|
How crowded is the World?
By Lykke E. Andersen*,
La Paz, 23 June 2008.
In the last 200 years the population of our planet has grown
exponentially, at a rate
of 1.9% per year. If it continued at this rate, with the
population doubling every 40 years,
by 2600 we would all be standing literally shoulder to
shoulder.
Stephen Hawking
To most people, the World feels rather crowded, and many people
are worried about the impacts that all we humans have on the
environment. In this newsletter, however, I will argue that the
perceptions of crowdedness are biased due to crowding.
Here is a thought experiment: Take the entire World population
of 6.67 billion people, group people into families of 5, and
give each family a nice house on a generous 600 m2
plot. This would require about 800 thousand square kilometers of
land, which means that the entire World population would fit
comfortably within the borders of Bolivia, even without
encroaching on the 17 million hectares of protected areas, and
leaving the rest of the planet free of humans.
So the World is not really crowded yet. And the population bomb
has by now been defused. Long range population projections made
by the UN
(1) suggests that the World population probably will reach
its maximum around 9 billion this century, and unless fertility
trends are reverted, the human population would start shrinking
considerably, as almost all developed countries have fertility
rates well below replacement level, and fertility rates in
developing countries are falling rapidly towards developed
country levels (2).
Still, if you live in a big city and rarely get out in the
wilderness, which would be the case for most of us, the World
does seem crowded.
But we crowd together for very good reasons. Crowding allows us
to specialize in what we do best and trade with others, instead
of having to make everything we need from scratch in each
household. Such specialization creates huge efficiency gains,
which is why we have seen such tremendous increases in standards
of living during the last few hundred years, during which the
worldwide urbanization rate has climbed from just 6% in 1800 to
slightly over 50% now. Crowding also promotes technological
inventions, like electricity, computers and Internet, which
would have been impossible for any of us to invent if we had
been living isolated, self-sufficient existences on each of our
10 hectare shares of the World.
Crowding vastly increases our choices, and thus our quality of
life. Not only is there an incredible variety of goods,
services, jobs and leisure activities to choose from in big
cities, but the market for potential partners is also vastly
larger than it is for youngsters living in sparsely populated
rural areas. Indeed, in rural areas girls often marry when they
are very, very young, which makes sense if they (or their
parents) are afraid that the only halfway decent bachelor in the
area will be snatched up before they turn 18.
For those of us who were not ready to get married and have kids
at 13, it is certainly nice to have the choices that cities
offer.
Related articles:
-
Urbanization is a Blessing - Why Fight it?
-
Marriage Markets in Bolivia
(*) Director, Institute for Advanced
Development Studies, La Paz, Bolivia. The author happily
receives comments at the following e-mail:
landersen@inesad.edu.bo.
(1) United Nations (2004) World
Population to 2300.
(2) See, for example, the Gapminder
presentation Has
the World Become a Better Place?
Σ
Institute for Advanced Development Studies 2008.
The opinions expressed in this newsletter are those of the
author and do not necessarily coincide with those of the Institute.
If you would like to receive the Monday Morning
Development
Newsletter by e-mail, please
fill in your information here:
|