Which Is Worse: Underpopulation Or Overpopulation?

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  • čas přidán 5. 12. 2022
  • This video was made in partnership with Gates Ventures. The human population of the world will soon peak - and then decrease - thanks to a combination of two quickly changing economic and educational trends.
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    To learn more about this topic, start your googling with these keywords:
    - Overpopulation: a situation in which there are too many people for the amount of food, materials, and space available.
    - Underpopulation: a situation in which there are too few people to realize the economic potential of an area or support its population's standard of living.
    - Exponential growth: a pattern of data that shows greater increases with passing time, creating the curve of an exponential function.
    - Extreme poverty: an income below the international poverty line of ~$2/day
    - Total fertility rate: the average number of children born to each woman over her lifetime.
    - Population bomb: a theory that the human population would grow faster than available food supplies.
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    David Goldenberg | Script Writer, Narrator and Director
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    REFERENCES
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    Cohen, J. (1995). Population Growth and Earth's Human Carrying Capacity. Science. 269: 5222. (341-346). www.science.org/doi/10.1126/s...
    Pradhan, E. (2015). Female Education and Childbearing: A Closer Look at the Data. World Bank. blogs.worldbank.org/health/fe...
    State of the World Population 2022. Seeing the Unseen. The Case for Action in the Neglected Crisis of Unintended Pregnancy. www.unfpa.org/sites/default/f...
    Smeeding, T. (2021) Adjusting to the fertility bust, Science, 346, 6206, (163-164). www.science.org/doi/10.1126/s...
    Herrmann, M. (2022). The Global Population Will Soon Reach 8 Billion-Then What? UN Chronicle. www.un.org/en/un-chronicle/gl...
    Our World In Data (2019). World Population Growth. ourworldindata.org/world-popu...
    Rosling, H. (2018). Factfulness. www.gapminder.org/factfulness...
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Komentáře • 2,9K

  • @enotdetcelfer
    @enotdetcelfer Před rokem +10006

    Question not answered: "Which is Worse"... not even really described.
    Real title: "Why exponential population growth is starting to reverse".

    • @HisameArtwork
      @HisameArtwork Před rokem +283

      yeah also complaining educated women have less kids .... really tired of hearing it. how about instead complain uneducated men don't help with kids.

    • @sajeucettefoistunevaspasme
      @sajeucettefoistunevaspasme Před rokem +1422

      @@HisameArtwork he's not complaining

    • @amazuri3069
      @amazuri3069 Před rokem +1032

      @@HisameArtwork where did he complain? He was just stating facts about why there are less kids. Genuine question.

    • @al137
      @al137 Před rokem +171

      Yeah, click bait title

    • @xyro88
      @xyro88 Před rokem +569

      @@HisameArtwork I think you are hearing what you want to hear. It's not complaining, it's stating a fact.
      Do you often twist statements you hear into criticism and complaints? (This is a genuine question, not an attack on your way of thinking)

  • @roymustangsgirl007
    @roymustangsgirl007 Před rokem +8065

    Also worth noting. I’m 29. 5 years ago I was so sure I round be a mother. But with skyrocketing rent and cost of living, I just can’t afford a family. I can hardly afford me

    • @alexrogers777
      @alexrogers777 Před rokem +1150

      This is something conservative types always ignore. It's all "retvrn to tradition" "have more kids" "quiverfull" bs but then they never actually look at **why** people aren't having kids

    • @mrtonyvillagomez
      @mrtonyvillagomez Před rokem +44

      Curious what state r u in?

    • @baha3alshamari152
      @baha3alshamari152 Před rokem +137

      Find rich man and you won't have to worry about it
      As woman you don't have to provide or work for resources

    • @Shnarfbird
      @Shnarfbird Před rokem +63

      If we can all live in comfortable prosperity, can we promise that the strain on the environment will not increase?

    • @estefanolivares4159
      @estefanolivares4159 Před rokem +417

      @@baha3alshamari152 there's also the growing trend of holding men accountable for being a holes so there are even less men to have children with.

  • @Osmium78
    @Osmium78 Před 3 měsíci +908

    You didn’t answer the question

    • @teehasheestower
      @teehasheestower Před 2 měsíci +14

      You get anarchy when poor people have no employment options. A competent government steers the economy so that especially young people stay productive.
      But still, the environment, anyone?

    • @benjaminmorris4962
      @benjaminmorris4962 Před měsícem +4

      Well, overpopulation will inevitably lead to underpopulation, so... They're basically the same 😂

    • @orangecitrus8056
      @orangecitrus8056 Před měsícem +22

      that's how clickbait works

    • @valerioharvey7289
      @valerioharvey7289 Před měsícem +8

      He did tho. He said towards the end of the video that some experts believe that underpopulation is find as long as it goes faster than the economy decline, because it means that each people would be more prosperous

    • @allanfrd
      @allanfrd Před měsícem +5

      He kinda just exposed the answer badly.

  • @afrikasmith1049
    @afrikasmith1049 Před rokem +652

    I'm 32 and I still have to live with family because rent is too expensive here in the United States. Starting a family or meeting someone is waaaaay below my priorities.

    • @amoresjohnwendell-os5ev
      @amoresjohnwendell-os5ev Před 3 měsíci +25

      True, and plus aint healthcare expensive in the US?

    • @Iron_Sights99
      @Iron_Sights99 Před 3 měsíci +58

      @@amoresjohnwendell-os5ev There's a reason why our average lifespan is shorter than overseas. We can't afford to get seen for minor illness/injuries.

    • @acevergel1999
      @acevergel1999 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Move to a 3rd world Country and Have online Jobs
      You'll have good Life there

    • @highgaming8237
      @highgaming8237 Před 3 měsíci +24

      ​@@acevergel1999Sorry that's just an assumption. As an Indian, although the cheap food, rent, and education looks pocket friendly from your country but the problem is that Indians are earning pretty low on average and unlike you guys we don't have Iphones everywhere. Infact, In India, we have a saying that is one recession can make all middle class Indians poor. So, please don't think that a 3rd world country earns more. And I only gave you the example of one of the highest GDP country.

    • @tefky7964
      @tefky7964 Před 3 měsíci +12

      @@highgaming8237 Thats why he mentioned an online job, so he could still work for a US company with US salary, but live in country with much lower cost of living and as such have much better life. Without the online part we do that quite often in Czechia with neighbouring Germany and Austria having even two times bigger salaries, so some people just daily cross the border and work a full time job in one of those countries, while living more cheaply here, although an online jobs in some of richer countries get more common too.

  • @JWQweqOPDH
    @JWQweqOPDH Před rokem +1487

    One thing that was overlooked was the problem of a shrinking *working* population, while the retired/disabled/unemployed population grows.

    • @fghsinging
      @fghsinging Před rokem +25

      That can be solved with technology, that can help disabled people have jobs.

    • @JWQweqOPDH
      @JWQweqOPDH Před rokem +178

      @@fghsinging Retired people tend to be declined physically AND mentally. Plus they just refuse to work. Look at the massive protests in France when they tried to slightly increase the retirement age. Also, most technology that would allow retirement-age people to work would be better suited / more lucrative put towards robotic automation.

    • @disunityholychaos7523
      @disunityholychaos7523 Před 10 měsíci +18

      Some folks have dementia to ALS, physical defects and impairments that some jobs can’t accept, folks who have debt and evicted to homelessness add with the drug epidemics and folks finding job searches waiting weeks or not for an interview

    • @marcinkonieczny3737
      @marcinkonieczny3737 Před 6 měsíci +8

      Przeoczono głównie to, że wojny, choroby, pandemie i niedostatki zawsze dotykały wszystkich gatunków które nadmiernie się namnożyły. Jeśli chcielibyśmy mieć spokój z pandemiami wojnami, biedą i na nic nie chorować, to musielibyśmy jako ludzkość zdecydować na harmonię demograficzną. Ale tego z kolei nigdy nie zaakceptują wielcy tego świata. Bo główny problem jest w tym, że większość przywódców politycznych i religijnych ma głęboko W POWAŻANIU dobro ludzi, jak i przyszłych pokoleń. A interesują ich jedynie ich własne partykularne interesy. A te nakazują, by mieć jak najwięcej podatników (niewolników), taniej siły roboczej, wyznawców, i mięsa armatniego, gdyż od tej ilości zależy ile znaczą wśród innych podobnych wielkich tego świata.
      A dla "bydła" (czyli dla nas) które (mentalnie) hodują, mają bajki o emeryturach, postępie, depopulacji, itp, brednie.

    • @apassionatetrader1115
      @apassionatetrader1115 Před 4 měsíci +1

      You can't put burden of old generation on new generation that's an endless Ponzi scheme. Children are not retirement plan.

  • @merrymachiavelli2041
    @merrymachiavelli2041 Před rokem +4150

    One thing that's not spoken about enough is that the issue isn't necessarily the population in _absolute_ terms, it's the rate of change. If a population doubles or halves over 500 years, that's not likely too problematic for people within it - tax revenues, pensions, infrastructure...etc. will adapt.
    But if a population doubles or halves in 50 years, then you are looking at a really serious strain on society and keeping a country functioning. _That's_ why South Korea, Japan, Italy and Bulgaria's (to name a few) are in a difficult situation. Their rates of decline are going to be _really_ steep, with the possibility of their populations halving by the end of the century. Which creates all sorts of problems the same decline over a longer period would not, like a disproportionately large elderly population and relatively small workforce.

    • @elsandwich7481
      @elsandwich7481 Před rokem +108

      This is very true, thank you for shedding a new light on my thoughts, I think I left this out on my last comment

    • @focidhomophobicii2426
      @focidhomophobicii2426 Před rokem +69

      Japan could possibly increase their birth rate by banning JAV industry
      but that will also effect the whole world

    • @Rialagma
      @Rialagma Před rokem +134

      That't why the immediate solution would be immigration from fast-growing countries to declining countries. But some cultures are more open to that than others.

    • @theflyingdutchguy9870
      @theflyingdutchguy9870 Před rokem +28

      the problem isnt as much for people. but more for the rest of the planet. i think its pretty arrogant to only care about yourself. the planet isnt made for you you know

    • @StyeAI
      @StyeAI Před rokem +1

      @@focidhomophobicii2426 or Korea banning male kpop groups. They be satisfied with the boy groups to satisfy their hormonal needs.
      Jk.

  • @nawwk79
    @nawwk79 Před 2 měsíci +67

    When resources are limited. over-population is definitely much worse as more people are suffering.

    • @Charistoph
      @Charistoph Před 4 dny +5

      Except that we have had more suffering when the population was lower than when the population was higher.
      Part of that is because the human population is a resource in and of itself. The more people there are, the more labor can be supplied to obtain resources. The more people there are, the more likely there is someone who comes up with a new idea that makes things more efficient.

    • @righthandstep5
      @righthandstep5 Před 2 dny +2

      ​@@Charistophwrong

    • @righthandstep5
      @righthandstep5 Před 2 dny +1

      Well said op. You're 100 percent correct.

    • @Charistoph
      @Charistoph Před 2 dny +1

      @@righthandstep5, really? History says otherwise.
      Up until the Industrial Revolution, over 95% of the population was devoted to farming. That 95% was often also not the wealthy or powerful, but the downtrodden, the slave, the peasant, the laborer.
      We've had more innovations develop in the last 150 years than the previous 5,000 because there were more people who were not devoted to farming so they could pursue other ideas and innovations. As an example, Steve Jobs and Steve Wozniak would not have had time to develop Apple Computers in their garage if they had to be farming for 90% of daylight.
      Just the last 60 years since "The Population Bomb" was written is a demonstration as to how false this concept is as every single prediction has been proven false every single decade except this one, and that's because of the mismanagement of government more than anything else.

