Maltusian Theory: A Biological Perspective on Population Dynamics
A useful way to conceptualize the Malthusian model is through a biological lens, where human populations are seen as governed by the same principles as animal populations. Malthus's theory viewed people as being similar to other animals in their reproductive behavior when resources are plentiful. This idea was not entirely original to Malthus; years before, the Irish economist Richard Cantillon had made a similar point, stating that 'Men multiply like mice in a barn if they have unlimited means of subsistence.' Malthus argued that despite human intelligence, the fundamental dynamics of agricultural societies mirrored the animal kingdom. The model rests on two pillars: the law of diminishing average product of labor and the tendency for populations to expand when living standards improve. This can be visualized with an analogy of antelopes on a plain: abundance leads to herd growth, which eventually strains resources, lowers living standards, and slows population growth until a subsistence-level equilibrium is reached.
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Economy
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The Economy 1.0 @ CORE Econ
Ch.2 Technology, Population, and Growth - The Economy 1.0 @ CORE Econ
Economics
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Ch.1 Prosperity, inequality, and planetary limits - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Learn After
The Malthusian Poverty Trap: Mechanism and Economic Acceptance
Malthusian Subsistence Equilibrium: Mechanism and Dynamics
What they are, what they are for, and what they are about.
Theories
Human vs. Animal Behavior in the Malthusian Model
Role of Assumptions in the Malthusian Model
Analyzing a Model of Population Dynamics
An isolated, pre-industrial agricultural society, previously stable at a subsistence level of living, discovers a new farming technique that doubles the food yield per acre. According to the logic that population dynamics in such societies mirror those of animal herds with abundant resources, which of the following describes the most likely long-term outcome?
The Antelope Analogy in Population Theory
An isolated agricultural community discovers a vast, uncultivated, and fertile plain. According to a model that views human population dynamics as being governed by the same principles as animal populations, arrange the following stages into the correct logical sequence that would unfold over time.
A central conclusion of the economic theory that models pre-industrial human populations like animal herds is that an abundance of resources will ultimately lead to a permanently higher standard of living for the entire population.
A model of pre-industrial economies views human populations as being governed by the same principles as animal populations. Match each event in this model with its direct consequence.
Explaining the Subsistence Equilibrium Mechanism
A model of pre-industrial economic dynamics, which views human populations as being governed by the same principles as animal populations, rests on two key pillars: 1) the tendency for populations to expand when living standards rise above a certain level, and 2) the law of diminishing _________ of labor.
Critiquing the Biological Analogy in Population Models
Evaluating the Limits of a Population Model
The Production Function in Malthus's Model
Malthusian Assumption: Population Grows When Living Standards Rise
Malthus's Application of Biological Principles to Human Economies
Malthus's Antelope Herd Analogy for Population Dynamics
Resource Abundance and Population Growth in the Malthusian Model
Diminishing Average Product of Labour
Causes of Diminishing Average Product of Labor in Agriculture