #4 n Mostly rural n

Top 10 Populous Nations n n n 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. China India

Top 10 Populous Nations n n n 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. China India U. S. A. Indonesia Brazil 6. Pakistan 7. Russia 8. Bangladesh 9. Nigeria 10. Japan • China and India expected to flip flop • U. S. will stay #3 b/c of immigration • LDCs taking top spots from MDCs

Population Density n Arithmetic Density: total # of people divided by total area of

Population Density n Arithmetic Density: total # of people divided by total area of land • Can be misleading b/c is an average • US = 78/sq mile, but Manhattan is 67, 000/sq mile and Loving, TX. 1/sq mile • Highest = Bangladesh, Japan, Netherlands • Remember high pop (China) not necessarily high pop density

Pop Density cont’d n Physiological Density: ratio of people to a given unit of

Pop Density cont’d n Physiological Density: ratio of people to a given unit of cultivable/arable land (suited for agriculture) • i. e. can you feed your population? • Can be high b/c of high pop density or poor land • Ex: US 404/sq mile of arable land Egypt 9, 073/sq mile of arable land

2. 2 POPULATION GROWTH n Rule of Thumb…. • Pop increases rapidly where many

2. 2 POPULATION GROWTH n Rule of Thumb…. • Pop increases rapidly where many more born than die • Slowly where births barely exceed deaths • Decreases where deaths outnumber births • Increases when people move in and decreases when people move out

Pop Change…measured 3 ways n n 1. Crude Birth Rate CBR: total # of

Pop Change…measured 3 ways n n 1. Crude Birth Rate CBR: total # of births for every 1, 000 alive 2. Total Fertility Rate TFR: average # of children a woman will have during child bearing yrs. Affected by: culture, religion, lifestyle, is child econ asset or drain, access to birth control, mother’s educ and career

Pop Change – cont’d. n 3. Natural Increase Rate NIR: • • NIR =

Pop Change – cont’d. n 3. Natural Increase Rate NIR: • • NIR = CBR – CDR Calculates % by which pop grows each yr. Ex: CBR = 20, CDR = 5, NIR = 1. 5% Excludes migration – only natural increase A negative NIR means pop decreasing World NIR peaked in 1963 at 2. 2% World NIR has declined in last 20 yrs.

What determines a nation’s NIR? Factors to consider n n n Econ development Education

What determines a nation’s NIR? Factors to consider n n n Econ development Education Gender Empowerment – status and power to women Health Care Culture (i. e. Catholics or Mormons) Public Policy (ex: China one child)

Factors determining a nation’s NIR – cont’d. n Conclusions…. countries w/ low econ development,

Factors determining a nation’s NIR – cont’d. n Conclusions…. countries w/ low econ development, low educ, low gender empowerment, but w/ lower infant mortality rates b/c of improved health care, cultural traditions favoring fertility, and no public policy limiting pop growth. . have HIGHEST rates

Where are these countries? n n n LDCs: sub Sahara Africa, parts of Middle

Where are these countries? n n n LDCs: sub Sahara Africa, parts of Middle East, parts of L. America In MDCs pop growth is not natural but due to immigration Irony – fastest growing places are least equip to deal w/ the growth

Doubling Time n Doubling Time: # of yrs needed for a pop to double

Doubling Time n Doubling Time: # of yrs needed for a pop to double • Formula 70/NIR…ex: NIR is 2. 6 % DT is 70/2. 6 = 27 years • Pop growth is compounded/exponential (if rate stays steady at 3% you’ll add more raw numbers each yr b/c base gets bigger) • At 3% rate, DT is less than 25 yrs. Taking place in SS Africa, parts of ME, and parts of Central America

MORTALITY n n CDR Infant Mortality Rate: annual # of deaths of infants under

MORTALITY n n CDR Infant Mortality Rate: annual # of deaths of infants under 1 yr compared w/ total # of births • In some parts of SS Africa is 10% n Life Expectancy: # or yrs a newborn can expect to live. . 75 in most MDCs, late 30 s in some parts of Africa

Population Growth Curves n n S Curve – historical growth J Curve – exponential

Population Growth Curves n n S Curve – historical growth J Curve – exponential growth (fixed percentage)

Demographic Momentum n The tendency for pop growth to continue despite strict family planning

Demographic Momentum n The tendency for pop growth to continue despite strict family planning b/c of young pop in child bearing yrs • Asia and LA 33% of pop under 15 • Africa 40% of pop under 15 • Ex: In 2002 both UK and S. Korea had fertility rate of 1. 6. But projections for 2025, older UK will decline by 2 mill and youthful SK will add 2 mill.