    • @Englishsea24
      @Englishsea24 Před dnem +1

      ​@Charistoph No when the population is just right, there is enough resources and employment to go around. An overpopulated country is a divided, impoverished and crime ridden society. An underpopulated country doesn't have enough people to build it up to greater wealthier status, but enough to keep it going, just the way it is

  • @jimmbear3998
    @jimmbear3998 Před 8 měsíci +168

    Overpopulation problems IMHO are much worse than underpopulation problems. For example with overpopulation you get more pollution, more traffic, more people competing for resources. Underpopulation problems don’t really hold water because the Earth has had less people before. Underpopulation really only hurts giant corporations because they will have fewer people to sell their products to. For example if you are a company that sells cars, 10 billion people is better than 5 billion people because it means you have more people to sell cars to which means more 💰 for wealthy corporations.

    • @ben7572
      @ben7572 Před 7 měsíci +4

      Isn't the point of savings nature from pollution to pass on good nature to future generations? and plus 90% of all nature's pollution comes to Asia, the place where about saving the nature is care less about fo example Europe with its large populations and smaller territory. Let me remind you that Europe has a smaller territory than Central Asia. making less pollution to the earth around only 5% of it and this is the meaning of the fact that in Europe the demographic crisis, the continent that brings the world the majority of technology, has a demographic problem which will in turn pre-empt an economic one because that they will work less and taxes will be high in order to pay pensions for the old generation wich will be half of the population

    • @skull_lee
      @skull_lee Před 6 měsíci +5

      Big corps losing money isnt just it small business also loose money due to lack of customers which leads to less shops jobs and overall poverty and famines since there is usch a scarce number of farmers and other jobs

    • @CodyRayJohnson
      @CodyRayJohnson Před 3 měsíci +19

      if breeding like an animal is your only legacy you aren't any better than an animal.

    • @SL-wt8fm
      @SL-wt8fm Před 3 měsíci +13

      ​@@CodyRayJohnsonfamily is a respectable life goal, what's your magnum opus cody?

    • @Alsry1
      @Alsry1 Před 3 měsíci +16

      @@SL-wt8fm inventing a life changing invention would probably be a better life goal.

  • @00Linares00
    @00Linares00 Před rokem +1341

    Main issue is that most social securities depend on a very large ration of working:retired people. As it shrinks, the older generation has in some countries started to crush the younger ones.

    • @chronictimewasterdisease
      @chronictimewasterdisease Před rokem +172

      well you could, you know... do the unthinkable and tax the rich?

    • @GiRR007
      @GiRR007 Před rokem +38

      @@chronictimewasterdisease Oooor stop artificially propping up wages via the minimum wage laws and let the system do its job.

    • @alexrogers777
      @alexrogers777 Před rokem +316

      @@GiRR007 the minimum wage today is already a worthless amount of money, why would you want people to make even less. Lowering the minimum wage would just mean more people end up needing welfare, it just leads to corporations using welfare to subsidize their criminally low wages *even more than they already do*

    • @danilooliveira6580
      @danilooliveira6580 Před rokem +72

      @@GiRR007 but if you increase minimum wage you also increase taxation that consequently helps fund retirement.

    • @chronictimewasterdisease
      @chronictimewasterdisease Před rokem +86

      @@GiRR007 i have a better ideia, how about we nacionalize all the factories and and get rid of landlords by expropriating their vacant properties

  • @whoeveriam0iam14222
    @whoeveriam0iam14222 Před rokem +327

    the "money on average" is kind of useless if a few people have so much of the money

    • @BoazMoerman
      @BoazMoerman Před rokem +30

      That is true, but often other metrics are used instead which are more meaningful. For example, median income measures the income of the "average person", so it is not really affected by millionaires. Other metrics, such as the percentage of people below the poverty level which was used in this video, are also very useful.

    • @GiRR007
      @GiRR007 Před rokem +4

      I mean given that there exist SO many more people that are in poverty than there are a few people who are rich the average is quite accurate as its still correlating to the average person. The largest denomination.

    • @cortexavery1324
      @cortexavery1324 Před rokem +11

      @@GiRR007 No... Median is better and yet still flawed.
      The average is in this context completely fucked.

    • @GiRR007
      @GiRR007 Před rokem +2

      @@cortexavery1324 Median is just picking an arbitrary number in the middle that doesn't take everyone into account. The average is fine since there are extremes on both ends the compensate for each other.

    • @cortexavery1324
      @cortexavery1324 Před rokem +13

      @@GiRR007 ... learn math

  • @kittenzrulz2314
    @kittenzrulz2314 Před rokem +27

    So the title is clickbait.

  • @ambergris5705
    @ambergris5705 Před 11 měsíci +24

    It constantly feels like we're both way too many humans, and that it creates huge issues, but never enough humans to find solutions to the problems we have.

    • @aeuropeannotbritish7754
      @aeuropeannotbritish7754 Před 9 měsíci

      Were not too many people

    • @yomilala8929
      @yomilala8929 Před 3 měsíci +11

      ​@@aeuropeannotbritish7754 8 billion people seems like a lot.

    • @markstein2845
      @markstein2845 Před 2 měsíci +2

      seeming, doesn’t mean it is. Many people can argue that the earth seems flat.
      The reality is that most people live in big cities that have a lot of people, but most countries are empty, even China that has 1.5 billion people, has 90% of its population living in 15% of its territory.
      Some cities are crowded, but we’re not overpopulated. Most cities need more people to have any economy, and depend on the tax payers money of big cities to even have any public service working.

    • @sneckotheveggieavenger9380
      @sneckotheveggieavenger9380 Před 2 měsíci +8

      We are too many people but the world is unequal, lot of people have their potential never realized

    • @strider8662
      @strider8662 Před měsícem

      Compared to world's habitable mass, 8 billion is nothing. World has way more than enough resources and land to sustain people. ​@@yomilala8929

  • @tenzhitihsien888
    @tenzhitihsien888 Před rokem +156

    The bigger problem with overpopulation, I'd say, is that we can't keep up with our various wastes. And the more of us there are, the worse that problem becomes.

    • @marcinkonieczny3737
      @marcinkonieczny3737 Před 6 měsíci

      Przeludnienie - pojęcie bywa względne. Gdy się liczebność (zagęszczenie na km 2) zwiększa, to najpierw braki są dostrzegalne w mniejszej ilości najbardziej pożądanej zwierzyny - u nas dotyczyło to dla przykładu turów. Ale to jeszcze bardzo mały problem, gdyż na inne można jeszcze swobodnie polować. Jednak wraz z dalszym demograficznym "postępem", i kolejnych zaczyna być deficyt - i wtedy silniejsi sobie jedynie przyznają prawo do polowania na nie. Ale i wtedy jeszcze nie ma tragedii, gdyż ludzie zaczynają zwierzęta hodować. Co prawda jest to już powiązane ze znacznie większa ilością pracy, itp. - jednak i jeszcze wtedy na tym etapie mamy naprawdę dostanie i wspaniałe życie. Gdy jednak i wtedy dalej ludzi przybywa - jak w Europie w 19 wieku - to zaczyna być coraz wyraźniejszy deficyt ziemi. A co powoduje masowy odpływ ludzi w kierunku jej poszukiwania i walki o nią. I w tym etapie mięso staje się towarem luksusowym (w początkach 19 wieku mięso było jeszcze tańsze od chleba. Połowa 19 wieku, to już tylko bogatsi mogą je codziennie spożywać). A dziś, to większość nawet nie zna smaku prawdziwego mięsa.
      Dziś dzięki postępowi technologicznemu i powszechnej chemizacji rolnictwa, niby mamy poważny kryzys żywieniowy rozwiązany. A tak naprawdę, to nigdy w historii nie istniała taki kryzys i taka katastrofa w tej dziedzinie.
      Dawniej żywność była po prostu niesamowicie smaczna. A co ważniejsze, to dostarczała nam wszelkie potrzebne dla zdrowia i prawidłowego rozwoju składniki.
      Każdy ludzki organizm codziennie podlega niezwykle doskonałemu procesowi samoregeneracji - JEDNAK! - by ten proces mógł zachodzić, to nie może być w danym dniu zbyt wiele stresu - gdyż wtedy ten proces podlega zawieszeniu - gdyż organizm koncentruje się na potencjalnej walce, lub ucieczce. A że dziś żyjemy w niezwykle nerwowych czasach...........
      Dalej - by proces ten mógł zachodzić, to organizm potrzebuje do niego wiele mikroelementów, itp - a które w zbilansowanej ilości były dostarczane w formie żywności. Dziś z każdym rokiem tych składników jest coraz mniej!!!! - a za to coraz więcej trucizn!!!!!! - WIĘC TERAZ NIE DOŚĆ ŻE ŻYWNOŚĆ JUŻ NIE LECZY, TO DODATKOWO CORAZ BARDZIEJ TRUJE!!!!!
      I stąd coś tak niespotykanego dawniej jak choroba - DZIŚ JEST CZYMŚ TAK POWSZECHNYM, ŻE STAŁA SIĘ ONA NORMĄ!
      W dodatku spotykamy jeszcze choroby tzw cywilizacyjne - a które w (nieprzeludnionej) naturze nie istnieją - jak choroby zębów, stawów i układu kostnego, nowotwory, cukrzyce, itd. itd, itd.
      A i nie zapominajmy, że choroby typu pandemie - jak dżuma, itp - są powiązane wyłącznie z większym zagęszczeniem (tak przyroda się broni przed nadmierną ekspansją jakiejkolwiek populacji). I dla przykładu - Polska w 13 bardzo słabo zaludniona - i dżuma która wyludniła prawie połowę Europy - naszych nieprzeludnionych wtedy jeszcze ziem - nie dotyka!
      PS Oczywiście wiem że ktoś może teraz polecić mi jakieś jedno z wielu opracowań, a które piętnują przeszłość, a pokazują nasza wspaniałą teraźniejszość. I jak np w średniowieczu w biedniejszych domach na przednówku dziecko za całodzienne pożywienie dostawało zaledwie kilka ziemniaków. I tylko autorzy tych rewelacji - a które były w podręcznikach! - nawet tego nie wiedzieli, że roślina ta była sprowadzona z Ameryki - więc jej tutaj zwyczajnie w średniowieczu być nie mogło.
      Po prostu bez przerwy demonizuje się przeszłość, by wtedy współczesność na tle tej zafałszowanej przeszłości, to nie tylko nie wygląda tak straszliwie katastrofalnie - ale wręcz wydaje się lepsza.

    • @nope19568
      @nope19568 Před 5 měsíci +2

      ​@@marcinkonieczny3737 lol we've found cancer in dinosaur fossils, try again and look into paleopathology please

    • @marcinkonieczny3737
      @marcinkonieczny3737 Před 5 měsíci

      @@nope19568 A co w tym dziwnego?! Myślisz ze przed Potopem nie było nadmiernego mnożenia się?
      No chyba że wierzysz w religię ewolucji i bajdurzenie o milionach lat.

  • @thestateofalaska
    @thestateofalaska Před rokem +188

    i think the bigger issue with decreasing population is that the average age of people gets higher. Meaning you have the same amount of elderly people but less working age young people to support them.

    • @nick11crafter
      @nick11crafter Před rokem +22

      Yes, that is the actual concern today, that they skipped over entirely.

    • @AshrakAhmed
      @AshrakAhmed Před rokem

      Less young tax base you mean?
      so the gov't can't collect enough tax to support older gen and yet multinational pay 0% tax on billions they make!
      And we keep scratching our head, why the youngs won't get married and have children while we are pricing them out of all opportunity to have a decent life!

