Rousseau, Malthus, and Thanos Were Wrong
The authors of Superabundance make a strong case that more people and industrialization mean a richer, more prosperous world.

"This universe is finite. Its resources, finite. If life is left unchecked, life will cease to exist." So declares the Marvel supervillain Thanos near the end of Avengers: Infinity War, when he destroys half of humanity with the snap of his fingers.
In Superabundance: The Story of Population Growth, Innovation, and Human Flourishing on an Infinitely Bountiful Planet, Marian L. Tupy of the Cato Institute and Gale L. Pooley of Brigham Young University–Hawaii note that Thanos was channeling millennia-old critiques of progress and population growth. In the best-known version of this argument, the English political economist Thomas Malthus contended that an increase in the number of people inevitably means famine and starvation.
But Malthus—and Thanos—are wrong. The past 200 years have seen historically huge increases in the number of people living on planet Earth, taking us from 1 billion in 1800 to 8 billion in 2022, but we are flourishing more than ever before and living longer, more productive lives.
In December, Reason's Nick Gillespie sat down with Tupy and Pooley. They discussed how the real prices of our most basic necessities—and most of our luxury goods—have declined over time and how free markets and human innovation make our planet infinitely bountiful.
Reason: Who is Julian Simon and why is he so important?
Pooley: Julian Simon actually was this obscure economist. There was a book that was published in 1968 by Stanford University biologist Paul Ehrlich titled The Population Bomb. And [Ehrlich] makes these claims about how we're facing this extinction because there are too many people. Julian actually said that when he originally read the book, he thought, well, this theory seems to be reasonable. But as he began to check the facts, what he discovered, to his surprise, is that as the population increased, all these resources became even more abundant.
So he and Ehrlich began to have this quite public dispute about what was going to happen in the future. What is that relationship between population and resources? And it finally ended up in a bet, and Julian said, "Look, pick any nonrenewable resource for any period over a year, and I'll bet you that it's going to become more abundant." And so Ehrlich picked five metals: copper, chromium, nickel, tin, and tungsten. They had the bet for a 10-year period from 1980 to 1990. And that's when Julian really made Ehrlich accountable for what he'd claimed. At the end of that 10-year period, Ehrlich had to write Simon a check for $576.
When did humans start worrying about running out of resources because of population growth?
Tupy: People have been wondering about the relationship between resource abundance and population growth for at least two-and-a-half thousand years. The ancient Greeks thought about it. The ancient Romans thought about it. The Chinese thought about it. The Indians thought about it. But over the last 200 years—specifically since Malthus published his famous essay on population—most people have been generally negative to our population growth. There was an expectation that as the population grew, resources would become more expensive, therefore scarcer, and there would be some kind of calamity.
[But] looking at hundreds of different commodities, fuels, minerals, metals, even finished goods and some services, everything has become cheaper in terms of "time price." People simply have to work less in order to buy things which are essential goods and commodities in order to survive.

What is the concept of "time price"?
Pooley: We buy things with money, but we really pay for them with time. How much time does it take you to earn the money to buy that thing? So there's a money price that you can express in dollars and cents, but there's a time price that you can express in hours and minutes. The time price equation is real simple. It's just how much it cost you divided by your hourly income.
Time is this universal constant. You can't inflate it; you can't counterfeit it. Of the seven fundamental majors in science, six of them go back to time. It's this fundamental feature. So if you can move economics from thinking of money to thinking in time, I think we then allow that discipline to become more scientific.
We all get 24 hours a day. So if instead of income inequality you can think about time inequality, I think it's much more informative and revealing in terms of what kind of life we have.
Do we lose something when we just focus on everything as a function of the average wage given to the average laborer in a given period?
Tupy: No measurement is perfect, but there are some very important things for which time price is ideal, especially things which are of greatest importance to the least fortunate among us, be they in America or be they in Ghana. A bag of potatoes is the same today as it was in 1700s Germany. A bag of oranges is the same today as it is in Ghana. We are measuring basic food items and we are always very careful to compare bananas with bananas, oranges with oranges, a pound of beef with a pound of beef. We look at things that people need for their ordinary daily survival. Once you switch over from basic commodities to services things get more complicated.
We did try to estimate one type of service and that is cosmetic surgery. We are conscious of the fact that in America, whilst food and electronics and things like that are becoming cheaper, education and health care are definitely becoming more expensive relative to wages. So what we wanted to see is what would happen to a "medical procedure" if it is subjected to the proper functioning of the market—you pay for it. It's largely deregulated. And what we found is that when it comes to plastic surgery or cosmetic surgery, they are growing at a superabundant rate. Everything is becoming cheaper when the market is allowed to function.
What is the Maginot Line that you are crossing between abundance and "superabundance"?
Tupy: The Maginot Line is the rate of growth of population. Ehrlich was claiming that as the population grew, everything would become more expensive and therefore abundance would be declining. What we found is that everything is actually growing in abundance, at least the things that we have measured. But abundance can be growing at two different speeds. It can be growing at a lower rate than population growth or a higher rate than population growth. And what we found was that it almost invariably grows at a higher rate than population growth. So if you have population growth of 2 percent, but abundance is increasing by 3 or 4 percent, that's superabundance. The gap between population growth and superabundance, that tells you that human beings create this new knowledge which is capable of increasing standards of living.
Why is Thanos, the supervillain from the Avengers franchise, invoked in your book as the "anti–Julian Simon"?
Pooley: Thanos illustrates this ideology of scarcity. He makes a statement: The universe is finite and its resources are finite. He's correct on the first part. We do live on a planet with a fixed number of physical atoms. But the second part of his statement's wrong, because resources aren't a function of atoms. Atoms are important, but resources are really a function of knowledge.
When you take the material world—atoms—and you organize them and you add knowledge to them: That's when they become resources. And that knowledge is really what creates their value.
Can you describe the best indicators of how we are doing so much better in ways that surprise and stun people?
