There’s a pretty natural curve as societies become educated and more industrialized, you see infant mortality plummet and overall birth rate drop (there’s a collection of different causal reasons for the drop in birth rate). Negative percentages for a while, then (we assume) stable within a margin of error year over year.
What this means is that we should see various societies level off or decline a little before stabilizing. The only area that really looks at the flattening of population growth as a desperate problem is modern capitalist economies, where you need an ever increasing supply of cheap labor to continue pushing the holy line upwards. A differently structured economy would likely not care much about a stable or stably decreasing world population.
VexillaVexme t1_j2c12cf wrote
Reply to comment by Codametal in Question by Psychological_Wheel2
There’s a pretty natural curve as societies become educated and more industrialized, you see infant mortality plummet and overall birth rate drop (there’s a collection of different causal reasons for the drop in birth rate). Negative percentages for a while, then (we assume) stable within a margin of error year over year.
What this means is that we should see various societies level off or decline a little before stabilizing. The only area that really looks at the flattening of population growth as a desperate problem is modern capitalist economies, where you need an ever increasing supply of cheap labor to continue pushing the holy line upwards. A differently structured economy would likely not care much about a stable or stably decreasing world population.