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Rapid Population Growth and Poverty Generation in Malawi
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 11 November 2008
Extract
There has been a long controversy over the likely impact of population dynamics on economic growth and development. As long ago as 1789 the Reverend Thomas Malthus argued in his famous ‘Essay on the Principle of Population’ that food production would not keep pace with the population's natural proclivity to grow in an unchecked fashion. In the absence of prudential checks, the result would be starvation, vice, and misery, with a tendency for economies to stagnate at a subsistence or poverty level of income.
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References
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8 The sources of these projections are World Bank, 1991, op. cit. p. 32; Malawi Population Census, 1977. Analytical Report, Vol. II, 1984, p. 155; and House, William J. and Zimalirana, George, ‘Malawi's Population Dynamics: future prospects’, Lilongwe, 1992. The differences between the World Bank's projections and the others can be partly explained by the lack of agreement about the rate of decline in mortality, as well as assumed current levels.Google Scholar
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