2. 3 Demographic Transition Model n n n 4 stage model shows similar process

2. 3 Demographic Transition Model n n n 4 stage model shows similar process of pop change in all societies over time Every country is at some stage The model is irreversible…you do not go back

STAGE ONE: LOW GROWTH n n Very high CBR and CDR cancel each other

STAGE ONE: LOW GROWTH n n Very high CBR and CDR cancel each other out Almost no long term natural increase Most of human history spent in stage one No country is here today

STAGE TWO: HIGH GROWTH n Rapidly declining CDR but CBR remains high and =

STAGE TWO: HIGH GROWTH n Rapidly declining CDR but CBR remains high and = very high NIR • @ 1750 – late 1800 s nations in Ind Rev (Eur and N. America) moved into stage 2. Improved agric and health care dropped CDR. • First time in world history to have significant growth • LDCs entered stage 2 @1950 when MDCs diffuse improved medical tech (vaccines) to LDCs. • Most of Africa in stage 2 today

STAGE THREE: MODERATE GROWTH n n CBR rapidly declines and CDR continues to decline

STAGE THREE: MODERATE GROWTH n n CBR rapidly declines and CDR continues to decline slowly. NIR begins to moderate CBR drops b/c of social customs – access to birth control, infant mortality rate drops, women in work force, kids become econ drain Eur and NA enter - first half of 20 th C Asia and parts of LA moved here in recent yrs

STAGE FOUR: LOW GROWTH n n Very low CBR and CDR produce almost no

STAGE FOUR: LOW GROWTH n n Very low CBR and CDR produce almost no long-term natural increase and possibly a decrease Zero pop growth: CBR and CDR = • TFR of 2. 1 produces zero growth n n Most Euro countries in stage 4 today Countries w/ negative NIR…Russia and Japan (shrinking)

Possible Stage Five? n n In future if higher CDR than CBR you’ll have

Possible Stage Five? n n In future if higher CDR than CBR you’ll have irreversible pop decline. If a country stays in stage 5 without migration it will eventually cease to exist

Generalities of the Model n n No one in stage 1; only a few

Generalities of the Model n n No one in stage 1; only a few have reached stage 4 Model has 2 big breaks w/ the past • First break: sudden drop in death rate (stage 2) from technology and has taken place everywhere • Second break: sudden drop in birth rate (stage 3) comes from changing social customs and has not taken place everywhere

2. 4 Population Structure and Composition n Population pyramids…show age and gender groups. How

2. 4 Population Structure and Composition n Population pyramids…show age and gender groups. How do MDC’s and LDC’s differ? • 1. ) Sex Ratio: # of males per 100 females. In general slightly more males born, but women outlive men Eur and NA 95 males: 100 females n World wide 102 males: 100 females n

Pop Structure and Composition – cont’d. n 2. ) Age Distribution • Dependency Ratio:

Pop Structure and Composition – cont’d. n 2. ) Age Distribution • Dependency Ratio: # of people too old or young to work, compared to # of people in productive yrs. n n % of pop under 15 = % over 65 divided by % in between 15 -65 multiplied by 100 Tells you how many dependents for every 100 workers Stage 2 countries: ratio is 1: 1 (1 worker for every dependent) Dependents are young Stage 4 countries ratio is 2: 1 (2 workers for every dependent) Dependents are young and old

Age Distribution – cont’d • Graying of the pop in MDCs – more than

Age Distribution – cont’d • Graying of the pop in MDCs – more than ¼ of all govn’t expenditures in US, Canada, Japan, and W. Eur goes to Social Security, health care, and other programs for the elderly • Baby Boomer Cohort in US (born 19461964)…what does this mean for you? • Generation X = 1965 -1980

Population Structure and Composition – cont’d n Race and Ethnicity: Hispanics now largest minority

Population Structure and Composition – cont’d n Race and Ethnicity: Hispanics now largest minority in US (recently passed African Americans) • 11% of US pop is foreign born 50% of that from LA n 50% of that from Mexico n

What do you see? Why?

