Population ‘Tipping Point’ Was About 2,000 Years Ago

The human population explosion, usually said to stem from industrialization and public health in the 18th and 19th centuries, is actually the result of changes as far back as 2,000 years ago, according to new research.
Population ‘Tipping Point’ Was About 2,000 Years Ago
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The human population explosion, usually said to stem from industrialization and public health in the 18th and 19th centuries, is actually the result of changes as far back as 2,000 years ago, according to new research.

“The industrial revolution and public health improvements were proximate reasons that more people lived longer,” says Aaron Stutz, an associate professor of anthropology at Emory University. “If you dig further in the past, however, the data suggest that a critical threshold of political and economic organization set the stage 1,500 to 2,000 years ago, around the start of the Common Era.

“The resulting political-economic balance was the tipping point for economies of scale: It created a range of opportunities enabling more people to get resources, form successful families, and generate enough capital to transfer to the next generation.”

1 Billion and Beyond 

Population dynamics have been a hot topic since 1798, when English scholar Thomas Robert Malthus published his controversial essay that population booms in times of plenty will inevitably be checked by famine and disease.

“The power of population is indefinitely greater than the power in the earth to produce subsistence for man,” he wrote. The so-called Malthusian Catastrophe theory was penned just prior to the global census size reaching one billion.

While it took hundreds of thousands of years for humans to reach that one billion milestone, it took only another 120 years for humanity to double to two billion. And during the past 50 years, the human population has surged to near eight billion.

“It’s mind-boggling,” Stutz says. “The human population has not behaved like any other animal population. We haven’t stayed in any kind of equilibrium with what we would consider a typical ecological niche.”

Economic historians and demographers have focused on societal changes that occurred during the Industrial Revolution as the explanation for this super-exponential population growth. An archeologist by training, Stutz wanted to explore further back in time.

“Archeologists are interested in looking at much earlier changes in human society,” Stutz says. “In addition to looking at data, we dig up things like people’s houses, community courtyards, agricultural fields, harbors, and so on. That gives us this sort of holistic view of how human society and the environment influence one another over time.”

As reported in PLOS ONE, Stutz found that that the potential for the human population to burgeon despite environmental degradation, conflict, and disease could be traced to a subtle interaction between competition and organization.

At a certain tipping point, this interaction created opportunities for individuals to gain more control over their lives and prosper, opening the door to economies of scale.

Brief Lives in the Roman Empire

Stutz cites the Roman Empire, which spanned 500 years, from just before the Common Era to 476 CE, as a classic example of passing through this threshold.

One of the largest and most prosperous empires in history, it is noteworthy for economic and political organization, literature, and advances in architecture and engineering.

And yet, on an individual level, life was not necessarily so grand. Farm laborers and miners were ground into short, miserable lives to produce all those surplus goods for trading and empire building. And large numbers of young men had to serve in the military to ward off rebellions.

“The vast majority of people who lived under Roman rule had a life expectancy into their late 20s or early 30s,” Stutz says. “A huge swath of the population was feeding, quite literally, the dynamism that was taking place in terms of economic and political development. Their labor increased the potential for providing more democracy and competition on the smaller scale.

“That, in turn, led to a more complex, inter-generational dynamic, making it possible to better care for offspring and even transfer resources to them.”

Sweatshops and Inequality

The tipping point had been reached, Stutz says, and the trend continued despite the collapse of the Roman Empire.

“The increasingly complex and decentralized economic and political entities that were built up around the world from the beginning of the Common Era to 1,500 CE created enough opportunities for individuals, states, and massive powers like England, France, and China to take advantage of the potential for economies of scale,” Stutz says.

This revised framework for the underpinnings of human population dynamics could lead to better understanding of how economic and political organization is affecting modern-day society, he adds.

“We might wind up being back in a situation where a growing part of the population is basically providing labor to sustain a minority,” Stutz says. “You could certainly point to the sweatshops in the developing world. Another potential example is the growing income inequality that’s been well-documented in the United States over the last couple of decades.”

Republished from Futurity.org under Creative Commons license 3.0. Read the original. 

*Image of the Earth via Shutterstock

Carol Clark
Carol Clark
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