SOC 023 Chapter 11
Per Capita Income
a common measure of average income, calculated by dividing the total value of goods and services produced (GNP or GDP or PPP) by the total population size
To reach high levels of economic development
a country must bring rate of growth down quickly
Impact Equation
a formula developed by Paul Ehrlich and associates to express the relationship between population growth, affluence, and technology and their impact on the environment: Impact= Population x Affluence x Technology
Ester Boserup idea on population growth
a growing population is more likely than either a non-growing or a declining population to lead to economic development.
Doomsters
a nickname given to people who believe that population growth retards economic development
Neo-Marxian
a person who accepts the basic principle of Marx that societal problems are created by an unjust and inequitable distribution of resources of any and all kinds, without necessarily believing that communism is the answer to those problems
Drought
a prolonged period of less-than-average rainfall
Purchasing Power Parity
a refinement of GDP that is defined as the number of units of a country's currency required to buy the same amounts of goods and services in the domestic market as one dollar would buy in the United States
Economic Development definition
a rise in the average standard of living associated with economic growth; a rise in per capita income
Overpopulation
a situation in which the population has overshot a region's carrying capacity
Aquaculture
a steady increasing source of fish for food
Capital
a stock of good used for the production of other goods rather than for immediate enjoyment of anything invested to yield income in the future
Ecosphere
all of the earth's ecosystems, the living portion of the biosphere
Green Revolution definition
an improvement in agricultural production begun in the 1940s based on high-yield variety strains of grain and increased use of fertilizers, pesticides, and irrigation
Hirschman idea on population growth
an increase in population size will lower a population's standard of living unless people reorganize their lives to increase production;
Global Warming
an increase in the global temperature caused by a buildup of greenhouse gasses
Economic growth
an increase in the total amount of income produced by a nation or region without regard to the total number of people
Proponents of the world system theory
argue that population growth is irrelevant to the process to the economic development
Boomsters
believe population growth is a good thing nickname given to people who believe that population growth stimulates economic development
Green Revolution
combined plant genetics with pesticides to get more food out of every acre
Ecosystems
communities of species interacting with one another and with the inanimate world
Sustainable Development
defined by the Brundtland Commission as "development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs"
Sustainable development requires
different definition of a desirable standard of living and permanent inequalities in levels of living around the world
Rapid population growth
dipping into capital resources base of the planet
High Yield Varities
dwarf types of grains that have shorter stems and produce more stalks than most traditional varieties
Malthusian cycle of poverty
economic growth will have been enough to feed more mouths, but not enough to escape from poverty
Paul Harrison stated
embrace of environmental crisis in a mere 15 years due to deforestation, and biological diversity, and 1.4 consumers eating
Overshoot
exceeding region's carrying capacity
Food stabilization possible if
farmers in less developed countries are able to reach production levels and if environment does not intervene
11 to 12 bullion could be sustained if
food production worked far more efficiently and if environment did not intervene
Famine
food shortage accompanied by a significant increase in deaths
Contribution to changes varies
from place, time, and according to specific type of degradation
Gross Nation Income in PPP
gross national product expressed in terms of Purchasing Power Parity (rather than the official exchange rates
Economic development
growth in average income and material well being of people
United Nations and World Bank
have sponsored a number of household expenditure surveys in developing countries to try to estimate actual differences in the standard of living
Population Hurdle
higher the rate of population growth, the higher the rate of investment must be (Leibenstein)
Increasing population requires
increase in food production unless we alter the way we eat and how we waste food
Extensification of Agriculture
increasing agriculture output by putting more land into production
Food production increased by
increasing farmland or per-acre yield, plant breeding, fertilizers, and pesticides
Hope for the future brought by
increasing yield per acre and reducing wasted food
Arable
land that is suitable for agricultural purposes
Semiperipheral nations
linked to core countries and other semiperipheral nations, but are only weakly linked to peripheral nations
Peripheral nations
linked to core nations but not to each other,
Population growth creates
long-term pressures on societal resources
Doomster
neo-Malthusians who argue that population growth must slow down or the economic well-being of the planet will deteriorate over time.