    • @marcinkonieczny3737
      @marcinkonieczny3737 Před 6 měsíci +2

      Wojny, choroby, pandemie i niedostatki zawsze dotykały wszystkich gatunków które nadmiernie się namnożyły. Jeśli chcielibyśmy mieć spokój z pandemiami wojnami, biedą i na nic nie chorować, to musielibyśmy jako ludzkość zdecydować na harmonię demograficzną. Ale tego z kolei nigdy nie zaakceptują wielcy tego świata. Bo główny problem jest w tym, że większość przywódców politycznych i religijnych ma głęboko W POWAŻANIU dobro ludzi, jak i przyszłych pokoleń. A interesują ich jedynie ich własne partykularne interesy. A te nakazują, by mieć jak najwięcej podatników (niewolników), taniej siły roboczej, wyznawców, i mięsa armatniego, gdyż od tej ilości zależy ile znaczą wśród innych podobnych wielkich tego świata.
      A dla "bydła" (czyli dla nas) które (mentalnie) hodują, mają bajki o emeryturach, postępie, depopulacji, itp, brednie.

    • @codecode1948
      @codecode1948 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Yes, that's why we should end social security. This will incentivize people to have more kids to look after them when they get old. Just as it was in the past.

    • @marcinkonieczny3737
      @marcinkonieczny3737 Před 3 měsíci

      @@codecode1948 Wars, diseases, pandemics and shortages have always affected all species that have multiplied excessively. If we wanted to have peace with pandemics, wars, poverty and not get sick from anything, we would have to decide as humanity about demographic harmony. But this, in turn, will never be accepted by the great people of this world. Because the main problem is that most political and religious leaders deeply care about the good of people and future generations. And they are only interested in their own particular interests. And these require us to have as many taxpayers (slaves), cheap labor, followers, and cannon fodder as possible, because this amount determines how much they matter among other similar greats of this world.
      And for the "cattle" (meaning us) who (mentally) breed, their fairy tales about pensions, progress, depopulation, etc. are nonsense.
      All the fuckers known from history, who dreamed of even greater power, always ruthlessly forced their subjects to have maximum fertility (Roman emperors, rulers of Islam, the Vatican, most kings, Ceausescu, Mao Tse-Tung, Hitler, Stalin, General Franco, Mussolini, etc., etc. Moreover, just like slave owners, they always took care of and promoted their fertility.
      Social is just one way to do this.
      Europe, thanks to lower fertility rates, experienced peace and prosperity (which it had not known before, when there was a huge fertility rate). But many leftists didn't like it, so they provided great welfare for childish people. However, after the experiences of WWII, most people were not bought. So angry leftists brought invaders against us to end peace and prosperity! And to exchange us for a more docile nation.

  • @partnermammoth2562
    @partnermammoth2562 Před rokem +25

    2:15 thats only if wealth is equally distributted

  • @DarkRizzard69
    @DarkRizzard69 Před rokem +15

    1:07 was that a pokemon reference?

  • @0OB08O
    @0OB08O Před rokem +418

    The problem with the economy is that currently, it's goal is to grow instead of working on a cycle with a constant amount of resources, we keep the need of ever more and more while it doesn't make sense in an universe where you can't make up matter for the resources

    • @DavidCastillaGil
      @DavidCastillaGil Před rokem +31

      Thank you! I don't get why this point isn't mentioned in most debates. Like what are we trying to grow into thin air, into the vacuum? The planet and its resources are limited, and sure we can go out look for more but still, matter in the universe is finite. I think someone misunderstood the universe expanding beyond its limits.
      I'm going to get a bit philosophical now. The amount of matter and energy is fixed, you can't create more of it, and the universe tends to expand and dilute. Energy doesn't disappear but it is sort of used up. As life evolved it has always tried to minimize its energy usage for this same reason, the more efficient you are the better. The end goal is being a perpetuum mobile, but since that's impossible, there's an exponential curve of reduced gains. So all kinds of life are simply feedback loops that take something from the environment and use a bit of it to maintain itself against the chaos that surrounds it. Life, by definition, must be consistent in not using more than required because that would be its own death sentence. The exception are viruses that don't even care about that because they steal energy from other organisms. If we want to survive for the long term, we definitely need to find an equilibrium in what we use up. It is likely impossible to find a perfect balance where everything is reused 100%, because that by itself would disobey thermodynamics. But the earth is a pretty good example we could learn from. For millions of years, it's been sustaining life on a rock with just a few tonnes per year of external material and the warmth and radiation of the sun.

    • @ayoCC
      @ayoCC Před rokem +17

      The economy can keep growing, it's basically a measure of how many monetary transfers happen each year.
      The largest economies do that by having the most valuable people and skills, rather than resources. Dictatorships rely on resources because it's easy to control.

    • @DavidCastillaGil
      @DavidCastillaGil Před rokem

      @@ayoCC if I understand that correctly, given an economy of just us two and a total resource cap of one apple, if we exchange the same apple ten million times between us is like creating an empire out of nothing. That's why I don't trust economics the same way I trust math. Both use numbers, but only one of them lies.

    • @ayoCC
      @ayoCC Před rokem +2

      ​@@DavidCastillaGil The problem with that hypothetical is that it's not representing anything. That's why you have good watchdog institutions and in a non dictatorship you actually don't pad your numbers (there's deeper reasons). Math is just neutral here, while economics achieves a greater good, since people will always get more value out of buying something than the one who sold it. (in a world where all is domestic) It's incentivising scaling what you produce and providing your service more efficiently.
      And in a roundabout way optimizing toward as many clean transactions within a year leads to all things to be more abundant and standards to rise.
      The dirty way of scaling is of course cheating by abusing other humans rather than technological advancement.

    • @TheZebinator
      @TheZebinator Před rokem +5

      I think that bottleneck is way too large to even start to consider, starting to mine stuff from asteroids and other planets will raise the ceiling an insane amount. Getting other planets like Mars habitable will also greatly increase the possibility for growth in the economy and our race as a whole. I'm sure getting to a whole other solar system is going to be insanely hard but as long as we haven't utilized the one we're in right now I don't think it's reasonable to stop growing

  • @kaitlyn__L
    @kaitlyn__L Před rokem +1589

    This is a good overview of the birth rate tapering off, but I would point out some people have been worrying about population growth for much longer than a few decades. Famously Malthus even worried about it before the industrial revolution! But said revolution massively improved farm output with mechanised harvesting and fertiliser, averting Malthus’ fears.

    • @MinuteEarth
      @MinuteEarth  Před rokem +210

      Yep - and there's still a school of thought that technology will give us "permanent abundance" even if the population did continue to grow exponentially.

    • @papageno88
      @papageno88 Před rokem +90

      Also, Malthus was politically motivated in his alarmism by the goal of letting Ireland starve for the benefit of Britain.

    • @Zaxares
      @Zaxares Před rokem +41

      While that's true, the caveat to the Green Revolution was that it came at the cost of massive environmental damage and loss of species diversity across the world, a process which is still ongoing. The Earth could indeed support many more humans than Malthus expected, but it wasn't for free; more food and resources going to humans meant that OTHER species were losing out.
      But going back to the main topic, I believe in the long run underpopulation won't really be a problem, because of one big factor that's looming on the horizon; the AI/automation Revolution. Eventually, we're going to reach a point where nearly all the work society needs can be done by machines, even better than humans can. We won't be able to stop this; the free market and economic efficiency means that once machines reach that point, businesses WILL start using machines over humans in preference. (The machines don't have to be PERFECT. They just have to make less mistakes than humans, and we make a LOT of mistakes.) When that happens, we simply won't need that many humans anymore, and having a smaller population actually becomes a positive rather than a negative, because it means we won't have humans desperate for jobs that no longer exist. And as machines continue to improve, we could even reach a stage where the machines can now maintain and build themselves, freeing humans from the need to work at all. You would be free to pursue of a life of leisure, learning or crafting, purely because you WANT to, not because you have to.

    • @Djuntas
      @Djuntas Před rokem +1

      So a UN study in 2014 says 12 billion people is likely. You are sponsored by Gates, so this whole video is pointless drivel, we haven't heard before. We are already to many on the planet, without robust systems to help those in need. Im so tired of not achknowledging this issue because "herp derp Japan" - You all mention Japan every single time, but its 1 country...Look at South America, Africa and other continents that do grow.

    • @joaovmlsilva3509
      @joaovmlsilva3509 Před rokem +27

      Wasn't Malthus the guy from: poor people should die so there will be no poor people in the future

  • @ptrkmr
    @ptrkmr Před rokem +15

    I’m disappointed that logistic growth wasn’t really mentioned. I feel that that should be an important factor to consider since all populations tend to follow that

    • @jimmybrooks5902
      @jimmybrooks5902 Před měsícem

      Logistic is the most simplistic model. Delta-Notch like, total annihilation or more complex nonequlibrated ODEs can be uses more succintly.

  • @abcdefg91111
    @abcdefg91111 Před 3 měsíci +2

    it is always "human civilization" until other civilizations do not fit the interests of a certain civilization

  • @mathmusicandlooks
    @mathmusicandlooks Před rokem +161

    One of the big issues with population predictive models is that there are LOTS of factors seen and unseen to take into account. It’s more than just “how many people are there?” And more than “just” the economy. It’s also availability of food production, technology, how many of what types of jobs are available?
    In the earlier 1800s, poor families needed to have lots of kids because that helped keep the family farm running, which was necessary to feed anybody in the family. Infant mortality was super high, life expectancies were low, modern medicine was still in its early stages. Since the industrial revolution and the subsequent technology boom that continues to happen, we hardly live in the same world anymore. Comparing populations over the past couple centuries might as well be comparing populations of different planets. Trying to predict the future of the population more than a decade or two in advance is probably about as useful as trying to predict the exact weather in your home town a year or two in advance.

    • @eksbocks9438
      @eksbocks9438 Před rokem +11

      I think we're seeing a pattern, actually. Families living in larger cities will have smaller families.
      Because of stress, lack of cohesion (Isolation), and a higher cost of living.
      I figured it out when I was studying Fertility Rates in Japan. Obviously, the lowest rate was Tokyo.

    • @jasonkoroma4323
      @jasonkoroma4323 Před rokem +1

      @@eksbocks9438 Exactly the main factors at play.

