Population growth and economic change are tightly bound together. The very high rates of population growth in the poor countries of Africa, Asia, and Latin America complicate the resolution of basic economic problems and make it more difficult to assure an adequate rate of growth of income per capita. Simultaneously, the relative stagnation of per capita incomes, especially in the rural areas of the very poor countries, helps to maintain high levels of fertility, thus completing a circle of rapid population growth and poverty. There is no one solution to the dilemma. Neither dramatic improvements in the standard of living nor the rapid adoption of fertility control are likely in the poorest countries. Moreover, population control by itself ...
In this book, a model of long-term interrelationships between income distribution, population growth...
Population growth is often pictured as negatively affecting the environment, the economy and individ...
Meeting: World Population Conference, 19-30 Aug. 1974, Bucuresti, ROIDRC personnel. Report on the is...
Population growth and economic change are tightly bound together. The very high rates of population ...
The population of the developing world has doubled since 1965 and now stands at 4.8 billion. This gr...
There is a very large but scattered literature debating the economic implications of high fertility....
IDRC personnel. Paper on issues in population control in developing countries - describes the proble...
Rapid population growth is a threat to wellbeing in the poorest countries, whereas very low fertilit...
The population of the developing world is expanding at the unprecedented rate of more than 800 milli...
This paper deals with the impact of the population growth on the economic performance in the Sub- Sa...
This paper applies insights from theoretical and empirical research in economic growth to analyze th...
In our previous post we described the shifting views of economists and demographers regarding the re...
During the next 20 years, much of the developing world will undergo significant demographic changes,...
The extensive literature on population and development yielded few policy-relevant results before th...
This post is the first in a two part series exploring the relationship between population growth and...
In this book, a model of long-term interrelationships between income distribution, population growth...
Population growth is often pictured as negatively affecting the environment, the economy and individ...
Meeting: World Population Conference, 19-30 Aug. 1974, Bucuresti, ROIDRC personnel. Report on the is...
Population growth and economic change are tightly bound together. The very high rates of population ...
The population of the developing world has doubled since 1965 and now stands at 4.8 billion. This gr...
There is a very large but scattered literature debating the economic implications of high fertility....
IDRC personnel. Paper on issues in population control in developing countries - describes the proble...
Rapid population growth is a threat to wellbeing in the poorest countries, whereas very low fertilit...
The population of the developing world is expanding at the unprecedented rate of more than 800 milli...
This paper deals with the impact of the population growth on the economic performance in the Sub- Sa...
This paper applies insights from theoretical and empirical research in economic growth to analyze th...
In our previous post we described the shifting views of economists and demographers regarding the re...
During the next 20 years, much of the developing world will undergo significant demographic changes,...
The extensive literature on population and development yielded few policy-relevant results before th...
This post is the first in a two part series exploring the relationship between population growth and...
In this book, a model of long-term interrelationships between income distribution, population growth...
Population growth is often pictured as negatively affecting the environment, the economy and individ...
Meeting: World Population Conference, 19-30 Aug. 1974, Bucuresti, ROIDRC personnel. Report on the is...