Tupy: We looked at resources relative to blue-collar worker wages. And we found, for example, that in terms of time prices, rice has declined by 99 percent in terms of how much time you have to work in order to buy a pound of rice. And that means that now you get 112 pounds of rice for the same amount of work that would've bought you one pound of rice in 1850.
So in comparing 1850 to 2018, what we found was a number of different commodities—sugar, nickel, rice, tea, rye, palm oil, pork, cotton, wheat, cocoa—have fallen by 99 percent. On average, it's about 98 percent. So if you had to work for something for 100 minutes to buy it in 1850, you now have to work 2 minutes to buy it.
How has time scarcity diminished throughout history?
Pooley: The time abundance is what we're really enjoying as well. We get this time abundance and we get a choice abundance.
If we go back to 1960 and look at somebody living in India and assume they spent eight hours a day—and a lot of these guys were—they're making $90 a year GDP [gross domestic product] per capita. So they spend their whole day working to earn enough rice to subsist on. Today, the price of rice falls by 80 or 90 percent. They only have to spend an hour a day. So they end up with six more hours a day that they can now devote to something else: to learning, to earning the money to buy a bicycle. They get to move out of that time scarcity into this more time-abundant zone where now they're much more similar to someone in the U.S.
When you give 2 billion people between China and India their freedom to have five or six or seven more hours a day to devote [to other pursuits], they then become creators to grow and discover new knowledge.

Is income inequality still a problem around the world?
Tupy: The cool thing about studying economic development and the workings of capitalism in the post–World War II era, but especially since globalization about 40 years ago, is to see the different kinds of inequalities which have just collapsed.
The left continues to obsess about income inequality, but look at the gap between infants dying in the Third World and in the West, how much it has shrunk. Maternal mortality, time inequality, calorie inequality—there are hundreds of different inequalities which are shrinking around the world as a result of economic development. So even though income inequality may still be increasing in some countries, income inequality across the world has shrunk.
How do we get more superabundance?
Pooley: We believe that abundance is a function of population and the freedom to innovate. You can have an increase in population, but if they're not free to innovate, you really don't have this increase in abundance. But if you add a small measure of freedom—for example, the China situation—you suddenly see people begin to escape poverty because of this freedom to innovate, which is really the freedom to go out and discover and activate valuable new knowledge.
What role does the size of the population play in creating more abundance?
Pooley: Innovation is a function of invention and invention is a function of ideas and ideas are a function of human beings. So you've got to have human beings to be able to have this idea creation and discovery process, and then they have to have the freedom to act on those ideas.
Is population growth absolutely necessary for long-term economic growth?
Tupy: Yes, it's an interaction between population growth and the growth of human freedom. For example, you could imagine a situation around 2060 or after where the global population starts declining but suddenly the entire world becomes free. Libertarian paradise, where you can say anything, you can invest anywhere. You could offset the decline in population by having a greater share of humanity living in freedom, being able to fully participate in the global economy and innovation.
But if the future around 2060 is one where the population stabilizes and then starts declining, and at the same time freedom starts disappearing from the world, or it's going to be restricted to only a few countries, then of course you would expect to see lower economic growth.
Pooley: I'd add one more thought to that. When population declines, you have this other effect of the demographic age: Not only are you not having more people, [but] your average age is getting older. So you end up like Japan, where the average age is much older. Simon highlighted it: Innovation primarily comes from young people, and you have to have more young people to innovate. Even though you've got a large population, if the average age is 65, you're not going to see innovation either.
Japan is the only Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development country that has fewer people now than in 2000 and it's a relatively free economy compared to other parts of the world. What are they doing wrong?
Pooley: We did a little study on Japan, and as their population tends to flatten out and then start to decline, their GDP per capita is also following that same trend. [It] slows down, flattens out, and then it's going to decline. It's a good place to live. Their life expectancy is like 88 years in Japan, so it's a great place to live if you want to live long. But it's not that great of a place to live if you're expecting lots of new innovation and growth.
What is Romanticism and how does it continue to influence critics of material progress?
Tupy: I think it starts with [Jean-Jacques] Rousseau. All of the figures of the Enlightenment understood that life was getting better, that people were increasing their income so they could see progress around them. The first progressive century is the 18th century, really, especially toward the end.
But that's basically where the agreement ended. In comes Rousseau, and he says, "All this new wealth is corrupting us." The other figures of the Enlightenment were saying, "The more wealth you have, the better the society becomes." He says that it's corrupting us, that it's making us less moral, it's making us more separated from nature, it's enslaving us. You see this argument in fascism, in Nazism and communism, all the way to modern environmentalism. Basically, it's based on this notion of Rousseau's noble savage.
Where do you see the environmentalist movement going? How do you convince environmentalists to take the superabundance agenda seriously?
Tupy: I always begin when talking about this subject by distinguishing smart and well-meaning environmentalists who care about the planet but whose hierarchy of values has the planet and human flourishing at roughly the same level. People like [author and activist Michael] Shellenberger, people like [cognitive psychologist] Steve Pinker—they care about the environment, they want to clean the environment, they want a safe planet, but at the same time, they understand that there has to be a balance. On the other hand, you've got the extreme environmentalists who really see humanity as a cancer on the planet.
There are some positive things happening on the environmental side of things, partly because of the catastrophe that Europe is undergoing right now. The opposition to nuclear power, for example, seems to be losing steam. People are realizing that in order for civilization to continue, you have to have energy.
At the same time, the megaphone is definitely still with the people claiming the coming of the apocalypse. In the last chapter of the book, we point to a number of public opinion polls, both in the United States and in the rest of the world, which show that increasingly women and parents are making their choices about how many babies to have depending on environmental concerns. "We are going to run out of resources. Our children are going to starve." People tell us that "we are not going to have children because the world is ending."
How do we know that the world is not running out of resources?
Pooley: On the resource side, look at the prices of things. If we were truly running out of these things, the prices would be increasing dramatically. So the price contains its information about the relative scarcity of things, and then the time price really goes to the next level of saying, well, how much time does it take you to earn the money to buy that thing? And all of these products and services are becoming more and more abundant to us.
What got you interested in superabundance?
