Overpopulation The Human Explosion Explained | eJOY English
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Never before in history have there been so many people on Earth as right now.
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Our numbers have skyrocketed, from 1 billion in 1800, to 2.3 billion in 1940,
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3.7 billion in 1970, and 7.4 billion in 2016.
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The world population increased fourfold in the last century,
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so what can we expect for the next century?
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And what does population growth mean for our future?
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Will there be mass-migration?
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Overcrowded slums and megacities covering continents?
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Diseases and pollution?
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Chaos and violence over energy, water, and food?
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And a human species focused only on sustaining itself?
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Will population growth destroy our way of life?
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Or is this prophecy just ungrounded panic?
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In the 1960s population growth reached an unprecedented rate.
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Which led to apocalyptic prophecies.
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The poor would pro-create endlessly and overrun the developed world.
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The legend of overpopulation was born.
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But it turns out high birth rates
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and the population explosion are not permanent features of some cultures or countries,
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But rather part of a four step process the whole world is going through,
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The demographic transition.
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Most developed countries have already made the transition,
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while other countries are doing it right now.
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Let's go back to the 18th century, when the entire world,
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including Europe, was in the first stage of the demographic transition.
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By today's standards, Europe was worse off, than a developing region,
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suffering from poor sanitation, poor diets, and poor medicine.
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A lot of people were born, but lots of them died just as fast, so the population hardly grew.
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Women had between 4 and 6 children, but only 2 of them would reach adulthood.
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Then the industrial revolution happened in the UK
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and brought the greatest change in human living conditions since the agricultural revolution.
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People went from being peasants to workers.
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Manufactured goods were mass produced and became widely available.
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The sciences flourished and advanced transportation, communication, and medicine.
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The role of women in society shifted and created the conditions for their emancipation.
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Slowly this economic progress not only formed a middle class,
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but also raised standards of living and health care for the poor working population.
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The second transition stage started.
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Better food supplies, hygiene and medicine meant people stopped dying all the time,
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especially so, at a very young age.
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The result was a population explosion.
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Doubling the UK's population between 1750 and 1850.
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The main reason, families used to have lots of children was that
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only a few of them were likely to survive.
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Now that had changed, so the third stage of transition was set in motion.
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Fewer babies were conceived, and population growth slowed down.
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Eventually a balance emerged, fewer people were dying and fewer children were born,
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so the death rate and birth rate became stable.
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Britain had reached the fourth stage of the demographic transition.
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This didn't only happen in the UK, more and more countries went through the four stages.
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First, many births and many deaths due to bad living conditions.
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Second, better living conditions leading to fewer deaths and a population explosion.
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Third, fewer deaths resulting in fewer births, and population growth came to an end.
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But if birth rates have dropped so much,
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why is the population still growing so fast?
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Well, the children born in the population explosion of the 70s
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and 80s are having kids themselves now.
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Leading to a noticeable spike in overall population.
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But they are having far fewer children on average than their parents.
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The average today is 2.5, it was 5, 40 years ago.
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So as this generation gets older, and fertility declines further,
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the rate of population growth will keep on slowing.
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This is true for every country.
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In the west, we tend to overlook progress in other regions of the world.
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But actually most of the world's countries have made it to the fourth stage.
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Just look at Bangladesh.
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In 1971, the average woman had 7 kids,
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but 25% of them would die before the age of 5.
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In 2015, the mortality rate was down to 3.8% and women had only 2.2 kids on average.
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This is the rule, not an exception, we're not special, we just had a head start.
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It took developed countries about 80 years
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to reduce fatality from more than 6 children to less than 3.
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Others are catching up fast.
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Malaysia and South Africa did it in only 34 years; Bangladesh took just 20.
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Iran managed it in 10 years.
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All these countries that are catching up didn't have to start from scratch
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and the more support they get, the faster they catch up.
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This is why programs that help lower child mortality
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or help poor nations develop, are so important.
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No matter what your motivation is, whether you dream of a world
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where all people live in freedom and wealth,
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or you just want fewer refugees coming into your country.
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The simple truth is, that it's beneficial to you personally
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if people on the other side of the globe can live a good life.
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And we are getting there,
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the percentage of people living in extreme poverty has never been as low as today.
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So the future of global population growth
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is actually not an apocalyptic prophecy at all, it's a promise!
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Population growth will come to an end.
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The UN forecasts that the 12th billionth human will never be born at all.
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And as the development level of the world rises,
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the number of people with a higher education will increase tenfold.
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Countries who used to be a need will help advance development instead.
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More people is going to mean more people able to advance our species.
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This video was a collaboration with Max Roser and ourworldindata,
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where he explores the progress of humanity through research and data visualisation.
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Make sure to check it out!
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In 2016 we were able to make more and better content than ever before,
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because of your support on Patreon.com.
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Thank you so much and we will be back in the year 12,017.
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Overpopulation The Human Explosion Explained

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In a very short amount of time the human population exploded and is still growing very fast. Will this lead to the end of our civilization?
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