World Politics: International Politics on the World Stage, Brief, 4/e
John T. Rourke,
University of Connecticut - Storrs Mark A. Boyer,
University of Connecticut - Storrs
Preserving and Enhancing the Global Commons
Population Growth Rate
Of all the statistical measurements of human population, that of the rate of population
growth is the most important. The growth rate of a population is a combination of natural change (births and deaths), in-migration, and out-migration; it is obtained by adding
the number of births to the number of immigrants during a year and subtracting from
that total the sum of deaths and emigrants for the same year. For a specific country, this
figure will determine many things about the country's future ability to feed, house, educate and provide medical services to its citizens.
Some of the countries with the largest
populations (such as India) also have high growth rates. Since these countries tend to be
in developing regions, the combination of high population and high growth rates poses
special problems for political stability and continuing economic development; the
combination also carries heightened risks for environmental degradation. Many people
believe that the rapidly expanding world population is a potential crisis that may cause
environmental and human disaster by the middle of the twenty-first century.