Tupy: About 20 years ago, I realized that after the fundamental failure of communism, parts of the green movement became a home for watermelons: people who are green on the outside but red on the inside. If you asked me 10 or 15 years ago what is the ultimate agenda of the green extremists, I wouldn't give you an answer because it was hammered into me not to impugn other people's motives. We now thankfully live in a world where the cat is out of the bag. They are explicit. The goal of the extreme environmentalist movement is the destruction of the capitalist system. Some people may find that appealing. I don't, and I intend to fight against it.
Why do people believe that wealth creation and innovation are inherently destructive?
Pooley: [Karl] Marx felt like the production problem had been solved. His obsession was on distribution. So if you assume the world can produce all of this wealth and abundance and it's distribution that you need to worry about, then you can become obsessed with that. But we still fundamentally have this production problem. How do things get made?
If you grew up in a very wealthy society, if you never actually have to do things with your hands and you're in academia, it's very easy to be kind of caught up in these ideas about how if I was in charge, given my motives and my ethics, I would do it this way. When we allow intellectuals to have that kind of authority and power in a culture that haven't really dealt with the realities and have never really paid the costs for being wrong, then you're going to have this attention to that kind of an ideology.
So our pushback once again is: You've got to look at the facts. You've got to think about the historical perspective of how expensive things used to be and why they are so abundant today. It wasn't because we came up with a new distribution system. It's because we've been able to continually innovate. And that requires human freedom.
Tupy: Thank God that nobody had the power to stop innovation in 1900. There's a famous anecdote of somebody who said that we can shut down the patent office in Washington, D.C., because everything that could have been invented was. And that was 24 years before antibiotics came online. It's incredibly silly to think that we have reached the pinnacle of prosperity.
This interview has been condensed and edited for style and clarity.
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In before Sarc claims if you understand illegal immigration has a cost you are a Malthusian. Yes he made that argument.
Wow. Did he really?
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Was he shitfaced drunk again?
Does the pope shit in his hat?
When we allow intellectuals to have that kind of authority and power in a culture that haven't really dealt with the realities and have never really paid the costs for being wrong, then you're going to have this attention to that kind of an ideology.
"It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong."
Thomas Sowell
IMO the problem is more that just intellectuals. Once upon a time, perhaps as recently as 100 years ago, most people in the US understood where things cam from. Many people still lived on farms or in farming communities, or perhaps were one generation removed. The had relatively complete knowledge of where food comes from. The same was true for manufacturing, transportation, and almost all other components of the then "modern" economy. Even the technology used at the time was something most people could understand.
Now too many people in the US are not just ignorant but presumptive. Food comes from the supermarket. Electricity comes out of the wall socket. Stuff just happens. And the technology is incomprehensible magic.
These people then listen to their preferred politicians who can make ridiculous claims, about how terrible things are, and, most destructive, about how to fix things. But these solutions are equally grounded in ignorance, and would likely lead to the very catastrophes they claim to prevent.
When did this ignorance start? It seems to me we still learned all of that stuff in government schools in the 1960s.
It started when we didn't have to work on farms and build our own stuff. Basically we no longer needed to know. That means we can busy our minds with other things.
Like inventing and believing one imaginary crisis after another?
We're three steps out of the cave with a lot of toys. Meaning we still have caveman brains. Brains that are well adapted to identifying threats. While we've managed to eliminate most of these major threats to our health and safety, our brains are still searching for them and trying to mitigate them with the same survivalist fervor. It's just human nature.
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It's actually impressive how much modern behavior and response can be explained with evolutionary biology and psychology. Really fascinating, honestly.
I can imagine it started with second generation urban dwellers. And what you learned (and how complete that learning was) in the 60s is nothing like the curriculum since 2000.
1970's.
In the 1960s High Schools and Universities still taught Latin and Greek so that any student could read Galileo, Newton, Copernicus, Plato, Aristotle, the Bible, etc. themselves in their original forms, as the foundational texts of Western science, philosophy, medicine and history.
I am thinking more about "practical" knowledge. How to locate and dig a water well. How to plant and grow vegetables on a scale that fully feeds a family (and how to preserve them for year-long support). How to repair a broken machine with your own hands and tools. How to make light and heat in your home.
IMO replacing this type of knowledge with how to use a smart phone (not how to design and build a smart phone) makes us all very dumb, and susceptible to magical thinking--and political manipulation.
Then go buy the Foxfire books. You'll learn everything from water dowsing to making your own wagon wheels. I'd rather hire someone to drill a well and drive a car. But that's just me.
“You’ll learn everything from water dowsing to making your own wagon wheels.”
Exactly. Until one’s neighbor comes up with a couple of specialized tools and jigs which permit them to make wagon wheels at one-tenth the cost-in-time which you can make them, and you decide it’s more profitable to load up your wagon with wheels and sell them all over the county. And so it begins again.
I learned recently that there's a lot of debate over the quality of classic guitars. You know what I mean, right? A Les Paul from the 50s is supposed to be superior to one from today. Turns out that with modern machining they're able to make better sounding instruments. At least that's what some argue. So if you own a classic guitar, sell it to a Boomer. Because when they die, so will the market.
The strangest thing in the guitar world was when someone in Marketing came up with "relic" guitars. We'll sell you a guitar that has been artificially aged in the shop to make it look like you've put in the same hours practicing as, say, Jeff Beck.
I have proper shame that my guitars don't show more wear and tear from practicing, and it shows in the mediocrity of my playing.
"The strangest thing in the guitar world was when someone in Marketing came up with “relic” guitars."
Yeah, I find that pretty laughable, myself.
There's a mix of truth and hype to that, though. They did have access to some really nice, aged wood back then. And if you used that wood well, you could make a very nice sounding, nice looking guitar.
But does it really matter much what kind of wood forms the body of a solid body electric? Probably not.
“There’s a mix of truth and hype to that, though. They did have access to some really nice, aged wood back then. And if you used that wood well, you could make a very nice sounding, nice looking guitar.”
Well, yes. And, no. Many years ago, a well-known luthier and classical guitar player made the sides and back of one of his guitars out of papier mache. It sounded just fine.