    • @marcinkonieczny3737
      @marcinkonieczny3737 Před 6 měsíci

      Badałem temat holistycznie, i w WIELKIM skrócie podsumuję go tak:
      Przeludnienie - pojęcie bywa względne. Gdy się liczebność (zagęszczenie na km 2) zwiększa, to najpierw braki są dostrzegalne w mniejszej ilości najbardziej pożądanej zwierzyny - u nas dotyczyło to dla przykładu turów. Ale to jeszcze bardzo mały problem, gdyż na inne można jeszcze swobodnie polować. Jednak wraz z dalszym demograficznym "postępem", i kolejnych zaczyna być deficyt - i wtedy silniejsi sobie jedynie przyznają prawo do polowania na nie. Ale i wtedy jeszcze nie ma tragedii, gdyż ludzie zaczynają zwierzęta hodować. Co prawda jest to już powiązane ze znacznie większa ilością pracy, itp. - jednak i jeszcze wtedy na tym etapie mamy naprawdę dostanie i wspaniałe życie. Gdy jednak i wtedy dalej ludzi przybywa - jak w Europie w 19 wieku - to zaczyna być coraz wyraźniejszy deficyt ziemi. A co powoduje masowy odpływ ludzi w kierunku jej poszukiwania i walki o nią. I w tym etapie mięso staje się towarem luksusowym (w początkach 19 wieku mięso było jeszcze tańsze od chleba. Połowa 19 wieku, to już tylko bogatsi mogą je codziennie spożywać). A dziś, to większość nawet nie zna smaku prawdziwego mięsa.
      Dziś dzięki postępowi technologicznemu i powszechnej chemizacji rolnictwa, niby mamy poważny kryzys żywieniowy rozwiązany. A tak naprawdę, to nigdy w historii nie istniała taki kryzys i taka katastrofa w tej dziedzinie.
      Dawniej żywność była po prostu niesamowicie smaczna. A co ważniejsze, to dostarczała nam wszelkie potrzebne dla zdrowia i prawidłowego rozwoju składniki.
      Każdy ludzki organizm codziennie podlega niezwykle doskonałemu procesowi samoregeneracji - JEDNAK! - by ten proces mógł zachodzić, to nie może być w danym dniu zbyt wiele stresu - gdyż wtedy ten proces podlega zawieszeniu - gdyż organizm koncentruje się na potencjalnej walce, lub ucieczce. A że dziś żyjemy w niezwykle nerwowych czasach...........
      Dalej - by proces ten mógł zachodzić, to organizm potrzebuje do niego wiele mikroelementów, itp - a które w zbilansowanej ilości były dostarczane w formie żywności. Dziś z każdym rokiem tych składników jest coraz mniej!!!! - a za to coraz więcej trucizn!!!!!! - WIĘC TERAZ NIE DOŚĆ ŻE ŻYWNOŚĆ JUŻ NIE LECZY, TO DODATKOWO CORAZ BARDZIEJ TRUJE!!!!!
      I stąd coś tak niespotykanego dawniej jak choroba - DZIŚ JEST CZYMŚ TAK POWSZECHNYM, ŻE STAŁA SIĘ ONA NORMĄ!
      W dodatku spotykamy jeszcze choroby tzw cywilizacyjne - a które w (nieprzeludnionej) naturze nie istnieją - jak choroby zębów, stawów i układu kostnego, nowotwory, cukrzyce, itd. itd, itd.
      A i nie zapominajmy, że choroby typu pandemie - jak dżuma, itp - są powiązane wyłącznie z większym zagęszczeniem (tak przyroda się broni przed nadmierną ekspansją jakiejkolwiek populacji). I dla przykładu - Polska w 13 bardzo słabo zaludniona - i dżuma która wyludniła prawie połowę Europy - naszych nieprzeludnionych wtedy jeszcze ziem - nie dotyka!
      PS Oczywiście wiem że możesz teraz polecić mi jakieś jedno z wielu opracowań, a które piętnują przeszłość, a pokazują nasza wspaniałą teraźniejszość. I jak np w średniowieczu w biedniejszych domach na przednówku dziecko za całodzienne pożywienie dostawało zaledwie kilka ziemniaków. I tylko autorzy tych rewelacji - a które były w podręcznikach! - nawet tego nie wiedzieli, że roślina ta była sprowadzona z Ameryki - więc jej tutaj zwyczajnie w średniowieczu być nie mogło.
      Po prostu bez przerwy demonizuje się przeszłość, by wtedy współczesność na tle tej zafałszowanej przeszłości, to nie tylko nie wygląda tak straszliwie katastrofalnie - ale wręcz wydaje się lepsza.

    • @marcinkonieczny3737
      @marcinkonieczny3737 Před 6 měsíci

      Wojny, choroby, pandemie i niedostatki zawsze dotykały wszystkich gatunków które nadmiernie się namnożyły. Jeśli chcielibyśmy mieć spokój z pandemiami wojnami, biedą i na nic nie chorować, to musielibyśmy jako ludzkość zdecydować na harmonię demograficzną. Ale tego z kolei nigdy nie zaakceptują wielcy tego świata. Bo główny problem jest w tym, że większość przywódców politycznych i religijnych ma głęboko W POWAŻANIU dobro ludzi, jak i przyszłych pokoleń. A interesują ich jedynie ich własne partykularne interesy. A te nakazują, by mieć jak najwięcej podatników (niewolników), taniej siły roboczej, wyznawców, i mięsa armatniego, gdyż od tej ilości zależy ile znaczą wśród innych podobnych wielkich tego świata.
      A dla "bydła" (czyli dla nas) które (mentalnie) hodują, mają bajki o emeryturach, postępie, depopulacji, itp, brednie.
      Bóg stwarzając Ziemię, stworzył też jej doskonałe prawa - I łamanie ich nigdy nie jest pozbawione tragicznych konsekwencji. Jedną z nich są epidemie chorób, zwłaszcza psychicznych, i brak sensu życia i stale rosnąca liczba samobójstw.
      Nie bez powodu, Bóg (W Starym Testamencie) mówi o mnożeniu się ponad miarę, że gdy mnożymy się jak trzoda, to zamieniamy się w ludzką trzodą, itd, itd. Zresztą Bóg nieustannie gani Izraelczyków, za oddawanie czci bożkom płodności - I nieustannie pokazuje i zapowiada kolejne tego straszliwe konsekwencje.

  • @TriglycerideBeware
    @TriglycerideBeware Před rokem +338

    A fine video, a good title for a video in general... A bad title for this particular video. I was expecting much more contrasting, but underpopulation was hardly mentioned at all

    • @GuitarGuy650
      @GuitarGuy650 Před rokem +5

      You gonna cry?

    • @TheGlenn8
      @TheGlenn8 Před rokem +86

      Constructive criticism = good.

    • @alexrogers777
      @alexrogers777 Před rokem +20

      That's because underpopulation isn't actually bad

    • @xponen
      @xponen Před rokem +26

      ​@@alexrogers777 underpopulation turns cities into a rural economy. Imagine if people stop moving to cities, it replicate the effect of underpopulation, as business and shop closes because lack of foot traffics, the city eventually get abandoned.

    • @alexrogers777
      @alexrogers777 Před rokem +13

      @@xponen Most everyone I know wishes people would stop moving to their city

  • @FallingDrop234
    @FallingDrop234 Před 3 měsíci +14

    1:20 someone giving birth to -1 children 💀💀💀

  • @cartergonzalez2853
    @cartergonzalez2853 Před rokem +15

    1:09 I love how the girls on the books are Penny and Nemona from pokemon sv. I think its cool how you guys add pokemon references in your drawings.

  • @DudeWhoSaysDeez
    @DudeWhoSaysDeez Před rokem +701

    Both scenarios should be avoided. Slow consistent growth, or slow declines, or just flatlining the population numbers would probably lead to better results compared to extreme fluctuations.

    • @DaddyM7MD
      @DaddyM7MD Před rokem +50

      Underpopulation is right around the corner. Japan and korea have such old people and theyre suffering the effects. The world needs more people because all the other will die.

    • @tlpineapple1
      @tlpineapple1 Před rokem +73

      @@DaddyM7MD As noted by OP, it doesnt matter if the population grows or shrinks, what matters is how quickly it does so.
      If population stagnates, there are just as many people being born as there are dying out, just as many entering the workforce as there are leaving. Slight growths means more people entering the workforce which grows economies, and slight retraction can be offset by the increasing productivity of an individual person.

    • @yourboi1842
      @yourboi1842 Před rokem

      A drop in the population is amazing. People only think about the short term and the current generation of baby boomers. Long term we DO NOT need your kids.

    • @CBRN-115
      @CBRN-115 Před rokem +24

      The resources are finite. I don't think Earth can go 100 years more like this

    • @billcipherproductions1789
      @billcipherproductions1789 Před rokem +7

      @@CBRN-115 Earth will but we still need to be more sustainable.

  • @joaovmlsilva3509
    @joaovmlsilva3509 Před rokem +98

    The only people worried about not having enough people to -exploit- work are the ones that gets the most out of hyper competitive and individualistic behavior 🤔

    • @felipevasconcelos6736
      @felipevasconcelos6736 Před rokem +29

      Underpopulation can be very advantageous to the working class. After the Black Death caused a massive population shrinkage in Europe, the surviving workers had enough bargaining power to obtain several rights. This is because the reserve army of labor was practically nonexistent, meaning the aristocracy had little choice but to accept the demands of the workers.

    • @GiRR007
      @GiRR007 Před rokem +4

      You make it sound like having FEWER people to compete with harms individualistic behavior when its quite the opposite.

    • @joaovmlsilva3509
      @joaovmlsilva3509 Před rokem +1

      @@GiRR007 source?

    • @felipevasconcelos6736
      @felipevasconcelos6736 Před rokem +12

      @@GiRR007 one of the most powerful tools of capitalism is the reserve army of labor, which’s described in Marx’s Das Kapital (and also Wikipedia). When there’s a significant portion of the population in unemployment, then the bourgeoisie have all the bargaining power, since any workers that demand better conditions can be easily replaced. Fewer people means competition is less fierce among workers, and therefore if a significant portion of them organizes and collectively demand better working conditions, there’s not enough unemployed people to replace them easily and they have more bargaining power.

    • @GiRR007
      @GiRR007 Před rokem +3

      @@joaovmlsilva3509 The source of basic supply and demand? I dont think I can "source" common sense and logical reasoning. The fewer people you have the more the individual matters. Those who already excel in individualistic and competitive behavior will thrive MORE when they can take advantage of their individualism and have less to compete with.

  • @youevil9846
    @youevil9846 Před 8 měsíci +23

    I think that a stable population of 1 billion is ideal.

  • @Kobolds_in_a_trenchcoat
    @Kobolds_in_a_trenchcoat Před rokem +23

    Underpopulation also happened in many places in Europe as a result of the black plague. While not a global phenomenon, it did lead to a much higher level of power for working class (somewhat anachronistic term but you know what I mean) people. Many modern people in developed nations have less kids because it's expensive, both in the immediate future and over the course of at least the first 18 years (likely longer given modern trends), but this would be less of a problem with better economic outlooks given a higher labor power.
    It probably won't be clean or clear cut for a while but I suspect this problem will more or less be self correcting provided overall economics don't get too skewed.

