One of the recurrent themes in the debate around how to ensure global food security concerns the capacity of the planet to support its growing population. Neo-Malthusian thinking suggests that we are in a situation in which further expansion of the population cannot be supported and that the population checks, with their dismal consequences envisaged by Malthus, will lead to a new era of stagnant incomes and population. More sophisticated models of the link between population and income are less gloomy however. They see population growth as an integral component of the economic growth which is necessary to ensure that the poorest achieve food security. An undue focus on the difficulties of meeting the demands of the increasing population ri...
Almost 200 years ago Malthus argued that population growth would inevitably exceed the capacity of a...
The main purpose of this paper is to address the question of whether the world can feed itself durin...
In the introductory abstract to ‘Vision Infinity for Food Security,’ (Sharma and Wightman 2015), co-...
In the past four years, rising world food prices and the global economic downturn increased the rank...
When studying demography or economics we read An Essay on the Principle of Population, a famous tre...
In a little over a decade, the global population is expected to reach 8 billion. The task of feeding...
International audienceIn the late eighteenth century, in 1798, England's renowned economist Thomas M...
Specific amount of food and safe drinking water are basic necessities of living human-beings. The hu...
Title VI National Resource Center Grant (P015A060066)unpublishednot peer reviewe
Demand for food constant increases, according to the growth in population and income. These levels o...
More than two centuries ago in his Essay on the Principle of Population, Thomas Malthus famously iss...
This paper provides a unified growth theory, i.e. a model that explains the very long-run economic a...
In his Article, Professor Hardaway argues that while Thomas Malthus may have been incorrect in his a...
In both rich and poor countries, more than 800 million people remain chronically undernourished, at ...
Since Malthus wrote his famous Essay on Population, the world has witnessed great improvements in nu...
Almost 200 years ago Malthus argued that population growth would inevitably exceed the capacity of a...
The main purpose of this paper is to address the question of whether the world can feed itself durin...
In the introductory abstract to ‘Vision Infinity for Food Security,’ (Sharma and Wightman 2015), co-...
In the past four years, rising world food prices and the global economic downturn increased the rank...
When studying demography or economics we read An Essay on the Principle of Population, a famous tre...
In a little over a decade, the global population is expected to reach 8 billion. The task of feeding...
International audienceIn the late eighteenth century, in 1798, England's renowned economist Thomas M...
Specific amount of food and safe drinking water are basic necessities of living human-beings. The hu...
Title VI National Resource Center Grant (P015A060066)unpublishednot peer reviewe
Demand for food constant increases, according to the growth in population and income. These levels o...
More than two centuries ago in his Essay on the Principle of Population, Thomas Malthus famously iss...
This paper provides a unified growth theory, i.e. a model that explains the very long-run economic a...
In his Article, Professor Hardaway argues that while Thomas Malthus may have been incorrect in his a...
In both rich and poor countries, more than 800 million people remain chronically undernourished, at ...
Since Malthus wrote his famous Essay on Population, the world has witnessed great improvements in nu...
Almost 200 years ago Malthus argued that population growth would inevitably exceed the capacity of a...
The main purpose of this paper is to address the question of whether the world can feed itself durin...
In the introductory abstract to ‘Vision Infinity for Food Security,’ (Sharma and Wightman 2015), co-...