The top seems to be a bit more critical, but I am quite pleased what is being done with carbon fiber and other materials. And even if the ultimate is one or more varieties of spruce, well, there isn’t exactly a shortage of spruce….
“But does it really matter much what kind of wood forms the body of a solid body electric? Probably not.”
Agreed. Much more important is the density. And even there, the pickups and other hardware are probably much more significant.
One another front, sometime this year I’m going to replace the electric piano I bought 25 years ago with a new one. Amazing what I can get now for about $650.
"You know what I mean, right? "
One can pay as little as $10,000 for a 1920's Gibson F5 mandolin. Or one can pay in excess of $200,000 for one signed by Lloyd Loar.
An equivalent, US-made, hand-made mandolin, of equal or often times, better quality, can be had starting in the $5,000 range. With CNC machining and other modern technologies, just about all instruments being built today are better, at least in the consistency of their quality, than most built just a generation or so ago.
What drives the price up of a "vintage" Les Paul is not the quality -- it's "collectors" -- they see it as an investment.
Exactly. Unload your vintage instruments on vintage people before the prices become vintage.
The same thing goes for violins.
https://www.science.org/content/article/million-dollar-strads-fall-modern-violins-blind-sound-check
Musicians are gullible.
"Musicians are gullible."
Some are. Some of us are actually fairly bright, or a least edumacated.
I would love to have Garcia's "Wolf," but $1.3 million is a bit steep for me. Especially considering that I hardly ever play electric guitar.
A final note.
Some 20 or 30 years ago (longer?) the first violinist of the NY Phil had his violin stolen. A Stradivari, of course. These start at about $8 million these days. He actually recovered it, and as it was being inspected for possible , the luthier discovered it was a fake. Nuff said.
Stradivarius made the best violins (ever) in the 1700s, and they haven't been improved upon since. His secret (beyond best in class craftsmanship) was the density of the wood, due to the compactness of the annual growth rings, due to the Little Ice Age. So global warming even made violins worse.
If that's the explanation, luthiers should get wood from farther north.
The Foxfire series does have some fantastic old-time Appalachian skills like make a still and the 'shine that comes from it, making gunpowder, guncotton, and Cordite, as well as making a muzzleloader from wooden stock to blacksmithed parts to finished product. They also have great soapmaking and food preservation techniques, furniture and toy making and "other affairs of plain living."
However, the Foxfire Series also catalogues the superstitions and junk science of bygone eras as well. Dowsing, whether for water or oil, is a bunch of woo, as is smearing motor oil on burns, herbal remedies, faith healing, snake-handling, and bringing good luck with "Hex Signs" over the barn door. And while singing while churning makes the time pass better, it doesn't make the butter come faster.
Nota Bene but also Caveat Emptor.
Hell, I picked it up from government schools in the 80s and 90s.
Schools in the 70's were still focused on teaching math and grammar and history, using traditional methods. But my younger siblings going to school in the 80's were already learning "new math" and teamwork and white man bad.
Where was that?
I was the youngest, and I graduated about the time you did. I don’t know what happened with education during the 80s.
Guess I got lucky then. I just got regular old addition, subtraction, multiplication, division, fractions, etc. Though there was a significant difference between my early grade school in Virginia and my later grade school in Hawaii, and then high school in New Mexico. But I was also on the AP track, which may have also contributed.
Thomas Sowell on "experts"
"You can run through an impressive list of things and disasters brought about by people with high IQs" --Thomas Sowell.
I doubt Sowell would agree that therefore go with what stupid people think. Intelligence is necessary but not sufficient.
This is the macro-trend that people never understand. In the short term, it is entirely possible to have shortages and resource depletion. But over the long run, the resources available to humanity are (for all intents and purposes) infinite.
The US untapped some of the largest oil reserves in the world when it doubled down on fracking. There are more minerals in Near Earth Asteroids than have been excavated in human history. The earth’s mantle is chock-full of gold and silver and platinum. Even when people talk about shortages of Nickel, lithium or “Rare earth metals” for batteries, we are talking about actual production, not reserves of these minerals in the first place.
There exist unimaginable stores of these resources, available for the taking. The question is whether we can do so in a net-positive way. We get easy resources, and the next level of resources are locked behind some sort of energy-sink. We go from easily appropriated trees, to digging coal from the ground, to getting oil from seeps, to drilling into reservoirs, to hydraulically fracturing it out of permeable rock. We go from exposed tin deposits, to mining iron, to eventually pulling asteroids into orbit.
The question for humanity is not whether there are enough resources. The question is whether we can unlock the next level of resources before our current stockpiles run dry. And the most surefire way to ensure that we fail is by interfering with markets so that capital outlays are distorted; by creating artificial shortages and increasing the price of energy; by deigning to replace the problem-solving of millions of interested actors with the machinations of a few Top Men.
While the malthusians were telling us that we had reached Peak Oil, the private sector was fracking our way to energy independence. While Top Men were flying us to space on 1970s shuttles and telling us “Space is hard”, Musk was driving down the cost of orbital delivery by orders of magnitude. The answer to human survival is free markets, and the enemy are elitists who would benevolently protect us within walled gardens that ultimately become our tombs.
Fossil fuels are finite. And when we run out, we are fucked, unless we figure out cold fusion before hand. How long until they are gone? Who knows for sure, but they will eventually be gone. Other resoucres will also be gone. We harvest more fish than can be replenished. Same thing happend in the US with market hunting. Just because things are good now, does not mean they always will be. The boon we are seeing now is technology driven, not resource driven. Every other living thing eventually grows until it depletes the things keeping it alive. The population collapses and eventually reaches equilibrium or goes extinct. Humans are no different.
Fossil fuels are finite. And when we run out, we are fucked, unless we figure out cold fusion before hand. How long until they are gone? Who knows for sure, but they will eventually be gone.
We’ll never run out of fossil fuels. What will happen is that they will get more and more expensive to extract from the ground until at some point alternative forms of energy will be cheaper. When that happens people will stop buying fossil fuels, and what’s left will remain there. What will that form of energy be and when will this happen? I don’t know. If I did I’d be rich. But it will happen. Likely in my lifetime.