    • @marcinkonieczny3737
      @marcinkonieczny3737 Před 6 měsíci

      Wojny, choroby, pandemie i niedostatki zawsze dotykały wszystkich gatunków które nadmiernie się namnożyły. Jeśli chcielibyśmy mieć spokój z pandemiami wojnami, biedą i na nic nie chorować, to musielibyśmy jako ludzkość zdecydować na harmonię demograficzną. Ale tego z kolei nigdy nie zaakceptują wielcy tego świata. Bo główny problem jest w tym, że większość przywódców politycznych i religijnych ma głęboko W POWAŻANIU dobro ludzi, jak i przyszłych pokoleń. A interesują ich jedynie ich własne partykularne interesy. A te nakazują, by mieć jak najwięcej podatników (niewolników), taniej siły roboczej, wyznawców, i mięsa armatniego, gdyż od tej ilości zależy ile znaczą wśród innych podobnych wielkich tego świata.
      A dla "bydła" (czyli dla nas) które (mentalnie) hodują, mają bajki o emeryturach, postępie, depopulacji, itp, brednie.
      Przeludnienie - pojęcie bywa względne. Gdy się liczebność (zagęszczenie na km 2) zwiększa, to najpierw braki są dostrzegalne w mniejszej ilości najbardziej pożądanej zwierzyny - u nas dotyczyło to dla przykładu turów. Ale to jeszcze bardzo mały problem, gdyż na inne można jeszcze swobodnie polować. Jednak wraz z dalszym demograficznym "postępem", i kolejnych zaczyna być deficyt - i wtedy silniejsi sobie jedynie przyznają prawo do polowania na nie. Ale i wtedy jeszcze nie ma tragedii, gdyż ludzie zaczynają zwierzęta hodować. Co prawda jest to już powiązane ze znacznie większa ilością pracy, itp. - jednak i jeszcze wtedy na tym etapie mamy naprawdę dostanie i wspaniałe życie. Gdy jednak i wtedy dalej ludzi przybywa - jak w Europie w 19 wieku - to zaczyna być coraz wyraźniejszy deficyt ziemi. A co powoduje masowy odpływ ludzi w kierunku jej poszukiwania i walki o nią. I w tym etapie mięso staje się towarem luksusowym (w początkach 19 wieku mięso było jeszcze tańsze od chleba. Połowa 19 wieku, to już tylko bogatsi mogą je codziennie spożywać). A dziś, to większość nawet nie zna smaku prawdziwego mięsa.
      Dziś dzięki postępowi technologicznemu i powszechnej chemizacji rolnictwa, niby mamy poważny kryzys żywieniowy rozwiązany. A tak naprawdę, to nigdy w historii nie istniała taki kryzys i taka katastrofa w tej dziedzinie.
      Dawniej żywność była po prostu niesamowicie smaczna. A co ważniejsze, to dostarczała nam wszelkie potrzebne dla zdrowia i prawidłowego rozwoju składniki.
      Każdy ludzki organizm codziennie podlega niezwykle doskonałemu procesowi samoregeneracji - JEDNAK! - by ten proces mógł zachodzić, to nie może być w danym dniu zbyt wiele stresu - gdyż wtedy ten proces podlega zawieszeniu - gdyż organizm koncentruje się na potencjalnej walce, lub ucieczce. A że dziś żyjemy w niezwykle nerwowych czasach...........
      Dalej - by proces ten mógł zachodzić, to organizm potrzebuje do niego wiele mikroelementów, itp - a które w zbilansowanej ilości były dostarczane w formie żywności. Dziś z każdym rokiem tych składników jest coraz mniej!!!! - a za to coraz więcej trucizn!!!!!! - WIĘC TERAZ NIE DOŚĆ ŻE ŻYWNOŚĆ JUŻ NIE LECZY, TO DODATKOWO CORAZ BARDZIEJ TRUJE!!!!!
      I stąd coś tak niespotykanego dawniej jak choroba - DZIŚ JEST CZYMŚ TAK POWSZECHNYM, ŻE STAŁA SIĘ ONA NORMĄ!
      W dodatku spotykamy jeszcze choroby tzw cywilizacyjne - a które w (nieprzeludnionej) naturze nie istnieją - jak choroby zębów, stawów i układu kostnego, nowotwory, cukrzyce, itd. itd, itd.
      A i nie zapominajmy, że choroby typu pandemie - jak dżuma, itp - są powiązane wyłącznie z większym zagęszczeniem (tak przyroda się broni przed nadmierną ekspansją jakiejkolwiek populacji). I dla przykładu - Polska w 13 bardzo słabo zaludniona - i dżuma która wyludniła prawie połowę Europy - naszych nieprzeludnionych wtedy jeszcze ziem - nie dotyka!
      PS Oczywiście wiem że możesz teraz polecić mi jakieś jedno z wielu opracowań, a które piętnują przeszłość, a pokazują nasza wspaniałą teraźniejszość. I jak np w średniowieczu w biedniejszych domach na przednówku dziecko za całodzienne pożywienie dostawało zaledwie kilka ziemniaków. I tylko autorzy tych rewelacji - a które były w podręcznikach! - nawet tego nie wiedzieli, że roślina ta była sprowadzona z Ameryki - więc jej tutaj zwyczajnie w średniowieczu być nie mogło.
      Po prostu bez przerwy demonizuje się przeszłość, by wtedy współczesność na tle tej zafałszowanej przeszłości, to nie tylko nie wygląda tak straszliwie katastrofalnie - ale wręcz wydaje się lepsza.

    • @markstein2845
      @markstein2845 Před 2 měsíci

      I would love to have a source for this, because the black death happened in the 14th century, and the workers rights happened started in the 18th and it became a big thing in the 19th century.
      In the 14th century, europe was still a big farm, and in feudalism, workers already worked only 150 days a year, cause of the crops season.

  • @BuizelCream
    @BuizelCream Před rokem +664

    I see Dawn, Misty, Lillie, Penny, Nemona? Nice to have Turo as the one taking the lead in the discussion.

    • @mrgodogodopaint
      @mrgodogodopaint Před rokem +50

      pretty sure that is rika at 1:49

    • @F15_C
      @F15_C Před rokem +22

      Would actually been funny if the scientists at the start were the version proffesors

    • @RennaTempest
      @RennaTempest Před rokem +17

      Me after finishing Pokémon violet

    • @WhuDhat
      @WhuDhat Před rokem +10

      thought those were some anime-esque hairstyles lol

    • @walterkipferl6729
      @walterkipferl6729 Před rokem +10

      1:40 I think is Entrapta from She-Ra

  • @greedyProphet
    @greedyProphet Před rokem +160

    1:20 This is the real issue. If a woman gets more than 16 years of education, she'll start having negative children.

  • @luxofortis3713
    @luxofortis3713 Před měsícem +3

    Overpopulation is worse. I mean there would be enough wild food and wild animals around to eat if you were in a underpopulated world.

  • @ThePaalanBoy
    @ThePaalanBoy Před rokem +4

    Women with higher educations is also less likely to be in a relationship, as they tend to search for someone with a higher education than them, but is setting that bar higher with their own education.

  • @_mortiam
    @_mortiam Před rokem +263

    The problem of a decrease in population is not the decrease per se, but the fact that fewer people being able to work will have to take care of more people not being able to work (namely, elderly people)

    • @spacejunk2186
      @spacejunk2186 Před rokem +35

      Canada has a huge scandal currently over assisted suicides. I expect them to become a thing outside Canada as well, maybe even mandatory. Right besides the government pressuring women to have children.

    • @Ausf
      @Ausf Před rokem +15

      People just need to be responsible for their own retirement instead of expecting other people to support them.

    • @SoupyMittens
      @SoupyMittens Před rokem +7

      Retirement should be banned and instead they should do less labor intensive jobs like working at home

    • @yourboi1842
      @yourboi1842 Před rokem +5

      @@SoupyMittens ur fuckin crazy bro. Maybe we just not give them social programs to retire with and have the economy function well and not have the expectation that the economy would grow enough to pay off its current debt and the more debt it collects the more the economy exponentially grows to compensate

    • @lordgarion514
      @lordgarion514 Před rokem +5

      It's MUCH more than just taking care of elderly.
      The entire economic system is based on population growth.
      We need to change that system.

  • @fenhen
    @fenhen Před rokem +46

    A major problem with populations shrinking is you get more and more old people, which puts incredible pressures on a country’s finances (particularly pensions and health care), with fewer working age adults to pay for it all.

    • @focidhomophobicii2426
      @focidhomophobicii2426 Před rokem

      or them old people can just start elderly porno genre and make some living out of it
      and ruin next gen pornhub recommendations

    • @jamespower5165
      @jamespower5165 Před rokem +1

      But those working age adults would have a better education and would earn much on average. People would have more savings and would be less dependent on government programs anyway. Overheads like environmental pollution, and bureaucratic costs would significantly diminish and cheaper work can be either outsourced or obtained by immigration as required

    • @fenhatte
      @fenhatte Před rokem +9

      @@jamespower5165 what happen when every nation continue the trend, can you get migrant from non existent nation or you just build the concept of a slave nation

    • @Demopans5990
      @Demopans5990 Před rokem +2

      @@jamespower5165
      A) much more educated adults working better jobs would require a strong export market in order to sidestep the issue of bad domestic market. Export markets come with its own problems, especially when you're importing raw resources to turn into advanced products (just as Taiwan)
      B) maybe on average, people have more savings, but then comes the question of distribution. Following from A, it is likely only large companies can handle the overhead related to export of products, and said companies have the resources to gatekeep. Essentially, a good bit of wealth is controlled by a few companies. South Korea has this problem with Samsung. You're born in a Samsung hospital. You go to a school built by Samsung. You buy insurance from Samsung, and your house is owned by Samsung.
      C) Pollution by companies reduce costs for those companies, but at the cost of making the surrounding region highly dependent on the jobs provided by said companies. If all those companies are in the same industry, what happens when that industry is no longer viable? There used to be a plethora of mills on the Hudson river valley that dumped their waste into the river. To this day, only the Albany region and NYC are significant economic centers in NY, precisely because they didn't rely on only mills and steel factories when manufacturing jobs declined in the US

    • @jamespower5165
      @jamespower5165 Před rokem +1

      @@fenhatte Won't happen because there's still a wide economic gap between countries and also a wide population gap. By the time this declines, we will be living in an era where most work will probably be done by machines and the economic system will be very different
      The idea that we are living in a stable world when we are on the cusp of the AI transformation is silly

  • @yummyumtum
    @yummyumtum Před rokem +3

    I'm new and I already love this channel

  • @blackbearelectronicswithco9541

    True, but the population is still growing because people are living longer than they used to

  • @ispeakforthebeans
    @ispeakforthebeans Před rokem +142

    You guys are really good at making short informative videos and god awful at making good, accurate titles. Why set up false expectations about questions you wont even discuss?

    • @nick11crafter
      @nick11crafter Před rokem +26

      Yea, its really aggravating
      But maybe it's intentional since they get so many comments on it and comments bump it in the algorithm

  • @heartofdawn2341
    @heartofdawn2341 Před rokem +84

    A big part of the problem isn't the number of people vs the economy, but that far too much of the world's wealth is in _very_ few hands

    • @cortexavery1324
      @cortexavery1324 Před rokem +8

      YES YES YES !!!!!
      Not everything is political but this very much is !

    • @marcinkonieczny3737
      @marcinkonieczny3737 Před 6 měsíci

      Wojny, choroby, pandemie i niedostatki zawsze dotykały wszystkich gatunków które nadmiernie się namnożyły. Jeśli chcielibyśmy mieć spokój z pandemiami wojnami, biedą i na nic nie chorować, to musielibyśmy jako ludzkość zdecydować na harmonię demograficzną. Ale tego z kolei nigdy nie zaakceptują wielcy tego świata. Bo główny problem jest w tym, że większość przywódców politycznych i religijnych ma głęboko W POWAŻANIU dobro ludzi, jak i przyszłych pokoleń. A interesują ich jedynie ich własne partykularne interesy. A te nakazują, by mieć jak najwięcej podatników (niewolników), taniej siły roboczej, wyznawców, i mięsa armatniego, gdyż od tej ilości zależy ile znaczą wśród innych podobnych wielkich tego świata.
      A dla "bydła" (czyli dla nas) które (mentalnie) hodują, mają bajki o emeryturach, postępie, depopulacji, itp, brednie.

  • @avrinrose5457
    @avrinrose5457 Před 9 měsíci +2

    In my fictional world, there are overpopulated but people didn't care about it

  • @0_ooo0
    @0_ooo0 Před 14 dny +1

    We becoming a certain funny moustache austrian man WITH THIS ONE🔥🔥🔥

  • @Seeker7172
    @Seeker7172 Před rokem +527

    Wealth distribution is a factor not mentioned (and I understand it would have made the video longer), but if the world population shrinks, and if the amount of wealth hoarded by the tiny elite continues to grow, we'll go back to a quasi-feudal society where a tiny proportion has nearly everything and the vast majority have very little of what's left.

    • @rbstat6946
      @rbstat6946 Před rokem

      Nevermind the fact that these same wealthy elites use immigration to keep their country's populations high, keeping them poor. Which also ends up causing brain drain in the emigrating countries, which keeps them poor also.
      Not that I think we should do some kind of one-child policy or anything like that. But I don't think most people want their country to be more like Qatar either.

    • @Layde36
      @Layde36 Před rokem +42

      Well this is something that the video will never address as they rather complain about underpopulation and don't even mention the fact that the population distribution in regards to countries is completely uneven and there are hundreds of different factors instead of just claiming which one is worse as both scenarios are worse eitherways, that last sentence is in a way true sadly if you take in the general populace overall we are indeed living in such times but the difference is that poverty isn't in bulk and rather distributed evenly as to avoid any attention towards them compared to the past where poverty in one area was obvious than today where it's hidden or masked

    • @GreenTimeEagle
      @GreenTimeEagle Před rokem +10

      There are good rich and bad rich people...

