population growth Flashcards

1
Q

common reasons of higher birth rates in developing countries

A

▪ Limited access to education for women
▪ relying on children for labour or support in old age
▪ Lack of family planning services
▪ Cultural and religious beliefs

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2
Q

Birth rates in Africa

A

o The highest birth rates in 1990 and 2017 were most commonly found in Africa
o Many African countries also show little change in fertility rates in the last 30 years

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3
Q

Findings from the UN World Population Prospects Report

A

o World population projected to reach 8.6 billion by 2030
o Future population growth will be concentrated in developing countries
o Population growth will be especially concentrated in Africa

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4
Q

The Demographic Transition in Development - Population Pyramids

A

o In low-income countries - and middle-income countries in the past - the population is heavily skewed towards younger groups
o In high-income countries the distribution tends to be more uniform

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5
Q

Youth Dependency Ratio in developing countries

A

▪ The Youth Dependency Ratio: The ratio of children under age 15 to adults of working age (15-64)
▪ 42% of the population in low-income countries
▪ 17% of the population in high-income countries
o An increasing population growth rate will lead to a larger number of economically inactive individuals (mostly children)
o It will become more difficult for those who are working to support those who are not

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6
Q

common pattern underlying changes in population growth in many of today’s high-income economies

A

▪ Stage I: High birthrates and death rates
▪ Stage II: Continued high birthrates, declining death rates
▪ Stage III: Falling birthrates and death rates, eventually stabilizing

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7
Q

Malthusian Trap

A

▪ The population is rising due to high birth rates
▪ production is subject to diminishing returns
▪ Only where population declines will income per capita increase – if not, the economy will be stuck at a low-income equilibrium (poverty trap)
o poor countries will always be stuck at a subsistence equilibrium without preventative checks
o More concerning is what Malthus calls positive checks on population growth - including famine, war and disease

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8
Q

Poverty Trap Graph

A

Graph on slides
▪ Only if income per capita can passT will the economy escape the population trap

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9
Q

Criticisms of the Malthusian Population Trap

A

▪ overlooks the role of technological progress
▪ differences in productivity important in explaining differences in income
▪ With improvements in technology and productivity, the growth rate of income could potentially remain above the population growth rate

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10
Q

Reasons why Malthusian Population Trap is still useful

A

o Many believe that the Malthusian trap holds in poor countries today, although there is no conclusive empirical evidence linking population growth to income-per-capita
o It possible that such traps have occurred in historical past - evidence of a rise in income-per-capita following large scale ‘positive’ checks
▪ The bubonic plague - killed between 30% and 60% of Europe’s population and was followed by a sharp rise in income-per-capita

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11
Q

Quantity vs ‘Quality’ of Children with economic development

A

o Economic development may alter the costs and motivations for having children (Quality) and (Quantity)
For example,
▪ production is (human-) capital intensive more educated/skilled children may be desirable
▪ In modern societies, raising children is expensive so fewer children may be optimal
▪ reduction in child mortality
▪ social protection to the elderly

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12
Q

A Model of the Demand for Children - equation

A

Cd = 𝑓(𝑌, 𝑃𝑐, 𝑃𝑥, 𝑡𝑥), 𝑥 = 1 … … 𝑛
Where,
Cd is the demand for surviving children
Y is the level of household income
Pc is the “net” price of children
Px is price of all other goods
tx is the “tastes” for other goods relative to children

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13
Q

A Model of the Demand for Children - Correlation

A

▪ The higher income, the greater the demand for children (children are normal goods)
▪ The higher the net price of children, the lower the quantity demanded
▪ The higher the prices of all other goods relative to children, the greater the quantity of children demanded (children and other goods are substitutes)
▪ The greater the strength of tastes for goods relative to children, the fewer children are demanded
Note: these relationships may be written as:
𝜕Cd/𝜕𝑌 > 0
𝜕Cd/𝜕𝑃𝑐< 0
𝜕Cd/𝜕𝑃𝑥> 0
𝜕Cd/𝜕𝑡𝑥< 0

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14
Q

The Microeconomic Household Theory of Fertility - Illustration

A

Graph on slides

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15
Q

Conflicting views on whether population growth should be a cause for concern - Argument 1: Population growth: “It’s not a real problem”

A

The real problem is not population growth but the following:
▪ Under-development
▪ environmental destruction
▪ Population distribution

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16
Q

Conflicting views on whether population growth should be a cause for concern - Argument 2: “Population growth is a real problem”

A

Theoretical arguments e.g., Malthus’ Population Trap
Empirical arguments:
▪ Lower economic growth
▪ Adverse impact on education and health - food insecurity
▪ Impact on the environment

17
Q

Policy Approaches to Reduce Fertility

A

Fertility will be lower where there is:
o More female employment
o Less reliance on unskilled labour in production – structural transformation
o Reductions in infant mortality - better healthcare
o Development of old-age and social security plans – better social protection
In addition, the following are also likely to be effective:
o Affordable prices and better information on contraceptives and family planning
o Policies that have the effect of reducing male-child preference