Other resoucres will also be gone. We harvest more fish than can be replenished. Same thing happend in the US with market hunting.
Yet deer are now considered to be pests.
The boon we are seeing now is technology driven, not resource driven. Every other living thing eventually grows until it depletes the things keeping it alive. The population collapses and eventually reaches equilibrium or goes extinct. Humans are no different.
Except that we can shape our environment and have the ingenuity to find new uses for resources.
When Malthus made his original predictions the world population had just crested a billion, and over 90% of those people lived in abject poverty. In the two hundred plus years since the population has sextupled, yet only 10% of the people live in abject poverty.
To put it quite simply, he was very wrong.
Your reply indicates a gross lack of comprehension and understanding. It is well known that some of the resources humanity uses are finite. To pretend otherwise is just being obtuse.
Resource limits EXIST. It's just that simple. Humanity has grossly exceeded natural resource limits in fisheries, fossil fuels, forestry, land use, pollution and more. We are now all dealing with this fact, which is wrongly being mislabeled as "growth" as a "requirement". Growth is NOT a requirements - humanity cannot "infinitely grow" under the false assumption that this would (finally) mean "economic prosperity to all". This is utterly ridiculous.
The article and the associated video are specifically MISLEADING readers and viewers with the false paradigm of growth.
Well stated.
"Other resoucres will also be gone."
This is incorrect. Over and over you crazed malthusians assert it like it is common sense. And over and over, your predictions fail to occur. It would be laughable how wrong you are, except the folks like you have been scaring people for so long, that the joke has become old.
Again, there are more resources in the solar system than we, or our great, great, great, great grandchildren could imagine using. The problem is accessing those resources. And chicken littles like yourself always manage to fuck things up.
"We harvest more fish than can be replenished."
Again this is just wrong. Some places over fish. Other places do not, and have abundant fisheries. You should really educate yourself on the subject, because folks like you have been getting this wrong for nigh on 100 years.
C'mon the fish thing is the tragedy of the commons.
Fossil fuels can last for centuries. Nuclear fission can last for millennia. We don’t actually need any new technologies for a long time to continue, but we will get them anyway.
Humans are fundamentally different.
Time price was something on which Matt Ridley based his book "The Rational Optimist". That's about 10 yrs old. Nice to see someone else taking up the same line of reasoning.
Sadly, there are still people out there, including my Nephew, who buy into Peak Oil.
When I first heard of it, I thought they were talking about a spiral-shaped catheter. Get it? Peak Oil? Pee Coil? Definitely not "The Catheter That Hurts Less."
😉
*Ahem!* Anyway. I kept telling my Nephew that petroleum is made of dinosaur bones and other organic matter that sinks Into the Earth, where it's subject to heat and pressure for millions of years until it makes Black Gold Texas Tea. And as long as living things are born and die, we'll always have some petroleum.
Oh well, The World Will End Yesterday.
🙂
I saw on a late-night showing of Nova once that it actually rains diamonds on Neptune, due no doubt to the Planet’s intense gravitational pull on Carbon atoms in the atmosphere. I’ve subsequently found out that other of the Outer Planets also have diamonds as well.
My first thought was: ” If we souped-up chimps could catch and carry back just a fraction of that “rain,” the whole world would be better off on so many fronts!”
For one, we’d have building material that could withstand wildfires, earthquakes, floods, and anything else Nature could throw our way indefinitely! And all for cheap!
We could eternally end all the terrorists and gangsters who profiteer on “blood diamonds” mined by forced labor!
We could put The Cape of Good Hope Diamond and even bigger extraterrestrial rivals into cases of Cracker Jack and give them to kiddies as surprises! Maybe they could use them in crystal radio sets and pick up AM and Shortwave for a taste of nostalgia!
Fiancés and other Gold-Diggers could no longer hold men over a barrel for “one month’s salary” or whatever the stupid formula is for engagement and wedding rings!
Every laser could be a diamond laser, every electret crystal mic would have a diamond element, and every phonograph would have diamond needles as default equipment!
Put down the jeweler’s loup and pick up a jackhammer! There’s diamonds in them thar orbs!
Very good overall and I would like to think that they're correct - certainly their analysis of current superabundance in terms of time makes sense. But I am not entirely convinced about the future. We are currently in super-abundance, but prices are not particularly forward-looking. If a good economic model shows that sometime in the next 20 or 30 years there will be a shortage of rice, that won't show up in current rice prices*. This doesn't mean I think that Ehrlich is right. On the contrary, I think he's a busted flush. I am just open to a degree of scepticism, even though I think it more likely that we see a growth in the amount of synthetic foodstuffs accompanied by a rise in cheap noncarbon energy (which in turn solves desalinisation problems.)
*More detail: as anyone familiar with futures markets knows, the price of X for future delivery in say 5 or 10 years is not a function of expected price in 5 or 10 years but instead a function of spot price, funding costs and carry costs (except with some commodities whose prices is expected to be lower in the future). Now if people expect a major change in a future commodity price, in principle the spot price should change to accommodate it, but that assumes a degree of liquidity and efficiency that is seldom available in practice for very long-dated contracts.
You are ignoring government meddling. The only reason oil products are expensive now is government meddling. The only reason baby formula is once again scarce is government meddling. The only reason housing is scarce is government meddling.
There is no such thing as economic modeling, period, unless you consider opinions to be modeling.
Are you going to blame all commodity and product shortages on government meddling?
There is no such thing as economic modeling, period, unless you consider opinions to be modeling.
You are entitled to your ignorant opinion.
Your state takes more per gallon of gas than the oil company and the gas station make combined. And the federal government takes much more. Constraints on permits lower supply which increases price even more. Wham bam thank you ma'am. Yeah, government meddling increases prices. A lot.
Yes. That still doesn't mean that all shortages are due to government meddling, agreed?
No. The very term 'shortage' is government induced.
There's a Supply and it's Demand. When Supply goes low the Demand goes up; outside of government it's called reactive market and its fixed by suppliers meeting that demand.
