We are the first generation to see the slowdown. The question is not "How can we stop growing?" but rather, "Can we manage a graceful landing into a stable, aging, multi-billion person world?"
That is the story of 8.1. And it's just beginning. 8.1 trends in human population growth
| Engine | What changed | Impact | |--------|--------------|--------| | | Shift from muscle to machines; better farming, transport, and sanitation. | Death rates plummet. | | Medical Revolution | Vaccines, antibiotics (penicillin, 1928), germ theory, clean water. | Infant mortality collapses. People live past 40. | | The Green Revolution | High-yield crops, synthetic fertilizer (Haber-Bosch process). | Food supply finally catches up. | We are the first generation to see the slowdown
The Big Picture: A Hockey Stick for the Ages Imagine a graph that is flat for 99% of human history, then suddenly shoots up like a rocket. That is the story of our population. For millennia, growth was slower than a snail's pace. Then, in the last 200 years—a blink of an evolutionary eye—we exploded from 1 billion to over 8 billion. | Engine | What changed | Impact |
| Still Growing | Already Shrinking | Plateauing | |---------------|-------------------|-------------| | Sub-Saharan Africa (will triple) | Eastern Europe, Japan, South Korea | China, USA, Western Europe | | High fertility, declining death rates. | Why? Low fertility, aging, emigration. | Why? Below-replacement fertility, offset by immigration. |