What Is The Global Population Problem?

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Around the world, people are concerned about overpopulation issue. Population growth mean the increase in the number of people that reside within the state or country (The law dictionary n.d.). Population growth is the root cause of most current global problems. Is not it? Different individuals have varied opinion about human population growth. This issue is the essential topic to debate all over the world. According to Garrett Hardin (1989, pp.11-13) famous essay called 'There is no global population problem ', he wrote: We are not faced with a single global population problem but, rather, with about 180 separate national population problem. Population growth is one of the reason of global issue but is not the root cause of most current global …show more content…

Due to the education, economy system and changes in society. Educating helps them to understand the need to have one child or not more than two children. Especially, China the country where the government have law of family planning policy called one-child policy. So Chinese women are allowed to have only one child. Japan where population growth rate is -0.2 percent (World bank, 2013). Which mean there is no population rising exponentially. Population growth is not the global problem. This problem only happened in particular countries not all over the world. So population control must be applied locally. Such as local government should provide birth control education and responsibility of their population …show more content…

According to FAO: How to feed the world 2050 states that food production must increase by 70 percent due to the world population, 9.1 billion people by 2050. Even product cereal production and meat production over billion tonnes a year is not sufficient to achieve food security. The research recommend to solve this problem by policies to enhance access by fighting poverty, especially in rural areas, as well as effective safety net programmes (How to feed the world 2050, 2009). For instance, in Rwanda, one of the world poorest countries. Most Western reports misrepresented the killing as a race war between Hutus and Tutsis. Even thought much of the killing was related to land and food. (O 'Connor, J.Lines 2010, p.

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