Only GUNS can play with the laws of supply and demand to such an extent as to cause a 'shortage'.
The very term ‘shortage’ is government induced.
There’s a Supply and it’s Demand. When Supply goes low the Demand goes up; outside of government it’s called reactive market and its fixed by suppliers meeting that demand.
You're an idiot. Yes, a shortage of supply will in general eventually be met but it's not an instantaneous response - and in the case of say agricultural commodities, it cannot be.
Yes, a shortage of supply will in general eventually be met but it’s not an instantaneous response – and in the case of say agricultural commodities, it cannot be.
That’s what prices are for. Things are cheap where they’re plentiful and not so much where they’re not. That incentivizes people to make a profit bringing it from where it is to where it isn’t. The end result is the lowering of prices where it’s scarce.
Show me a modern famine and I’ll show you a government preventing prices from doing their job.
+10000 well said.
That incentivizes people to make a profit bringing it from where it is to where it isn’t.
Yes. Assuming that there is something there in the first place. This is not guaranteed. You're probably right about famine in general but so what? The point is that many shortages cannot instantly be fixed, regardless of price, nor is government meddling the invariable cause.
Do you think it takes a company no time to tool up a factory? Or do you think that it would take no time but that pesky government stops companies from tooling up?
Or do you adopt the even stupider line that if you move prices up so high that the demand drops and so demand equals the restricted supply, then really there's no shortage?
I don't know what point you are trying to make.
Prices don’t respond instantaneously, and suppliers may elect to set prices too low to get supply and demand in equilibrium. But it happens so infrequently and for so little time it’s not worth considering. You’d be hard-pressed to name a shortage of anything in our lifetimes that wasn’t caused by government interference, including threats about “price gouging.”
Funnily enough, Matt Levine's column today drew my attention to a developing shortage in Chartreuse: https://www.everydaydrinking.com/p/where-has-all-the-chartreuse-gone
I would hesitate to hail this as a major example of a non-government caused shortage, but it's an example nonetheless.
Happily I have half a litre still left, and I don't drink much.
A shortage in chartreuse? SJW Trigglypuff hair dyers hardest hit!
🙂
Yes, they are making basic free market economic points that probably every person in this commentariat is already familiar with. But they are bit too smug about it; or come across that way in the interview.
"This is how it has gone so far" is not an airtight argument that this is how it will continue to go. It's possible we are bumping up against some unique circumstances.
All true. Which really makes it extra weird that Goth Fonzie Woppo loves Jimmy Carter so damn much.
You know, the malaise in America, turn down your thermostat, put on a sweater, and only drive your car every other day and please keep it under 55 MPH at all times guy.
I mean, compared to the current guy...
I sense more than a hint of fixed-size pie thinking by all these catastrophists. Which leads me to speculate that most of them think the same way about economics in general, and the (re)distribution of wealth. Sounds like a bunch of earnest if delusional watermelons.
There’s that and there’s not taking into account the fact that we’re always tinkering and making things better. Had agricultural practices remained unchanged, Malthus’ predictions would have been correct. But he didn’t know what new inventions and improvements were coming. Neither do we.
And here’s the real counter-intuitive bit. Brainiacs like Steve Jobs and Bill Gates are one in a million. I mean that literally. Like you need a million people before one with a really great idea will emerge. That means the more people you have, the more great ideas you will have. So the solution to problems of scarcity and increased population is more people.
here’s not taking into account the fact that we’re always tinkering and making things better.
Technology, for short. One of the many things that Marx got wrong as well.
Like you need a million people before one with a really great idea will emerge.
More likely, you need fewer Stoke Pogeses and more urban areas.
I've been listening to Sowell's book on Marxism. Whoa boy oh boy did Marx have some silly theories. Linking value with labor was a real doozy, and it goes on from there.
Steve Jobs and Bill Gates are one in a million.
Which means that we have 7,800 of them globally.
-jcr
More thinking and free people.
Fixed The For You And Hopefully Everyons.
The wealth distribution argument is a little different, being composed of two main elements, one, that most of the profits of greater productivity have gone to a very small percentage of those who contributed to it - an argument from fairness that requires far more nuance than the loud voices on both sides are prepared to admit; and two, that greater wealth inequality leads to slower growth, which in developed economies is almost certainly true.
https://cepr.org/voxeu/columns/effects-income-inequality-economic-growth
I am thinking of more basic fixed pieness(?) (piety?) (pieology?). The root idea held by flat pie types is that, by definition, if anyone increases their wealth then it comes from loss of wealth held by others.
I will have to evaluate the arguments in Lederman and Bruckner but I reject intuitive calls for "fairness", especially when used to justify redistribution. I also reject any a priori claim that improvements in productivity have to be shared proportionately.
Which world would you prefer to live in? One where productivity increases slowly, along with GDP, and lower inequality? Or a world where a few innovators get rich, increasing not only GDP but the living standards of everyone, even the bottom tier?
Some things are a fixed pie. Government for example. It doesn’t create anything of value. All it does is shift money about. It starts with a fixed pie and people fight over their slice. And throughout most of history, getting rich meant plunder. To the victor goes the spoils. So until relatively recently, say the last few centuries, for the rich to get richer the poor had to get poorer.
A growing pie doesn’t make intuitive sense at first. I’ve tried a few ways to convince people that capitalism grows the pie, but it’s difficult. Often because they think of money as wealth, and stuff as junk. When money is simply how you acquire stuff. It’s the stuff that matters, not the money.
That goes into what the guy talked about in the article. As in measuring value by how much time it takes to work for it rather than how many dollars it cost. Getting that into peoples’ heads is remarkably difficult though.
I want the world where the government doesn't fuck with the money supply as much. And also a unicorn, while I'm wishing for the impossible. :-/
Seriously though, a lot of the modern "wealth inequality" of the current levels seems to stem from the complete decoupling of the currency from the gold standard. Average wages tracked GDP growth until the point where Nixon killed that, at which point they went flat. But the rate of increase in GDP didn't go up, that remained steady slope.