    • @Kobolds_in_a_trenchcoat
      @Kobolds_in_a_trenchcoat Před rokem +56

      Well, if it brings you some comfort, we've seen localized depopulation during the black plague. What happened was that low class people suddenly found their labor was worth a whole lot more as they were less replaceable than before. It is viewed as something of a beginning of the end to feudalism, though a slow end.
      It is difficult to say if that's a relevant comparison though. Modern economies are very different and in the developed world people don't have kids because it's expensive while in the developing world people have kids because they have more money. It's never really possible to predict the future with history I guess.

    • @happymolecule8894
      @happymolecule8894 Před rokem +10

      The wealth "hoarded" is just stock in companies. There isn't as much money out there as you think.

  • @Victor_Andrei
    @Victor_Andrei Před rokem +80

    I feel like most governments enact disastrous policies every time the economy shrinks, even though, as you said, it might not be such a big problem after all.

    • @cortexavery1324
      @cortexavery1324 Před rokem +2

      Right on.

    • @sophiewang1025
      @sophiewang1025 Před 2 měsíci +2

      Probably because even though it might not be a huge problem in the long run, it could have serious negative effects in the short term (the term they have to "prove themselves" to the population in order to stay in office)

    • @ENZ2103
      @ENZ2103 Před měsícem

      This is incorrect. If the economy shrinks, then the interest on debt becomes harder to pay back, and that creates more debt and more interest on debt that cuts into public services. Usually, debt it issued with the idea that the GDP rises faster than the debt, so if it doesn't, it could create an economic disaster.

  • @sandwichqueen
    @sandwichqueen Před rokem +4

    It's weird that abundance of resources is reducing the population. Usually it's the lack.

    • @markstein2845
      @markstein2845 Před 2 měsíci

      it depends, only resources that aren’t produced by humans. Most resources humans consume are produced by ourselves, like clean water, meat, crops, etc.
      If an animal will go extint it won’t be a chicken, that are killed by billion every day, it will be a weird frog that nobody cares cause the temperture increased 2 degrees and all his eggs which made all his children be females, and it collapsed the mating ecosystem

    • @DevPythonUnity
      @DevPythonUnity Před měsícem

      well its the goverment that said that in order to live on a land you have to pay monthly tax, and the goverment set prices of land, THE GOVERMENT IS LIMITING ACCESS TO RESORUCES

  • @mouhiazeck
    @mouhiazeck Před rokem

    I'm so glad I rediscovered this channel

  • @AndrewFullerton
    @AndrewFullerton Před rokem +256

    The problem was never overpopulation, it was *overconsumption*. Globally increasing wealth is an existential threat because our planet simply doesn't have the resources to support our entire population at the American standard of living. The fact that the solution defaulted to "we need fewer poor people" is pretty emblematic of how global elites would rather make everyone else suffer to subsidize their lifestyles than take even slight responsibility

    • @nick11crafter
      @nick11crafter Před rokem +39

      Simply put, the American standard being excessive indulgence and consumption is the principal issue here. Population itself isnt the issue at all

    • @richardmetzler7909
      @richardmetzler7909 Před rokem +29

      "we need fewer poor people" is one way to put it. Here's another, less cynical: "countries that don't manage to produce or import enough food to support their population are obviously overpopulated."

    • @Radicus
      @Radicus Před rokem

      Overpopulation is an issue. Sure we could support everyone, but you fail to see that we are destroying the planet and driving other species to extinction.

    • @doujinflip
      @doujinflip Před rokem +13

      But by the same token, Americans are also among the most economically productive, which drives the innovation and development of new and/or more impactful solutions. Unlike say the highly inefficient labor output of China or India, or the grossly net consumptive lifestyles of the modern Middle East.

    • @yourboi1842
      @yourboi1842 Před rokem +7

      We need fewer people. The government will preach that we need more.

  • @Dr.Kraig_Ren
    @Dr.Kraig_Ren Před rokem +102

    Title:- *Which one is bad? Overpopulation or Underpopulation?*
    *Video:-* _"We don't know, let the experts figure it out."_

    • @focidhomophobicii2426
      @focidhomophobicii2426 Před rokem +10

      or just wait for the outcome and says the other one would be better

    • @cloudkitt
      @cloudkitt Před rokem +2

      Experts who, with the help of a sensationalist media, have a way of crying wolf.

    • @sotch2271
      @sotch2271 Před rokem

      I can assurs you it will depend of where you are, shengen won't have the same problemin 30 years as lagos

    • @luigimrlgaming9484
      @luigimrlgaming9484 Před rokem

      “Experts”

  • @christischwend5335
    @christischwend5335 Před rokem

    I really like the pokemon references, a lot of care is put into each of these videos. Keep on going minute earth

  • @dantimdan193
    @dantimdan193 Před rokem +3

    Could you please cite a paper that cites the overall poverty rate decreasing. Thank you!!

  • @orterves
    @orterves Před rokem +140

    What about overconsumption though? People might be having fewer children, but if each of those children consumes more, so that the sum total global consumption increases even as the population decreases then you've still got a major problem.

    • @ryantsui2802
      @ryantsui2802 Před rokem +11

      If you have a market economy this doesn't exist as pricing pressures make consumption over a reasonable standard more and more unaffordable.

    • @sosopwsi829Jjw9
      @sosopwsi829Jjw9 Před rokem +19

      "Overconsumption" imagine if you will, a population so spoiled that they actually want less. Without knowing how horrible having less is actually like

    • @orterves
      @orterves Před rokem +5

      @@ryantsui2802 "it's ok, the poors will just have less and any luck will starve to death... who's that with the pitch fork knocking on the door?"

    • @orterves
      @orterves Před rokem +32

      @@sosopwsi829Jjw9 that's right, if everyone lived like the US, we'd need ~5 earths of resources... so the max global population would be < 1/5 of our current number.
      Overconsumption exists. And of course, no one, in general, wants less. That's the damn problem

    • @fubytv731
      @fubytv731 Před rokem +3

      What are you talking about? When demand is higher than supply, price will increase even for rich people.
      As the population shrinks, the economy will shrink too, driving price even higher, production of goods and services decreases, and businesses tank.
      I mean, market economy will set everything in balance eventually.
      Even when let's say hypothetically demand keeps rising up because of overconsumption, it means more demand for workers and wages will go up.
      But if there's no more value added to the economy because of underpopulation, it means less savings to invest on businesses, and even less goods and services to overconsume! I mean, if you don't mind having worse living standard, underpopulation is good for the environment then!

  • @ex7ermin874
    @ex7ermin874 Před rokem +57

    I just want to point out that the bit about the poor being less poor isn't entirely true. $2 in 1970 is $15.36 today, and globally 61% of people make do on less than $10 a day.

    • @derekwatson8965
      @derekwatson8965 Před rokem +20

      Finally! Great job on that. Yes, we have ironically gotten poorer and THAT is why we don't have as many babies.
      Can't feed more babies if you can only afford 1!
      Edit: but our standard of living has increased drastically, but also countered by high rents/mortgages what force room mates. Hard to have babies when your poor and rooming with other strangers!

    • @strategygaming5830
      @strategygaming5830 Před rokem

      @@derekwatson8965 yes so a big problem is rapid inflation as that actual increase has mostly happen in the last few years. But let’s keep spending trillions we don’t have and keep ruining the economy Yay! Oh and if you point this out you are now the enemy.

    • @Fritz999
      @Fritz999 Před rokem +9

      A brand-new house including the lot etc. in 1950: $ 10000.
      Now: $ 500000
      Income about $ 1.- per hour in 1950.
      Now? $ 30.- ?

    • @felixguillermo2568
      @felixguillermo2568 Před rokem +3

      He said equivalent.

    • @tomasrocha6139
      @tomasrocha6139 Před měsícem

      Inflation doesn't work like that internationally

  • @Jensenrobinb
    @Jensenrobinb Před rokem

    i love the “sadway eat cold” in the background

  • @dirtydeeds4free553
    @dirtydeeds4free553 Před rokem

    Very good, very quick, and brings up the last part about that the population shrinkage also matters when factoring in the world economy. Fuckin great for 2 minutes

  • @godsamongmen8003
    @godsamongmen8003 Před rokem +72

    When I was a teenager, I read an article predicting that the population would level out at 10 billion; this is where the scientists thought the birth and death rate would be equal.
    My biggest concern would be any disaster that interrupts trade. With humanity producing just enough food for a large population, any little thing could cause a famine that racks up a serious body count.

    • @azzy-551
      @azzy-551 Před rokem +8

      like a boat getting stuck in a canal?

    • @nick11crafter
      @nick11crafter Před rokem +7

      Those numbers had nothing to do with food, they rely on an expectation of birth rate being an equal ratio on average to the death rate, death being from all aspects and birth being slowed as the trends currently see. Food wise we can support more than 10billion people so long as they aren't poorly placed relative to the food production, which is becoming less of an issue with modern technology for environmentally controlled farming and environmental modifications.

    • @richardmetzler7909
      @richardmetzler7909 Před rokem +6

      We may see that playing out in the next years, starting right about now, with increasing droughts and floods, rising energy prices threatening the production of fertilizer, and the whole Russia/ Ukraine war disrupting grain production and trade.

    • @godsamongmen8003
      @godsamongmen8003 Před rokem +6

      @@nick11crafter I know there's a lot more going into that number than just food production. What I really meant is that as the population grows, we'll be skirting the edge of what we can support. Like you said, production and distribution are less and less of an issue with improvements in technology -- right up until that technology fails us. And it'll happen in a situation where nobody has any margin for error.
      I look at the pandemic-related shutdowns as a good example of this. Companies all over the world had grown accustomed to a complex web of supply chains, and when things ground to a halt it all got royally screwed up. With more people and more modern farming techniques, the world's food supply will be sitting on the same house of cards.

    • @nick11crafter
      @nick11crafter Před rokem +9

      @@godsamongmen8003 it sounds like your real concern then is with Globalism. If every person and or nation becomes ultimately self sufficient then there would be minimal risk of supply chain being able to impact society that much.
      Globalism actively opposes self sufficient in favor of global interdependence and relies entirely on the supply chain not getting interrupted.

  • @trevinbeattie4888
    @trevinbeattie4888 Před rokem +19

    I don’t care as much what happens to the economy; that’s something people can figure out how to fix or replace. What I do care about is the impact we’re having on our ecology. We’ve already done irreparable damage to numerous other species that are part of our ecosystem, and that will come back to harm us in the long run.

    • @markstein2845
      @markstein2845 Před 2 měsíci

      The thing is that the economy you eat, the ecology you feel.
      If the temperature rises 10 degrees, people will survive cause in most european countries you have 10 degree variation in a single day.
      But if the world wrinks 10%, butchery will sell bones, cause meat will be too expensive.

  • @andrews6013
    @andrews6013 Před rokem +1

    I'm not joking this summed up about 3 weeks of one of my college sociology courses

  • @user-kh7ef4ho4d
    @user-kh7ef4ho4d Před 5 měsíci +5

    Fewer people, less poverty!

  • @mateodominguez3841
    @mateodominguez3841 Před rokem +50

    0:47 Did you adjust prices to inflation? Also, have you considered the increase in cost of living? It doesn't matter how much money you make, but what you can do with that money. So, even if the poorest people make more than $2 a day, if they cannot buy more than what they did in the 1970s, their situation has not changed.

    • @Cookiekopter
      @Cookiekopter Před rokem +4

      He most likely meant 2$ equivalent in that time

    • @andrebenites9919
      @andrebenites9919 Před rokem +12

      @@Cookiekopter Yeah, but dollars isn't a good way of measure in this case, because the power of consumption for 2$ may vary quite a lot from region to region and time to time. Why does it matter to get more than 2$ if you can't buy more with that?
      It makes more sense to look at health stats like percentage of hunger or malnutrition

    • @lubje
      @lubje Před rokem

      My thoughts exactly.

