There is nothing more banal than dying. Getting born is much trickier. Over the 200,000 years of mankind’s history, it is estimated that 109 billion individuals died, compared to 8 billion now alive. Thus, about 7% of the people who ever lived are now alive. But they will die too: c’est la vie.
The chart below suggests that human population was stable until about 2000 BCE. From 2000 BCE, population grew slowly until around the 17th century, with some catastrophes along the way like the Black Death of the 14th century, which probably killed one-third of Europeans. Then, unexpectedly, the population exploded from the 18th and 19th centuries on (you can play with the graph on the website of Our World in Data). In 1820, life expectancy at birth was 36 years in Western Europe and Japan; its average was still only 24 in the rest of the world, the same level where it had been everywhere on Earth around the year 1000. In the United Kingdom, it was 40 years in 1820, and had grown to 77 in 1999.
The Industrial Revolution, which greatly increased incomes (GDP per capita), played a role in supporting and fueling the population explosion. As Angus Maddison noted, “there has been significant congruence over time and between regions, in the patterns of improvement in per capita income and life expectation [expectancy].” (See Angus Maddison, The World Economy, Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, 2003, 2006.)
We met Angus Maddison before when we looked at his estimates of GDP per capita since year 1 and the astonishing boost in its trend at the time of the Industrial Revolution. Increasing GDP per capita requires that total output (GDP) increase more than population. This growth phenomenon, which had never happened until it started in the Netherlands and the UK, requires institutions that don’t obstruct free markets and entrepreneurship. In the late 18th and early 19th century, ordinary people’s constant fear of starvation was abolished in countries that got on the bandwagon of the Industrial Revolution. Many countries that had feeble industrial revolutions were able to partly benefit from others’ through trade.
Note that the Industrial Revolution was not only a matter of factories, even if mass production of common consumption goods for ordinary people, like clothes and everyday objects and tools, was an important step and a major achievement. But it was preceded and accompanied by a financial revolution, not to mention the preceding centuries of commerce (even if often restrained by political rulers). Without this institutional background, widespread technological progress cannot occur. A whole industrial civilization was born and led to large progress in agriculture and intangible services too. Today, in America, two-thirds of consumer expenditures go to services—such as education, health, housing, home deliveries, and such—instead of food and hard stuff. Consumers now want mainly services because food and manufactured gadgets cost so little.
As my post “The Significance of Botched Industrial Revolutions” also indicated, some industrial revolutions started but failed, and some countries never had anything close. For us in Western countries (plus a few Asian countries), the future depends on our capacity to reinforce the institutions that allowed the Industrial Revolution to happen. Ortega y Gasset warned us that civilization—industrial civilization—is not guaranteed against political folly.
Another lesson relates to the environmental scares of the 1960s and 1970s in the form of “the population bomb,” title of a book by Stanford University biologist Paul Ehrlich. Environmentalists advocated massive state dirigisme to control population and save mankind. In 1965, the New Republic announced that the “world population has passed food supply,” that “the famine had started,” and that world hunger would be “the single most important fact in the final third of the 20th century.” In reality, the final third of the 20th century brought a historical decrease of poverty in the world. The “freedom to breed is intolerable,” ecologist and microbiologist Garrett Hardin pontificated. Economist Julian Simon argued against Ehrlich that man was “the ultimate resource,” title of his 1981 book: more individuals on our planet are not a problem but, on the contrary, bring more contributors in the solution of mankind’s problems—besides each individual being a life worth living. Simon made and won a famous bet with Ehrlich about the exhaustion of resources. The story is told in Paul Sabin’s The Bet: Paul Ehrlich, Julian Simon, and Our Gamble over Earth’s Future (2013); if you don’t have time to read the whole book, you may like my short review on Law and Liberty.
We may rephrase the issue in terms of so-called “carrying capacity.” National Geographic defines it as
a species’ average population size in a particular habitat. The species population size is limited by environmental factors like adequate food, shelter, water, and mates. If these needs are not met, the population will decrease until the resource rebounds.
Applied to the Homo Sapiens, this Malthusian approach neglects the crucial fact that human individuals want more than “adequate food, shelter, water, and mates,” and are indeed capable, with the right institutions, to obtain much more. The Encyclopedia Britannica adds “social requirements” to the conditions of carrying capacity, although the term “requirements” seems to limit the scope of voluntary social cooperation:
carrying capacity, the average population density or population size of a species below which its numbers tend to increase and above which its numbers tend to decrease because of shortages of resources. The carrying capacity is different for each species in a habitat because of that species’ particular food, shelter, and social requirements.
Economics helps us understand how currently living humans have come to constitute 7% of all those who lived in 200,000 years. It also enables us to look at the environmentalists’ scares and other social matters with a cool head.