Someone did a study and said billionaires like Bezos only gained something like 3% of what society gained. If you want a specifically utilitarian reason to "allow" them to keep their riches, that's a pretty small commission, only half what realtors get from selling a house.
Or you could just remember what liberty is, and stop thinking up excuses to leave rich people alone.
And if you want to drag cronyism into the matter, then attack government for making cronyism possible and encouraging it; don't attack the people who take advantage of it.
What percentage of Amazon does Bezos own? The way people talk you'd think he owns most of the company. Turns out he's got ten percent. That's after getting divorced. The next question is who owns the rest. The answer to that is most people who have something set aside for retirement.
You're eliding between wealth creators and rent seekers.
Here's the thing--most of the anxiety of the Malthusians comes from being marinated in the culture of urban society every day. It's been shown in studies that living in cities makes you more susceptible to mental illnesses, and their concern is drawn from seeing people literally go crazy from being in the human ant farm day after day. A big part of these "back to nature" movements, retreats, and even our national parks are drawn from the instinctive understanding that getting out from the constant stimulation of urban life can help keep a lot of these mental dysfunctions at bay.
The problem is that they confuse over-population with those that are inherent with scale as they apply to human psychology.
A big part of these “back to nature” movements, retreats, and even our national parks are drawn from the instinctive understanding that getting out from the constant stimulation of urban life can help keep a lot of these mental dysfunctions at bay.
Ever notice a lack of black people camping? Me too. Know why? They've got the sense to not play homeless for fun.
Way to miss the point.
If they are in the Military and on bivouac, they live as they are told to live, just like everyone else in the Military. And fuck Civil Rights, Volunteers are under The Uniform Code of Military Justice and sign away a lot of those for the duration of their stint.
I think you'd appreciate this:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biophilia_hypothesis
Shit, the whole implementation of urban parks was based on this.
And go back to the Roman idea of "rus in urbe" even within their own homes.
Lotta weird shit in that photo. What's that structure up on poles on the right? Why is a stop sign facing a walkway? What are those white things plastered to those trees and poles on the left? What's that other structure on the left?
Looks like it could be any northeast US city/suburb, where once residential areas become commercialized. My guesses:
The structure on the right is a sign, now painted over, associated with a business operating in what was a residential house.
The stop sign also faces the street. If in the middle of a block, it might be protecting a crosswalk. Or maybe the crossing street is more like an alleyway.
The white things are city/town signs, maybe for parking regs.
What structure on the left?
The stop sign is clearly next to that sunny stretch which indicates no trees, aka a street.
“when [Thanos] destroys half of humanity with the snap of his fingers.”
Which is a really ineffective way of dealing with the perceived problem: “This city is infested with rats! Let’s exterminate half of them!”
"Let’s fix the problem of not enough food by cutting the number of farmers in half!"
Not too different from what FDR's idiot minions did in the New Deal when they destroyed millions of head of livestock and millions of tons of crops.
-jcr
Movie Thanos was a product of leftist thinking. As originally written, Thanks was totally in love with the cosmic entity that represented death in the universe (in the Marvel universe, life, death, eternity, infinity, chaos, order, etc. have cosmic beings embodying them). . Thanos sought prove his devotion to Death and gain her favor by wiping out half the universe through the use of the Infinity Gems.
Basically, the scriptwriters turned Thanos’s plan into a cosmic ESG scheme.
> Of the seven fundamental majors in science, six of them go back to time
I'm pretty sure that's supposed to say "measures", not "majors". Sounds like someone wasn't enunciating correctly when talking to their computer.
I believe it is important to differentiate between TRENDS and laws. Malthus was partially wrong about the prediction that population growth would inevitably result in mass starvation. There have certainly been famines throughout history but the recent trend has been fewer, less prolonged and less severe famines due to innovation. And those famines have generally not been due directly to overpopulation but, rather, due to intentional political policies or, sometimes, from sudden natural catastrophes. Innovation is also not a natural law and just because the trend has been that innovation has supported population growth, people should not count on new innovations to always and everywhere continue to bail us out.
Malthus was partially wrong about the prediction that population growth would inevitably result in mass starvation.
Ummm.
There have certainly been famines throughout history but the recent trend has been fewer, less prolonged and less severe famines due to innovation. And those famines have generally not been due directly to overpopulation but, rather, due to intentional political policies or, sometimes, from sudden natural catastrophes.
Looks like he was totally wrong. Not partially wrong.
Innovation is also not a natural law and just because the trend has been that innovation has supported population growth, people should not count on new innovations to always and everywhere continue to bail us out.
Innovation is correlated with freedom. It is also unpredictable. One thing is for certain, and that's that the more that is imposed under the idea that innovation isn't good enough, the less innovation there will be.
The main failure of Malthis was that his Christian Theology denied, disparaged, and discouraged Man's rational thinking mind and it's capacity to solve problems.
Malthus never considered the possibility that humans could find substitutions for scarce things in Nature or find ways to use scarce things more resourcefully, such as when we substituted petroleum for whalel oil and refined petroleum to make many fuels, lubrications, plastics, and other products. Nor did Malthus consider that, by discovering new things about Nature, such as the divisability of the atom or the composition of DNA, we could unleash the power of the atom to perform exponentially more work than other power sources and tweak the crops and livestock we use to multiply them geometrically and with more desired traits.
If we had stayed with Malthusian Theology as well as Malthusian Economics, yes we would have less innovation and yes, we would have more shortages, famines, and damn shorter, less healthy lifespans.
Malthus, Erlich, et. al.: THERE IS ONLY ENOUGH FOR ONE!
In the end, there can be only one!
More people ——> and <—— industrialization.
That doesn't come about in a nation that hates on corporations with criminal Guns while stealing from the working to subsidize laziness.
Superabundance makes these HAPERINFLATION alarmists look like Malthusian whiners. Energy is getting cheaper when factoring in time values.
Thanos is the perfect Progressive villain -- eager to save the world/universe, and not concerned with how many people have to die to achieve his goals, even though his plan will make little difference in the long run (with resources suddenly twice as available, the 50% of life forms remaining will reproduce faster than ever, and the population will double in a single generation.)