    • @durdleduc8520
      @durdleduc8520 Před rokem +2

      this is what a works cited page is for. you're not going to get anywhere with a youtube comment, if you have questions on the information then read their sources.

    • @mateodominguez3841
      @mateodominguez3841 Před rokem +5

      @@durdleduc8520 And you should consider that a question in the section comments can be directed to the rest of the audience, not just the author(s) of the video! And the intention of a question can also be to foster questioning, not just to obtain a little bit more information.
      My point is, I appreciate your intention to let others know there are better ways to obtain information than just directly asking, but a question can do much more than just clarify an uncertainty :).

  • @zappababe8577
    @zappababe8577 Před rokem +9

    We don't have a shortage of food, we just don't have a good way of transporting it to places in the world where it is needed - especially perishable items.

    • @Egerit100
      @Egerit100 Před rokem +2

      And also a lot of food waste

  • @NashHinton
    @NashHinton Před rokem +2

    We still have too many people. We're in a 6th mass extinction and causing global warming because of our population. Needs to go down faster.

  • @user-do5ln7ez2d
    @user-do5ln7ez2d Před 5 měsíci +2

    The question is: For how long will the planet be able to house 8 billion people?

  • @NickRoman
    @NickRoman Před rokem +54

    But the thing about that is, we're still using all kinds of non-renewable resources; so, even if the Earth does not explode with people, it seems like we're headed for disaster one way or another as eventually things like sand and petroleum will run out. So, we must find a way to do without all such things. Will we before losing them makes a huge impact?

    • @isaacaaron540
      @isaacaaron540 Před rokem +3

      I understand petroleum but, forgive my ignorance, what do sand got to do with anything?

    • @NickRoman
      @NickRoman Před rokem +17

      @@isaacaaron540 , ha ha, I figured some people wouldn't know. A particular type of sand is needed to make concrete. Concrete is pretty important isn't it? Already wars have been fought over access to good sand.

    • @abyssmage6979
      @abyssmage6979 Před rokem +13

      There are already workable chemical alternatives to petroleum gasoline (like fermented bioethanol) and much research is also already headed towards improving them. There are also already papers published for much more sustainable alternatives for river sand (like coal-bottom ash) that have been well received in the scientific community.
      People are dumb (sometimes) but people aren't thaaat dumb to not think of using science and technology to provide an alternative source of resources. If anything imo the global warming is more of an issue than resource scarcity is.

    • @eksbocks9438
      @eksbocks9438 Před rokem +2

      Because it's more than just volume. It's the level of brain power that the majority has.
      That's why some places are able to get things done easier.

    • @costamcostam8961
      @costamcostam8961 Před rokem +2

      @@NickRoman exactly+Funfact: Saudi Arabia imports sand. Country that is almost entirely in the desert imports sand because its sand is useless.

  • @thatverseguy
    @thatverseguy Před rokem +56

    Goes to show how the best kind of life is one that is balanced. Too much or too little of anything is never good. The same applies to collectives.

  • @eglol
    @eglol Před rokem +4

    Okay. 1:10 there is a girl I noticed with a hair color like a Pokemon game girl's hair and then another one!?!? Coincidence or no?

    • @eglol
      @eglol Před rokem

      Potentially more Pokemon characters on this video?

    • @eglol
      @eglol Před rokem

      Seriously Penny and Nemona from Pokemon Scarlet and Violet

  • @user-zy1nk1jo3p
    @user-zy1nk1jo3p Před 4 měsíci +1

    the bomb just doesn't want to explode

  • @applepie4287
    @applepie4287 Před rokem +37

    I went in expecting the question answered. I sat patiently through what I thought was tangential information thinking it was being introduced to establish a foundation for more information. I am really disappointed that our question was never answered.

    • @aguyontheinternet8436
      @aguyontheinternet8436 Před rokem

      But it is some good knowledge

    • @DeadlyBlaze
      @DeadlyBlaze Před rokem

      Underpopulation is worse currently because overpopulation is no longer a problem.

    • @ungoyone
      @ungoyone Před rokem +1

      @@DeadlyBlaze Can you elaborate on how it's not a problem?

    • @nick11crafter
      @nick11crafter Před rokem

      @@ungoyone Technology outpases population growth in most sectors. Food is well beyond current needs lacking only in logistics, and so the only major resource shortages theoretically would be commodities that we can generally live without.
      Compare with underpopulation where there wouldn't be enough labor to maintain current living standards and resource negative populations such as the elderly or disabled would essentially need to be sacked to support the health and productive population.

    • @AshrakAhmed
      @AshrakAhmed Před rokem +3

      @@DeadlyBlaze This is very Western centric view that under population is a problem, say this to smaller country like Bangladesh and they will have a very different outlook!
      it's problem for West cause you can't get people to collect your rubbish for cheap!
      So it's a economics problem of people refusing to do menial task because the pay is low (so rich can keep the bigger share of profit), and because the pay is low and everything getting expensive those with smaller disposable income not taking children.
      Thus the cycle continues!

  • @LORDJABEN
    @LORDJABEN Před rokem +14

    Economists: "Have children or the economy might collapse!"
    Millennials/GenZ: "Oh no, another Tuesday."

  • @elvinmah165
    @elvinmah165 Před 2 měsíci +1

    That's why maintaining is important

  • @MrGreenTabasco
    @MrGreenTabasco Před rokem +2

    You did not answer the question

  • @twincast2005
    @twincast2005 Před rokem +9

    The two problems with a shrinking population are:
    The inverted population pyramid putting a strain on pension systems and elder care. Eventually these should balance out, but things are already precarious now, and they'll be getting worse for decades with no end in sight.
    Our current capitalist system having the concept of infinite growth at its core. Now, that has always been nothing but foolishness and avarice, and the sooner we go back to a stable, sustainable economy, the better, but things won't be pretty when the fat finally hits the shin. Publicly traded companies, their overpaid executives, and their shareholders won't let the gravy train stop quietly.

  • @FBIandre123
    @FBIandre123 Před rokem +12

    2:09 is that eraserhead?

  • @trejkaz
    @trejkaz Před rokem +4

    If everyone has more money, everyone has less money.
    But no, the crisis in Japan is interesting because due to the declining birth rates, the average age of the country is rising. They still pay aged benefits to the elderly, but now there are fewer and fewer young people paying taxes which cover that. It seems like it should stabilise eventually, but will the system break before it does?

    • @VegitoBlue202
      @VegitoBlue202 Před rokem

      Japan is a literal dystopia bro
      It's gonna break the US and the West ain't far behind

  • @hruben222ruben5
    @hruben222ruben5 Před rokem +2

    Would be nice to explains some of the effects of both. Especially under population in places like Japan that are suffering from it

    • @dfabulous
      @dfabulous Před měsícem

      If Japan just fixed their work culture and work/life balance, they'd probably make a come back. By the time they actually do that it'll be too late though. They're not even having sex over there because they're too tired and overworked. That's crazy. And the young people aren't into it in general.

    • @opossumlvr1023
      @opossumlvr1023 Před 28 dny

      Japan has a chance to recover as they are not letting third world immigrants in. Europe and the Americas will continue their decline until they have the economic status of what a third world nation is today as the indigenous populations will be replaced by migrants.

  • @KristenRowenPliske
    @KristenRowenPliske Před rokem +34

    I know for my millennial & Gen-Z kids, they see the mess the world is in, how hate & prejudice taint things, how the climate is changing for the worse because of things our parents did & they don’t want to bring kids into it. I only hope
    There are enough of those generations to keep the momentum of change going.

    • @billcipherproductions1789
      @billcipherproductions1789 Před rokem +3

      Though, most gen z will probably have kids. Especially the ones who live outside the USA

    • @ilovecakecanihaveapiece
      @ilovecakecanihaveapiece Před rokem +3

      @@billcipherproductions1789 In the USA, we're going to have the opposite of a baby boom

    • @billcipherproductions1789
      @billcipherproductions1789 Před rokem +2

      @@ilovecakecanihaveapiece Well glad that I ain't an American or live in the USA. 🤣🤣🤣🤣

    • @Demopans5990
      @Demopans5990 Před rokem +4

      @@billcipherproductions1789
      Eh, that is quite debatable. Similar Chinese cohorts are putting off child rearing for very similar reasons. Most population growth would be concentrated in Africa and South America

    • @billcipherproductions1789
      @billcipherproductions1789 Před rokem

      @@Demopans5990 Well, a stable population is the best so in Europe, it is that.

  • @Kotenekrazy
    @Kotenekrazy Před rokem +16

    I'm glad that you made Nemona higher than Penny although 'something' tells me she's a bit more down bad than her Eevee backpack counterpart

  • @yehanravindu7221
    @yehanravindu7221 Před 3 měsíci

    Really got a lot of quality information from the comment section. Thanks.

  • @Adonis-qb5ze
    @Adonis-qb5ze Před 6 měsíci +2

    Nah
    I think because it is expensive to have an child, I sure don't see any millionaires nor billionaire with less than 3 kids

  • @eeveepro9171
    @eeveepro9171 Před rokem +7

    Tip for the future, don't defuse a bomb with scissors, their rubbing could create a spark and reignite the fuse

    • @markstein2845
      @markstein2845 Před 2 měsíci

      Don’t worry, in the canvas word, the physics don’t exist, we have to manually deattach the fuse cause scissors dont work as they should in the canvas

  • @3Black.1Red
    @3Black.1Red Před rokem +7

    2:22 that pun was the bomb yo😂

  • @gorilladisco9108
    @gorilladisco9108 Před rokem +6

    "Women with better education choose to have less children."
    Amy Coney Barrett : "Hold my beer."

    • @luigimrlgaming9484
      @luigimrlgaming9484 Před rokem +1

      Well overpopulation doesn’t happen not just because woman are better educated but probably because more people can do things to support more than just themselves

  • @Sultan_Zaki
    @Sultan_Zaki Před rokem +3

    For their first point on poverty, they understand that more then $2 a day still isn't good like wow I got 2.5 dollars time to go buy everything I need and more!

  • @D.Jay.
    @D.Jay. Před rokem +18

    The big thing that defused the bomb is the exponential yield of food per acre due to new types of fertilizers and their ease of production.

    • @MinuteEarth
      @MinuteEarth  Před rokem +4

      That certainly helps feed the giant population we have today!

    • @firstname4337
      @firstname4337 Před rokem +1

      that idiot leaders in Canada want to ban nitrogen fertilizer to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and combat climate change -- they claim its not a ban -- they say "It is absolutely not a fertilizer ban. It is a strategy to reduce our emissions. Farmers need to be mindful there are not many growing seasons left before 2030, so it's vital they figure out how best to implement sustainable practices as soon as possible." --- idiots

    • @markzambelli
      @markzambelli Před rokem +4

      And the wondrous benefits of GMO to boost yeild.

    • @oliverwilson11
      @oliverwilson11 Před rokem +1

      Completely unsustainable production but yes

    • @Shnarfbird
      @Shnarfbird Před rokem +3

      The rivers are choked with nitrates

  • @eduardos.c.desouza8895
    @eduardos.c.desouza8895 Před rokem +26

    I think there is a problem because it is assumed that countries will continue to develop and women will continue to have more years of education. Recently I'm not entirely sure this is going to be the case.

    • @eksbocks9438
      @eksbocks9438 Před rokem +1

      That's because of all the push-back from Egoist people.
      What people don't realize when it comes to human nature is that not all humans have the same way of thinking.
      In fact when civilization was first being formed, our ancestors were literally in a tug-of-war with people who didn't want it.
      They liked all the Tribal conflict. Even though it wasn't right.

