The potentially explosive force of population growth poses questions to which the answers given by scientists of recent decades have often generated more heat than light. In this book we have an economist's approach to the problem. Professor Pitchford discusses the long-run relationships between a country's population and its economic development, exploring ways in which population policy can be directed towards improving economic welfare. Assuming no specialised knowledge of economics, Professor Pitchford guides his reader lucidly through the concepts of production and employment to an important reformulation of the concept of optimum population. With the help of clear diagrams he introduces the various theories of population change and st...
This paper deals with the interaction between population growth and capital accumulation in an ecolo...
Population increase, stability, or decrease are expressions of social forces and human interaction w...
In a model on population and endogenous technological change, Kremer (1993) combines a short-run Mal...
This paper deals with the evolution of the literature on the problem of population and growth from t...
Policy on population and environment in the United States and abroad has been vacillating, unsure of...
In spite of two centuries of extensive debate, a consistent framework of the classical theory of pop...
Is population positively related to the scale of the economy and to economic devel-opment, or rather...
This work seeks to answer the "population question," i.e. the effect of population growth on product...
This book looks at the debates surrounding the relation between population growth or decrease and ec...
This paper investigates the relationship between population growth and economic growth, through the ...
Population growth and economic change are tightly bound together. The very high rates of population ...
This paper reviews briefly the idea of a steady state economy from the ancient times to the present....
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/Among economists who are also...
This paper develops a unified model of growth, population, and technological progress that is consis...
We adopt an imagined exchequer, the functionary responsible in an early polity for securing resource...
This paper deals with the interaction between population growth and capital accumulation in an ecolo...
Population increase, stability, or decrease are expressions of social forces and human interaction w...
In a model on population and endogenous technological change, Kremer (1993) combines a short-run Mal...
This paper deals with the evolution of the literature on the problem of population and growth from t...
Policy on population and environment in the United States and abroad has been vacillating, unsure of...
In spite of two centuries of extensive debate, a consistent framework of the classical theory of pop...
Is population positively related to the scale of the economy and to economic devel-opment, or rather...
This work seeks to answer the "population question," i.e. the effect of population growth on product...
This book looks at the debates surrounding the relation between population growth or decrease and ec...
This paper investigates the relationship between population growth and economic growth, through the ...
Population growth and economic change are tightly bound together. The very high rates of population ...
This paper reviews briefly the idea of a steady state economy from the ancient times to the present....
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/Among economists who are also...
This paper develops a unified model of growth, population, and technological progress that is consis...
We adopt an imagined exchequer, the functionary responsible in an early polity for securing resource...
This paper deals with the interaction between population growth and capital accumulation in an ecolo...
Population increase, stability, or decrease are expressions of social forces and human interaction w...
In a model on population and endogenous technological change, Kremer (1993) combines a short-run Mal...