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HOW CAN TECHNOLOGY AND INTERVENTION IN THE DEVELOPMENT OFFSET THE

PRESSURES OF POPULATION GROWTH?


Population expansion can be mitigated by technological advancements. Despite the fast growth of the
population, technology can provide ways to make life easier. It is able to provide occupations that are
appropriate for the populace. It may also be able to provide a solution to the growing population.
Technology advancements can provide a variety of options for mitigating population expansion.
According to Simon (1932–1998), Simon argued against proponents of population control, arguing
that technology has the capacity to increase the effective size of resource inventories, permit
recycling, and, if necessary, replace for scarce resources. "As the population grows, so does the
adoption of existing technology and the development of new technology." There is a growing body of
knowledge regarding historical advances in food and agriculture that casts doubt on models and
scenarios that forecast impending scarcity or ecological collapse, such as those described in The
Limits to Growth (Meadows et al., 1972).
In my own understanding for highly developed countries, it does, but there is a limit. The widespread
belief that we must continue to expand our population indefinitely is a false and dangerous belief with
a very, very unhappy conclusion. The justification is that younger people should work because older
people do not. While some of this is true, it is grossly exaggerated. When the advancement of
technology is applied to enhance human growth and development, the human social system supports
growing populations and a more diverse population, both individually and collectively.
According to Julian Simon (1932–1998), take this discussion a step farther. National data from a wide
range of countries–rich and poor, North and South–suggested a link between population size and
growth on the one hand, and technological innovation and cultural creativity on the other. In a
population, inventive potential is thought to be dispersed randomly (equity, education, interaction, and
other variables being equal).
As infrastructure develops as a result of technology advancements, more people may be able to
participate in a larger economic market, which was the siren song of globalization, to internationalize
the marketplace. Farmers and companies can use a restricted community as a market to sell to a
larger audience. This region is home to half of the world's population and the bulk of the world's poor
and hungry. As infrastructure develops to allow many land-locked places to scale their economy to
the rest of the globe, the expectation is that they will experience increased economic growth and
become self-sufficient, with poverty and hunger becoming a thing of the past.
Many developments, such as mass production of smart phones, computers, and computer chips,
would be impossible to execute on a small scale, according to my conclusions. To keep it going and
keep the per-unit cost low, it needed a large market. The internet increases public access to critical
information, lowers the cost of education, and offers everyone a voice. Many clever people no longer
watch television because it serves as a platform for fools and teaches us too much about how to
think. Traditional media is substantially less informed and accessible to good ideas than the internet.
For my closing statement the world gets more populated, technology and development interventions
can assist reduce the constraints of population growth by improving human welfare and paving the
way to sustainability. As the population rises, they will also make resources more affordable and
plentiful, making life easier. Today's population has a higher potential for invention and recovers
faster from technology shocks. When the population's productivity rises as a result of enhanced
innovative potential, this effect becomes even more pronounced.
Reference :
https://www.encyclopedia.com/social-sciences/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-
maps/technological-change-and-population-growth

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