    • @ten_tego_teges
      @ten_tego_teges Před rokem +1

      Examples?

    • @titandarknight2698
      @titandarknight2698 Před rokem +2

      I don't really understand. What does women getting more education have to do with this problemm

    • @luigimrlgaming9484
      @luigimrlgaming9484 Před rokem +1

      @@ten_tego_teges Afghanistan, Fanatic Islamists. I think that’s what he’s talking about.

    • @AntiAnglo-Saxon
      @AntiAnglo-Saxon Před 6 měsíci

      Asia will leave Europe and rest of the world behind in each and every aspect sooner or later. It's inevitable

  • @BlobFishSucksAtThings
    @BlobFishSucksAtThings Před rokem +1

    I love the popular media reference.

  • @Fraudulent_behavior
    @Fraudulent_behavior Před 4 měsíci

    I like all the little references to pop culture like at 1:11 you can see penny and nimona from the new pokemon games

  • @manstie
    @manstie Před rokem +13

    You also forgot the part where more people are single because it's easier to be a social recluse.
    And the part where houses are too expensive.

    • @cattysplat
      @cattysplat Před 3 měsíci +1

      The internet provides. Who needs to be social and sexual in real life when the virtual covers that and so much more.

  • @cosygoose1813
    @cosygoose1813 Před rokem +5

    Notice the pokemon scarlet and violet references. Also the problem is the age difference in some places its predicted that most of population will be retired in a few years.

  • @miral7312
    @miral7312 Před rokem +1

    Too much of something or too little is never good. Always strive for the middle part

  • @verbosequestion
    @verbosequestion Před 11 měsíci +3

    The norm for most of history was very slow growth or stagnation, so I'd ideally place that as the standard, under population causes just as many problems as overpopulation but it seems that nobody is talking about how dire of a situation most industrial countries are when their population isn't replenishing itself.

    • @marcinkonieczny3737
      @marcinkonieczny3737 Před 6 měsíci

      Wojny, choroby, pandemie i niedostatki zawsze dotykały wszystkich gatunków które nadmiernie się namnożyły. Jeśli chcielibyśmy mieć spokój z pandemiami wojnami, biedą i na nic nie chorować, to musielibyśmy jako ludzkość zdecydować na harmonię demograficzną. Ale tego z kolei nigdy nie zaakceptują wielcy tego świata. Bo główny problem jest w tym, że większość przywódców politycznych i religijnych ma głęboko W POWAŻANIU dobro ludzi, jak i przyszłych pokoleń. A interesują ich jedynie ich własne partykularne interesy. A te nakazują, by mieć jak najwięcej podatników (niewolników), taniej siły roboczej, wyznawców, i mięsa armatniego, gdyż od tej ilości zależy ile znaczą wśród innych podobnych wielkich tego świata.
      A dla "bydła" (czyli dla nas) które (mentalnie) hodują, mają bajki o emeryturach, postępie, depopulacji, itp, brednie.

  • @Seagull_House
    @Seagull_House Před rokem +7

    i feel like we shouldn't just expect the economy to keep growing, it always does eventually have to shrink, and i feel like it would just be better to reorganise it to stop it from growing at all, since thats the main cause of economic collapse

    • @kosatochca
      @kosatochca Před rokem

      The basic drive up factor of the economic growth is the demographic growth. More people are creating more businesses and adding up to more GDP, so when this population trend reverses itself then your economy won’t grow anymore. I doubt we need to artificially limit economic activity except the circumstances when it harms environment

    • @GiRR007
      @GiRR007 Před rokem

      Growth and collapse aren't linked linked like that. Even if you were to somehow completely stop economic growth that won't stop economic collapse.

    • @Seagull_House
      @Seagull_House Před rokem +3

      @@kosatochca actually, there are many economies today (such as the japanese one) that are growing as their populations are stagnant or even shrinking- it isn't population growth causing new business actively that grows economies, it's already wealthy people fiddling around with papers and stocks, and banks storing and lending money that grows the economy the most.
      the issue here is how our capitalist institutions have been left to grow and fester, benefiting a hand full of extremely rich people, while by its unintended design leading us into climate and social catastrophe. the reason i think we need to either set up limits on this system (or preferably rebuilding society without any kind of market for capitalism to leech onto and reinfect human society) is because letting economies grow in perpetuity can only lead to destruction and instability. sure, no one would be a billionaire, but everyone would be many times freer and could do nearly as they pleased without needing those untold billions in their bank accounts anyway.

  • @eliza4101
    @eliza4101 Před rokem +12

    I think focusing on population instead of consumption was a flaw all along. Not all people consume as much of the earth resources, so higher populations will not create shortages on their own. The concern about overpopulation, while I believe genuine on the part of scientists, was latched onto by ecofascist movements to try and vilify poor families in the Global South despite the fact that the average person in the developed world consumes more resources then someone in a underdeveloped or developing area. The issue with talking about population is population is just a proxy for resource consumption, and when talking about sustainability and environmentalism I think it is better to talk directly about consumption itself and what societies in the developed world can do to limit consumption to safer levels as well as help the developing world grow in more sustainable ways

    • @fsexplorer9727
      @fsexplorer9727 Před rokem +5

      the most based comment seen in this section, only one seeing that we can increase population and maintain a carbon-neutral society at the same time.

    • @GiRR007
      @GiRR007 Před rokem +2

      Consumption I dont think is the problem either. The bigger problem is waste. We consume alot because we waste alot, less waste=less consumption.

    • @spaghettiisyummy.3623
      @spaghettiisyummy.3623 Před rokem +2

      Mega Based.

    • @oliverwilson11
      @oliverwilson11 Před rokem +1

      Antinatalist environmentalists: "The best thing rich Westerners can do to reduce consumption is to not have kids"
      Pronatalist socialists: "Why do you hate the Global South you ecofascist"

  • @slayermate07
    @slayermate07 Před rokem +1

    Should really retitle this video to “why the developed and some upper tier developing countries are having population decline”

  • @BabyNoob270
    @BabyNoob270 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I can solo humanity in a fight.

  • @vemto8755
    @vemto8755 Před rokem +20

    can you do more/contiunation vids specifically explaining the effects of underpopulation? this isn't clear enough, im dumb

    • @jmanius1
      @jmanius1 Před rokem +8

      Lots of old people who can't work as much (and also require more costly care) and less young people to pick up the demand for labor in the economy. Basically economies would start creating less value than the societies they support could reasonably handle long-term

    • @prateekkarn9277
      @prateekkarn9277 Před rokem +7

      If you can look for my comment I've written in detail of a scenario that will happen due to underpopulation. Gist of it is, you either let the old people who retire die to prioritise survival for the younger generation, or die from mass shortages of necessities from an economic collapse.

    • @xponen
      @xponen Před rokem +5

      we often think that underpopulation meant less people, but we forgot what it actually meant is everybody become old people.

    • @saosaqii5807
      @saosaqii5807 Před rokem +1

      @@prateekkarn9277 there is no die from "mass shortage" in a overpopulation scenario. It's much more boring and less dramatic than we gotta let all the old people die or everyone dies.
      What actually happens when overpopulation happens is there would be so much more people that demand for limited goods would increase proportionally. Because of that things get more expensive and people decide to have less kids and buy less overall. Because people can't afford as much we reach a new equilibrium of supply and demand that might cause a few death and increased poverty but nothing dramatic but overall a lesser quality of life and a negative birth rate until the population becomes stable again.
      This is literally what we see in all populations and products. Things just go into a new equilibrium. Overpopulation won't become extreme unless billions of people magically appear. No once it comes to the limit it naturally stays at equilibrium or falls off slowly.

    • @Agent-ie3uv
      @Agent-ie3uv Před rokem

      @@xponen old people is still people 🙄🤔

  • @ChoralAlchemist
    @ChoralAlchemist Před rokem +4

    Lol, Aizawa being a voice of reason is very on brand.

  • @zeta_la_seta
    @zeta_la_seta Před rokem +1

    I wonder if the reduction of poverty numbers include some continents like south America were unequality and poverty are actually becoming way way worse as years go by.

  • @impactsuit9871
    @impactsuit9871 Před 4 měsíci +1

    When I was born, world population was half of what it's today...
    There was a small river next to my house with FISH, turtles and even occasional animals such as otters and wildcats...
    It's a SEWER today...
    Underpopulation is NOT a problem, its a NECESSITY...

  • @vinny4765
    @vinny4765 Před rokem +6

    Japan is a weird example to use because you don't take into consideration how expensive having children is over there. Even if you actually wanted children, between the housing expenses and the amount of time you work, makes it way too unrealistic to bother.

    • @lonestarr1490
      @lonestarr1490 Před rokem +6

      I don't see how this makes Japan special. Housing is becoming more expensive virtually everywhere in the Western World as well.

  • @richardmetzler7909
    @richardmetzler7909 Před rokem +19

    It seems that demographics is a game that you cannot really win. It's great for a country to have a growing population with lots of energetic young people - right up to the point where it's not great because the country is overpopulated and natural resources are depleted, and then it's about 30 years too late to do something about it. I suppose the best long-term solution would be a slowly decreasing population until we've shrunk to the point where everyone can sustainably enjoy a reasonable level of wealth.

    • @magilviamax8346
      @magilviamax8346 Před rokem +1

      Yes...if we are not too late already...

    • @NoMustang273
      @NoMustang273 Před rokem +8

      I think the US has arguably won it, their population pyramid is very solid with equal numbers across the board because of immigration and their population is pretty stagnant. Of course that won't necessarily last forever but for now, they've got it best.

    • @yourboi1842
      @yourboi1842 Před rokem +1

      I think it works but I also think the borders need to be closed apart from people of high education levels. Think of how fast people reproduce in India it’s like gonna be 2 trillion more or some huge ass number in a few years. They are filled with 5 kid family’s. A lot of people don’t think about that when we talk about to open our borders. No one thinks logically about our population declining to distribute wealth. If we let the uneducated people in that reproduce with 5 kids per family we are going to keep the country filled with the current overpopulated statistics. Even if they just emigrate in and don’t reproduce here. We will never achieve a peaceful statistic of fair land distribution. Our population is declining this is our chance to get people to actually be able to afford land.

    • @yourboi1842
      @yourboi1842 Před rokem +2

      Even if we let them all in to “be nice” our forests will be de-forested to build land for them. Our farms will be increased in size. We need to downsize all those things and grow our natural lands back. There is no nice solution it’s let them in and let the planet burn. We need forested land. We can’t have a green earth and have large amounts of immigrants. We need to take advantage of the declining birth rates.

    • @NoMustang273
      @NoMustang273 Před rokem +1

      @@yourboi1842 Fertility rate's been below replacement level for a while now in India with population planned to be peaking around 1.6 billion between 2048 to 2060. I have no idea where the hell you got 2 trillion from, the world population is currently 8 billion.
      Regardless while I agree that population decline can lead to wealth concentration, the problem is that our current economic model revolves around a growing population or at least able to stay constant. Older groups spend less and save more which kills any way of growing further.
      Countries like Japan and S.Korea therefore outsource and export to other countries but it's not a viable solution since their incomes have stagnated, and the burden on the youth will inevitably get worse. We need to change our entire outlook to focus on quality of life versus constant growth or advance AI and robotics to reduce the demand for labour so people can afford the time and money to have kids again. But the latter is unlikely imo since new innovations are never equitable and are heavily in favour of the rich which we're already seeing today.

  • @ComradeCorvus
    @ComradeCorvus Před rokem +1

    1:51 Rika got her higher education, I am so proud of her.

  • @goldenpotato925
    @goldenpotato925 Před 5 měsíci +2

    0:45 About 2$. It it's including rate of inflation or not? (1970. 2$ are 14.99$ in 2022 and 2022 2$ are 0.27$ in 1970)