This is a character trait only power-seeking progressives possess?
You misspelled hero.
One strand of ethics teaches that human (or other sentient) life is uniquely valuable, since only sentient life can begin to understand and appreciate the universe and how it works. And that if humanity doesn't attempt to expand into space, and populate the galaxy as quickly as technologically possible, we are committing a great moral harm to the trillions of people who might not be born, if humanity is constrained to the resources available only on planet Earth.
https://nickbostrom.com/astronomical/waste
ABSTRACT. With very advanced technology, a very large population of people living happy lives could be sustained in the accessible region of the universe. For every year that development of such technologies and colonization of the universe is delayed, there is therefore an opportunity cost: a potential good, lives worth living, is not being realized. Given some plausible assumptions, this cost is extremely large. However, the lesson for utilitarians is not that we ought to maximize the pace of technological development, but rather that we ought to maximize its safety, i.e. the probability that colonization will eventually occur.
I don't think this guy has the courage of his convictions quite yet though, since he hasn't made a similar moral argument against abortion.
You mean sapient, not sentient.
FTFY.
Darwin's central thesus in Origins is essentially Malthusian and absent this sort of limiting element fundamentally fails.
So add his name to that list.
Evolution may be real but Darwin deserves no credit for identification or understanding of the phenomonon.
The anti-Malthus argument depends on technology and intelligent and well-organised society, neither of which can be applied to other animals nor, until relatively recently (in evolutionary terms), humans.
Further, even in an environment with effectively infinite resources, the space itself is not infinite and so there is competition for occupying that space.
Funny how evolution was so obvious and yet after centuries of science, only two people - Darwin and Wallace - managed to come up with it. Note TH Huxley's comment, "how very stupid not to have thought of it" (though his tone of voice is not recorded...)
I always wonder at the motives of people who attempt to impugn Darwin (or Einstein, for that matter).
Evolution is real, the Pre-Socratic Greeks did have early ideas of Evolution, Darwin never claimed otherwise, and nothing about Evolution--Greek, Darwinian, or otherwise--requires Malthusianism.
If anything, species of organisms changng from less complicated to more complicated over time would require more sophisticated and novel interactions with the physical environment over time, which would mean discovering and turning of energy/matter into resources is the pennacle of adaptability required for Evolution.
The shocking thing about Ehrlich is not that he's a pig-ignorant misanthrope, there's always been plenty of those, but that he gets to spew his unmitigated bullshit from a tenured professorship instead of a skid-row bar stool.
-jcr
Human populations in Canada, Europe, Japan, and China are collapsing. The global population is stagnant and will likely follow suit.
The long term future of the human race looks iffy, not because of overpopulation, but because technology has removed most incentives to procreate.
The way we are going, the Amish are going to take over the world in a couple of centuries because they still reproduce.
Matt Ridley wrote a similar book about 10 yrs ago – “The Rational Optimist”. He discusses time price at length and other similar topics. It’s an easy read, check it out.
Superabundance is a product of Liberty, not of mere population. A population of slaves rarely if ever produces more than it consumes.
Were that the case, slavery would have destroyed any civilisation which tried it, and there'd be religious prohibitions against it.
Now I agree with the less axiomatic/dogmatic proposition that a free society is more economically efficient than a slave-holding or feudal society, and superabundance is a product of economic efficiency.
I believe it is important to differentiate between TRENDS and laws.
https://crescitaly.com/
More people also means more global destruction, more pollution, more waste, more climate change, more death, more conflict, more diseases. More of "everything" is NOT "better" - it is actually worse. Using the temporary assessment that "we have more now" does not mean that we will ALWAYS have more as Earth's resources are consumed and in some cases, used, permanently. The cornucopian attitude that humans (alone) have a "right" to "all resources, forever" is absurd. We cannot survive without a habitable Earth. We cannot survive without a living biosphere, but our present course actually indicates we are rapidly destroying the biosphere in our non-stop quest for resources, infinite growth and greed. Using the false metric of "prices" and "availability" is entirely human-centric and grossly shortsighted. The long-term view (human survival) demands that humans actually weigh their nonstop assault on the planetary resources and LIMIT our growth, consumption, waste, pollution and destructive ways. If we do not do this, we will destroy the only habitable planet we can live on. Ignoring that is what this video is about, just pretend that humans cannot destroy the habitability of the Earth, which we clearly are doing.
There is an alternative pessimistic scenario for the future of the world. Poorer countries not at the world technological frontier can improve their living standards quite significantly by catching up to the frontier which is represented by the Western world democracies basically. For the countries at the frontier, we are seeing diminishing marginal returns to research basically across the board. Robert Gordon from Northwestern University in the US is the academic guru on this subject and in my own area of knowledge of Australian agriculture, we are seeing diminishing marginal returns to our research efforts, though we have had a golden era in the past.
These diminishing returns are being seen across-the-board and if people can remember Robert Solow's work on wage increases being based upon productivity improvements then we are not going to get much richer in the future.
Being a Christian, I won't exult in the punishment of evil fools but it seems to me (And I was a statiscal analyst of demographic data) that 3 things now are unavoidable.
1) Social Security will fail or euthanasia will be introduced.
2) Europe will lose several nations to unsustainable population decline. And with increasing Muslim births civil violence will escalate greatly.
3) The family is gone for good in certain sectors of society. "Nearly a hundred years of the supposed “legacy of slavery” found most black children [78%] being raised in two-parent families in 1960. But thirty years after the liberal welfare state found the great majority of black children being raised by a single parent [66%]. "
I was disappointed that the interviewer did not ask about externalities like climate change. The interviewees say that things are cheaper than ever which means they are not scarce. That assumes that the full cost of things is reflected in the price. This is false. We have the level of productivity we have today at the expense of so much carbon in the atmosphere that we are warming our planet. I'd be curious to know how the interviewees account for the fact that the carbon crisis is not reflected in the price of the commodities they measured and that we as a nation and world have to address now.