What do you see? Why?

Overpopulation and Sustainability n Should we worry @ overpopulation? • Thomas Malthus – 1798

Overpopulation and Sustainability n Should we worry @ overpopulation? • Thomas Malthus – 1798 wrote “Essay on the Principle of Pop” and argued people need food to survive and have natural desire to reproduce n Food prod increases arithmetically and pop increases geometrically/exponentially n Predicted pop growth would eventually outpace people’s ability to produce food leading to starvation and famine n

Malthus and his theory

Malthus and his theory

Neo Malthusians n Argue that 2 characteristics of recent pop growth make Malthus’ argument

Neo Malthusians n Argue that 2 characteristics of recent pop growth make Malthus’ argument even more frightening • Esp high growth in LDCs • Pop growth outpacing econ dev in many LDCs (i. e. income rises 20% but pop rises 30%, so some LDCs worse off than they were 30 yrs ago) • Paul Erlich – most prominent neo-Malthusian. Wrote “Population Bomb” in 1968 – warned of mass starvation due to overpopulation http: //overpopulationisamyth. com/ov erpopulation-the-making-of-a-myth

Critics of Malthus n n n Malthus did not account for ability of people

Critics of Malthus n n n Malthus did not account for ability of people to increase food prod dramatically w/ new technology (go to video 3) Malthus did not foresee family planning and birth control and drop of CBR/NIR Malthus did not recognize that famine is usually NOT related to a lack of food but to unequal dist of food – Marxist approach (Moderate approach) http: //overpopulationisamyth. com/ov erpopulation-the-making-of-a-myth

Population and Sustainability n n Carrying Capacity: # of people a given area can

Population and Sustainability n n Carrying Capacity: # of people a given area can maintain…surpassed in densely populated places Overpopulation implies a breach of an area’s carrying capacity. Also involves • • • Over consumption of resources Inefficient allocation of goods Unsustainable land use MDC’s blame LDC’s – have too many babies LDCs blame MDCs – consume disproportionate share of world’s resources

Control of Population n Pro-Natalist Policies – government policies to promote reproduction and bigger

Control of Population n Pro-Natalist Policies – government policies to promote reproduction and bigger families • Ex. Tax breaks n Anti-Natalist – government and social policies that discourage reproduction to reduce pop growth rates • Tax breaks for sterilization • One-child policies – may lead to gender imbalance

Control of Population n Improve local and state economies • Better school, more eco

Control of Population n Improve local and state economies • Better school, more eco opportunities n Reduce CBR through the use of contraception • Family planning programs in LDCs • Why is this sometimes difficult?

Epidemiological Transition Model n n n At times high CDR have lowered NIR Stage

Epidemiological Transition Model n n n At times high CDR have lowered NIR Stage 1: Pestilence and Famine: i. e. infectious diseases…ex: Black Plague 1350 s kills ½ Eur pop Stage 2: Receding Pandemics: improved sanitation, nutrition, medicine of Ind Rev decreases spread of infect diseases

Epidemiological Transition Model Cont’d n Stage 3: Degenerative and Human Created Diseases • Fewer

Epidemiological Transition Model Cont’d n Stage 3: Degenerative and Human Created Diseases • Fewer deaths from infectious diseases • Increase in chronic disease associated w/ aging (heart disease and cancer) n Stage 4: Delayed Degenerative Diseases – degenerative diseases linger but life exp is extended trough medical advances (bypass, radiation, chemo, etc. )

Epidemiological Transition Model Cont’d n Possible Stage 5 – Reemergence of Infectious and Parasitic

Epidemiological Transition Model Cont’d n Possible Stage 5 – Reemergence of Infectious and Parasitic Diseases • Evolution of new strains of bacteria (TB, polio, malaria) • Poverty – people cannot afford drug treatment (TB) • Improved travel diffuses diseases faster (AIDS)