READER COMMENTS
nobody.really
Aug 12 2024 at 10:44am
The argument that each individual will die seems like a good bet–but only 93% accurate. I expect statistical analyses to reflect a 95% confidence interval. Pierre Lemieux is obviously jumping to conclusions.
David Seltzer
Aug 12 2024 at 3:17pm
Nobody: I’m 100% confident every individual of every species born, will expire.
nobody.really
Aug 12 2024 at 3:55pm
Is that a threat? 🙂
Hey, I’m just looking at the data. And, for what it’s worth, not everyone shares this view of universal mortality.
I try to maintain skepticism about universal assertions. For example, libertarians are fond of saying “Everyone’s different.” Except that it’s not true: I am NOT different; I am the same. Sure, most people are different than me–but I am not. Someday I plan to launch a campaign to search the internet for the statement “Everyone’s different” and to insert corrective footnotes.
David Seltzer
Aug 12 2024 at 7:31pm
Nobody: No threat here. “not everyone shares this view of universal mortality.” True enough as faith is very personal, but again they will die. As to an afterlife or the existence of the almighty, I remain an agnostic as I have no evidence that they exist or don’t exist. How do I falsify the assertion? Is the assertion testable? The Summa Theologica provides an explanation, but I can’t fathom a being who’s always been in existence. No beginning or end. I mean no disrespect as one’s faith or belief is subjective and worthy of veneration. BTW. My daughter has studied Kabballah for nearly half her life.
Ahmed Fares
Aug 12 2024 at 9:18pm
Yes, but the proof is very dangerous. This from the Babylonian Talmud:
As you can see, one died, one went insane, and one became a heretic.
The word used for “orchard” is “PaRDeS”. The letters in that are explained here (see the first section):
Pardes (exegesis)
Incidentally, the most dangerous part is not the ascent but the descent, which may result in a “crash landing”. (this is OCR from a Google book search)
source: Kabbalah: An Introduction to Jewish Mysticism
As an aside, this story appears obliquely in the Qur’an. I can expound further if you’d like.
Craig
Aug 13 2024 at 10:46pm
“As to an afterlife or the existence of the almighty, I remain an agnostic as I have no evidence that they exist or don’t exist.”
Fair enough though I would suggest that there is evidence but that the only issue is the weight of the evidence. There are testimonials some of which I believe that, at minimum, the person telling the story believes it.
nobody.really
Aug 13 2024 at 11:46pm
For what it’s worth, two scholars from MIT argue that empirical analysis permits us to falsify some claims about life after death–specifically, conventional claims about reincarnation.
Pierre Lemieux
Aug 14 2024 at 6:47pm
Ahmed: I fear that what you say is above my head. Perhaps the Kaballah has something to teach, but I am far from sure. Perhaps, although I doubt it, Pythagorean numerology does reveal secrets. Perhaps, but I doubt it as much, what Woody Allen says (in “Deconstructing Harry”) about the eighth floor of hell is true–that it houses escaped war criminals, TV evangelists, and the NRA. But I tend to think that economic theory and empirical observation constitute the best way to understand society.
Statistician David Hand’s The Improbability Principle: Why Coincidences, Miracles, and Rare Events Happen Every Day (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2014) is very interesting including on the “Bible Code.” As he develops his arguments, he explains much of what one needs to know in probability theory to understand it. The rational analysis of random events is certainly a summit in mankind’s intellectual history. Yet, and this is also banal to say, the more we know, the more complex the world appears.
Ahmed Fares
Aug 14 2024 at 11:20pm
re: Plato in the Qur’an
Plato will be along shortly. Be patient.
The word “mulk” which is the m-l-k root apears 48 times in the Qur’an. It’s the world that you see around you. The word “malakut” which derives from the same root and has the “-ut” sufformative suffix which refers to something in the abstract appears 4 times in the Qur’an, all 4 times in the genitive construct state, twice as the “malakut of the Heavens and the Earth”, and twice as “the malakut of every thing”. (this is important when we get to Plato)
Al-Ghazali writes that the “mulk”, i.e., this world, is the ladder to the world of the “malakut”, and that everything in the world of the “mulk” is a symbol of something in the world of the “malakut”.
The Hebrew word for “kingdom” is “malkuth” and it is the “is the tenth of the sefirot in the Kabbalistic Tree of Life”. Rabbi Yakov Saacks writing in the Times of Israel:
The chief injunction in Christianity is to seek the Kingdom of Heaven, which is all around you, but you do not see it unless you are born again, i.e., death and resurrection. The Aramaic word for “kingdom” is also “malkuth”.
