Malthusian and Neo-Malthusian Theories/ Ran Abramitzky and Fabio Braggion
[2023-06-17 20:10:17]
Becker, Gary S. "Economic analysis of birthrate", Richard Eastering (ed.), Changes in population and economy in developing countries. Princeton University Press, 1960. Becker, Gary S. and Greg H. Lewis. "On the interaction between quality and quality of children" Journal of Political Economy. 81.2 (1973), 279-288. Becker, Gary S. "Family Economics and Macro Behavior". American economic review 78.1 (1988), 1-13
Becker, Gary S., Kevin Murphy and Robert Tamura. "Human Capital, Birth Rate, Economic Growth" Journal of Political Economy. 98.5 (1990), 12-37. Bose lap, ester. Conditions for agricultural growth Economics of land change under population pressure 1965 London. Galor, Oded, Omer Moav. "Evolution and Growth" European Economic Review 45.4-6 (2001), 718-729 Galor, Oed and David N. Weil. "Population, Technology and Growth: From Stagnation of Malthus to a Dramatic Transcendence of the Population." American Economic Review 90.4 (2000), 806-828. Gömenez, Martha E. "Population: Marx and Malthus". Den Ny Verden. 3 (1973), 74-88
Kramer, Michael "Population growth and technology change: millions of dollars until 1990. Journal of Economics. Quarterly. 108. 3 (1993), 681 - 716
Massimo's Livi Bacci. Brief history of world population. Blackwell, 2001. Malthus, Thomas J. Article on the principle of population. Malthus, Thomas J. Principles of political economics. John, a toy. Population of Cairns. Oxford University Press, 2000. History of economic thought John Hopkins University Press, 1990. Razis, Assaf and Efraim Sadka. Population Economics MIT Press, 1995
Malthus' theory is a theme that is repeated in many social science places. John Maynard Keynes began his debate with "economic consequences of peace", and Malthus's explanation on European politics and economics was unstable due to pressure on food supply by the Malthus people. Many models of resource depletion and lack are characteristics of Malthus. The energy consumption rate goes beyond the ability to find and produce new energy sources, leading to a crisis. In France, terms such as "political Malthus Jean" ("Malthus politics") refer to population control strategies. In the later political economy theory, the concept of population restriction related to Malthus changed to a concept of restricting production. In the meaning of France, "Malthus economy" not only accepts the formation of protectionism and cartels but also means encouragement.
New Malthusism is a supporter of population management programs to secure current and future population resources. In the UK, the term "Malthus" may more specifically refer to discussions for supporting organizations such as preventive birth control, and thus the Malthus Union. The new Malthusists differ from Malthus' theory primarily in their enthusiasm for contraception. Malthus is a godly Christian who believes that "self-management" (abstinence) is better than artificial birth control. In some versions of his article Malthus insisted on using artificial contraception as a solution to the "stress" of the population, as it made abstinence less effective on a large scale. The modern "new Malthusans" are usually more concerned about environmental degradation and catastrophic famine than Malthus than poverty.