Food Security
people have physical and economic access to the basic food they need in order to work and function normally
Environmental Resourcing Use is
raising legitimate concerns about how long we can sustain developmental and increasing population size
Boomsters believe population growth
stimulates development and is a sign of well-being
Demographers
studied what lies ahead for us if we continue on this path
Marxist, neo-Marxists and adherents argue
that population growth is irrelevant to economic development because it determines pace and pattern
Troposphere
that portion of the atmosphere which is closest to (within about 11 miles of) the earth's surface
Carbon Cycle
that process through which carbons, central to life on the planet, are exchanged between living organisms and inanimate matter
Human Resources
the application of human ingenuity to convert natural resources to uses not originally intended by nature
Hydrosphere
the earth's water resources, including water in oceans, lakes, rivers, groundwater, and water in glaciers and ice caps
Demographic overhead
the general cost of adding people to a population caused by the necessity of providing goods and services
Demographic overhead Definition
the general cost of adding people to a population caused by the necessity of providing goods and services
Most common used index of a nation's income
the gross national income which is known as gross national product (the total output of goods and services produced by a country, including income earned from abroad)
Optimum Population Size
the number of people that would provide the best balance of people and resources for a desired standard of living
Intensification of Agriculture
the process of increasing crop yield by any means—mechanical, chemical, or otherwise
Mariculture
the process of increasing crop yield by any means—mechanical, chemical, or otherwise
Ozone Layer
the region of the earth's upper atmosphere that protects the earth from the sun's ultraviolet rays
Wealth of a nation
the sum of known natural resources and our human capacity to transform those resources into something useful
Ecological footprint
the total area of productive land and water required to produce the resources for and assimilate the waste from a given population
Gross Domestic Product
the total value of goods and services produced within the geographic boundaries of a nation in a given year, without reference to international trade
Lithosphere
the upper part of the earth's crust, which contains the soils, minerals, and fuels that plants and animals require for life
Hydrologic cycle
the water cycle by which ocean and land water evaporates into the air, is condensed, and then returns to the ground as precipitation
Atmosphere
the whole mass of air surrounding the earth
Biosphere and three layers
the zone of Earth where life is found Atmosphere Troposphere Hydrosphere
Greenhouse gases
those atmospheric gases (especially carbon dioxide and water) that trap radiated heat from the sun and warm the surface of the earth
Natural Resource
those resources available to us on the planet
Early capitalist saved
to build capital as a building block for future success
In the USA
we can see the relationship between population and environmental change
High Average income is associated
with lower rates of population growth and vice versa
Damage to lithosphere results in
○ Soil erosion ○ Soil degradation from excess salt water ○ Desertification ○ Deforestation ○ Loss of biodiversity ○ Strip mining for energy resources Dumping hazardous waste
GNI does not measue
○ it does not take into account the depletion and degradation of natural resources; ○ it does not make any deduction for depreciation of manufactured assets such as infrastructure; ○ it does not measure the value of unpaid domestic labor such as that generated especially by women in developing nations; ○ it does not account adequately for regional or national differences in purchasing power.
World Systems
Core nations are linked to other core countries and to semiperipheral and peripheral nations
A major constraint on providing food
Degrading the enivornment
Perspective on Relationship between Population Growth and Economic Development
Each describes different part of complicated process A major difference is the experience with rapid rates of population growth in developing countries
Consuming Resources at
An unprecedented rate
Resources that go into producing income
Human Resources Natural Resources
All living organisms in the biosphere require three basic things
Resources Space to live Space to dump waste
Millennium Development Goals for the World Community
1. Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger 2. Achieve universal primary education 3. Promote gender equality and empower women 4. Reduce child mortality 5. Improve maternal health 6. Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other diseases 7. Ensure environmental sustainability 8. Develop a global partnership for development
Ester Boserup and Julian Simon
Boomsters idea
Cornucopians
Boomsters who believe that we can always grow enough food to feed whatever size population we have