As promised, Plato in the Qur’an. Those of you familiar with Plato’s Cave Allegory will recognize this instantly. Also, note that in the Qur’an, Allah speaks in the “royal we”, aka, the “majestic plural”:
“We have put fetters around their necks which reach up to their chins so that they are standing with their heads upright. And We have put before them a barrier and behind them a barrier and covered them, so they do not see.” —Qur’an 36:8-9
An abstract from an article:
What I’ve hopefully demonstrated is the same idea from three Abrahamic faiths plus Plato, that the objects that you see around you are symbols of and a ladder to a higher reality.
David Seltzer
Aug 14 2024 at 5:48pm
Ahmed, Nobody and Craig: Thank you all for your thoughtful responses to my comment.
Craig
Aug 12 2024 at 3:16pm
“There is nothing more banal than dying.”
Just what I needed on a Monday!
“Environmentalists advocated massive state dirigisme to control population and save mankind.”
Many nations seem to be on the brink of suffering from a demographic implosion.
steve
Aug 12 2024 at 5:14pm
Thank heavens for CIMMYT and Borlaug. If memory serves they now produce most of the world’s wheat varieties and approaching half of the world’s corn varieties. In the US it looks like the ag schools are contributing heavily towards new rice varieties. (The founding of the Ag schools lead to the development of agricultural extension programs which then spread internationally. They have been key in educating farmers on how to increase yields.)
https://www.nwaonline.com/news/2022/apr/04/breeders-develop-new-rice-types/
Steve
Mactoul
Aug 13 2024 at 1:51am
The plot misleads. Population was always increasing but a log plot is necessary to see the increase in ancient time.
True as far as it goes but you miss the elephant in the room. The self-domestication of man, going on since prehistoric times, and development of states which led to gradual reduction of violence. Plus co-evolution of man himself—more violent men were culled from the gene pool via capital punishment meted out by the states. All these are pre-conditions to growth.See Steven Pinker’s Better Angels of our Nature
Also as an aside, the trade in ancient city-states was a very different thing, as were the city-states themselves. For the role of gods in ancient city-states and how Assyria went from a peaceful trading state to genocidal empire, an interesting hypothesis is given in Julian Jaynes’ Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of Bicameral Mind.
Essentially, we have co-evolution of man and states, enabling every bigger and bigger societies, cities and states, enabling cooperation on bigger and bigger scales.
Pierre Lemieux
Aug 16 2024 at 4:15pm
Mactoul: Sorry for my delay in responding. Note that I was relying on Maddison’s book (available online and linked to in my post) for the big picture, and on Our World In Data for the estimates of from year zero 0 to 10,000 BCE (academic sources are with the link in my post). I don’t know of any population estimates before 10,000 BCE (which is already quite heroic).
On your objection that the chart is misleading, I wanted to make some calculations (and reach to a mathematical economist friend of mine) before responding. The result is that the chart is not misleading and a semi-log chart would still show a basically flat curve until 2,000 BCE. The reason is the following. From year 198,000 BCE (assuming that mankind is 200,000 years old) when the population was 2 until 2000 BCE when it is estimated to have been 72,690,000, you can calculate that its compounded annual growth rate was 0.000089 or 0.009%, that is 9 thousandths of 1%, a tiny growth rate which would give you a basically-flat semi-log curve. (Given the numbers above, you can calculate this growth rate with just a little bit of logarithmic wizardry, remembering from the Taylor series expansion of e^x that for small values of x, e^x ≈ 1+x.)
Grooner
Aug 13 2024 at 6:57pm
Re “homo sapiens”
At the core of homo sapiens is unwisdom (ie, madness) and so the human label of “wise” (ie, sapiens) is a complete collective self-delusion — study the free scholarly essay “The 2 Married Pink Elephants In The Historical Room” … https://www.rolf-hefti.com/covid-19-coronavirus.html
“When a well-packaged web of lies has been sold gradually to the masses over generations, the truth will seem utterly preposterous and its speaker, a raving lunatic.” — Dresden James
Once you understand that humans are “invisibly” insane (pink elephant people, see cited essay) you’ll UNDERSTAND (well, perhaps) why they, especially their alleged experts, perpetually come up with myths and lies about everything … including about themselves (their nature, their intelligence, their origins, their “supreme” status, etc).
“All experts serve the state and the media and only in that way do they achieve their status. Every expert follows his master, for all former possibilities for independence have been gradually reduced to nil by present society’s mode of organization. The most useful expert, of course, is the one who can lie. With their different motives, those who need experts are falsifiers and fools. Whenever individuals lose the capacity to see things for themselves, the expert is there to offer an absolute reassurance.” —Guy Debord
“Repeating what others say and think is not being awake. Humans have been sold many lies…God, Jesus, Democracy, Money, Education, etc. If you haven’t explored your beliefs about life, then you are not awake.” — E.J. Doyle, songwriter
Isn’t it about time for anyone to wake up to the ULTIMATE DEPTH of the human rabbit hole — rather than remain blissfully willfully ignorant in a narcissistic fantasy land and play victim like a little child?
