Thomas Malthus Theory

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Note on Thomas Malthus Theory, created by Jonathan Greenwood on 25/09/2014.
Jonathan Greenwood
Note by Jonathan Greenwood, updated more than 1 year ago
Jonathan Greenwood
Created by Jonathan Greenwood over 10 years ago
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Thomas Malthus theory on population Thomas Robert Malthus was born in 1766. In 1788, he became a member of the clergy and earned his master’s degree in 1791. When he was 32, he published his first paper on how agricultural production will not support population growth. Malthus thought that human population increases exponentially (1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, etc.) because it is natural human urge to reproduce and food supply would only increase arithmetically (1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, etc.). Therefore eventually humans would starve. However Malthus argued the population growth would be slowed and would be kept from rising exponentially for too long by preventative checks and positive checks. Malthus described preventative checks as those that affect birth rate: marrying at a later age, moral restraint, abstaining from procreation, birth control and homosexuality. A modern day preventative check would be women having a career so not having children at all or not having children until a later age. Malthus defined positive checks as those that affect the death rate: disease, war, natural disaster and eventually famine. Malthus also thought that fear of famine would decrease the birth rate as potential parents are less likely to have children if they think their child might starve. However this is not always the case as in Africa, parents have lots of children because they know some will die so they will have some left. Malthus used the new United States of America as an example of high birth. Malthus’ theory was developed before the industrial revolution and focuses on plants, animals and grains as key components of the diet. For Malthus available productive farmland was a limiting factor in population growth. Due to an increase agricultural production (new farm machinery) it has become a less important factor. Another factor is poverty, which can be caused by a large population because it would increase the number of people in a work force, lowering labouring costs. In the 1800 an example of poor people and low labouring costs would have been factories in Britain. Now it would be material factories in Asia. Malthus disagrees with the newly introduced welfare system which gave poor people more money for having more children. He realised this would just increase the number of poor workers, further lowering their wages. Thomas Malthus Printed further editions of his Principle of Population from 1803 to 1826. Malthus was awarded the first professorship in Political Economy at Halebury College. He is often known as the patron saint of demography and he caused it to become a proper academic study. Thomas Malthus died in 1834.

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