Today as we look at the world, with a population currently of approximately 7 billion, the population growth is or should be of concern to each and everyone in the world today. In 1750 the population of the world was a mere 700 million increasing by 300 million to 1 billion in 50 years. The next 50 years our world’s population grew another 200 million, then adding another 400 million by 1900. In the upcoming 50 years 1 billion more homo sapiens were added. The increase of 3.4 billion by the year 2000 shows the exponential increase getting larger. What took 50 years to increase between 1750 and 1800 would take approximately 4.5 years during the period from 1950 to 2000. The data is laid out in a graph form below. (Sain, 2012) As we see in the graph the major increase in the population is going to come from developing countries where the use of contraception is just about nonexistent. (Wilson, 2002)
As described by Lester brown this growth is moving toward a social tipping point. This tipping point may in fact be a point at which we may not be able to recover from unless we figure out a way to control it. (Brown, 2008) Brown states that even though the population has declined in industrialized nations, we see an increase in the developing countries. In some areas of the world that are already struggling with population and supportive resources. In these struggling developing nations the growth has been 70 million people a year, adding an excessive load on their ECO system and increasing disease, mortality rates along with poverty.
Stephen Moore argued that proponents of population control by family planning are Malthusian in their views. Wilson described this as a Paleolithic view against population growth. Wilson also addressed this as having been an occasional local issue but due to political mismanagement rather than confirmation of Malthusian mathematics. (Wilson, 2002)
Moore states “Overpopulation is a Hoax. That’s why there