Malthusian Theory
| English | Chinese | Pinyin |
|---|---|---|
| exponentially | 指数式 | zhǐ shù shì |
| linearly | 线性 | xiàn xìng |
| Neo-Malthusians | 新马尔萨斯主义者 | xīn mǎ ěr sà sī zhǔ yì zhě |
Malthus's warning
- In 1798, Thomas Malthus warned that population would outrun food.
- He argued population grows exponentially 指数式 (1, 2, 4, 8...).
- But food supply grows only linearly 线性 (1, 2, 3, 4...).
According to Malthus, population grows ____ while food grows ____.
Population exponential (1,2,4,8), food linear (1,2,3,4) — so population outruns food.
The predicted crisis
- Malthus predicted population would hit a ceiling set by food.
- Beyond it, positive checks (famine, disease, war) would raise the death rate.
- Preventive checks (later marriage, fewer children) could lower births instead.
Malthusian idea or criticism?
Sort each statement as a Malthusian claim or a criticism of Malthus.
Select all of Malthus's "positive checks" that raise the death rate.
Famine, disease, and war are positive checks; later marriage is a preventive check.
Why Malthus was (mostly) wrong
- Malthus underestimated technology: the Green Revolution hugely raised food output.
- Trade, fertilisers, and machines let food grow faster than he imagined.
- Neo-Malthusians 新马尔萨斯主义者 update the fear to include water, energy, and other limits.
Malthus correctly predicted the effect of modern farming technology.
He underestimated technology; the Green Revolution raised food far beyond his forecast.
Thinkers who apply Malthus's warning to modern limits like water and energy are ____-Malthusians.
Neo-Malthusians update the concern to finite resources beyond food.
Match each idea to its source.
Malthus = original warning; criticism = technology; neo-Malthusians = modern resource limits.
Malthus's core prediction — mass starvation from population outrunning food — has not happened globally, because he could not foresee modern farming. But do not dismiss him entirely: neo-Malthusians argue the warning still applies to finite resources like water and energy.
Malthus expected famine as populations grew in the 1800s. Instead, the Green Revolution of the 1900s introduced high-yield seeds and fertilisers, and food output soared past population growth — the opposite of his prediction.
Malthus argued population grows exponentially while food grows linearly, so population would outrun food and be checked by famine. He underestimated technology (the Green Revolution). Neo-Malthusians revive the worry for finite resources.