The official narrative is… “trust official science” and “trust the authorities” but as with these and all other “official narratives” they want you to trust and believe …
“We’ll know our Disinformation Program is complete when everything the American public [and global public] believes is false.” —William Casey, a former CIA director=a leading psychopathic criminal of the genocidal US regime
“Separate what you know from what you THINK you know.” — Unknown
Warren Platts
Aug 16 2024 at 12:40pm
What Malthus got wrong — and Ricardo got right — was the mechanism of population control. Malthus proposed that famine, pestilence & war would eventually put a lid on a population; Ricardo shared Malthus’s belief that there are limits to population growth but differed in that the main mechanism of control was limiting the birth rate.
The birth rate, in turn depends on the money-wage/natural-wage ratio: if > 1, the population increases; if < 1, population decreases; if = 1, by definition, the population is stable. The natural wage is not mere subsistence, but depends on custom: namely what one has been accustomed to & what one aspires to.
Thus the Baby Boom is easily explainable: a decade & a half of depression & war got people used to an austere existence: thus when the post-war economic boom hit, people noticed a big “wealth effect,” people got married at younger ages & the birth rate boomed. Similarly, in developing countries where people consider themselves lucky not to starve, when the benefits of a modern economy are felt, the population booms.
But as people get used to the good life, their expectations start to outstrip growth in the money wage. A tipping point is reached where the money-wage is now less than the natural wage: the birth rate dips below replacement level. A prediction of Ricardo’s theory is that the birth rate will dip more during economic recessions. In the U.S., this is exactly what we observe.
Pierre Lemieux
Aug 16 2024 at 8:35pm
Warren: The contemporary scientific reference on fertility and the family is Gary Becker. See his 1981 Treatise on the Family. He summarizes his ideas in his Nobel Prize lecture.
Warren Platts
Aug 17 2024 at 4:09pm
Pierre, thanks for the Becker lecture. Not sure that Becker’s rational choice theory refutes Ricardo’s theory of demographics, however. His observations that wealthier people have fewer divorces and that time value increases as society progresses economically–thus rendering the raising of children ever more expensive–is consistent with Ricardo’s theory as I understand it. Thus when wages stagnate, marriage prospects for men decline & fertility declines, as documented by Autor et al. (When Work Disappears: Manufacturing Decline and the Falling Marriage-Market Value of Men) despite that even poor Americans are far, far better off economically than the vast majority of Americans living 200 years ago who nonetheless had extremely high birth rates by today’s standards.
However, the widespread existence of DINKs (Dual-Income, No Kids) would seem to pose a challenge to Ricardo: Becker would say DINKs make rational, forward-thinking choices when they decide not to have kids. And since DINK household income (around $130K/yr) is substantially above the median household income (around $70K/yr), how can one say DINK money wages are below DINK natural wages?
This problem dissolves however, because the natural wage largely depends on one’s economic class. While Ricardo’s own examples dealt with working class wages, his theory clearly applied to his own class as well: the Ricardo family was fabulously wealthy: he was one of 17 kids from a successful Jewish stockbroker; Ricardo himself had 8 kids with his Quaker wife.
In the U.S., class can be roughly demarcated according to whether one has at least a bachelor’s degree, or not. But the median household income is dragged down by the majority of Americans who do not have a B.A. Therefore, it’s unfair to compare the stereotypical DINK household with working class households. Polls show that the vast majority of DINKs cite financial & time constraints, medical issues, or irrational fears of future climate change or political instability as rational reasons for choosing not to have kids. Moreover, an average income of $65K per partner in a DINK household is not a particularly high income in the USA; yet being part of the educated class will lead to preferences that only a high income can satisfy. Thus even DINKs are explained by Ricardo’s demographics.
Now, it could be argued that Ricardo’s theory is a mere tautology & therefore explanatorily useless. Indeed, I did say above that the natural wage is “by definition” the wage at which population is stable. However, that is too strong of a phrasing: one can imagine a tyrannical government enforcing policies that would either set the birth rate lower or higher than that would otherwise be the case if potential parents were allowed to make their own rational choices based on their own individual preferences. E.g., China’s one-child policy suppressed the birth rate to below replacement level when the natural birth rate would have been positive; in that case, it would still be true that the money wage was above the natural wage, despite the actual birth rate being below replacement level.
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