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World population growth over millennia: Ancient and present phases with a temporary halt in-between

Rein Taagepera, Miroslav Nemčok

2023The Anthropocene Review25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Enormous growth of the world population during the last two centuries and its present slowing down pose questions about precedents in history and broader forces shaping the population size. Population estimates collected in an extensive survey of literature (873 estimates from 25 studies covering 1,000,000 BCE to 2100 CE) show that world population growth has proceeded in two distinct phases of acceleration followed by stoppage—from at least 25,000 BCE to 100 BCE, and from 400 CE to the present, interrupted by centuries of standstill and 10% decrease. Both phases can be fitted with a mathematical function that projects to a peak at 11.2 ± 1.5 billion around 2100 CE. An interaction model can account for this acceleration-stoppage pattern in quantitative detail: Technology grows exponentially, with rate boosted by population. Population grows exponentially, capped by Earth’s carrying capacity. Technology raises this cap, but only until it approaches Earth’s ultimate carrying capacity.

Topics & Concepts

Population growthPopulationExponential growthAccelerationCarrying capacityPopulation sizeWorld populationGeographyDemographyMathematicsPhysicsEcologyBiologySociologyMathematical analysisClassical mechanicsSustainability and Ecological Systems AnalysisGlobal Energy and Sustainability ResearchSpace Science and Extraterrestrial Life
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