Census Bureau: If U.S. Moves from ‘High’ to ‘Low’ Immigration, Population Growth Would Slow

Guest Post by Joe Guzzardi

The United States Forest Service (USFS), a Department of Agriculture agency that administers the nation’s 154 forests and manages 194 million acres of land, released an analysis which estimated that, every day, the nation loses 6 million acres of open space. USFS defines open space as publicly or privately owned, protected or unprotected areas that include forests, grasslands, farms, ranches, streams, rivers and parks. The 6 million acres lost to development at what USFS called “an alarming rate” hampers a functioning ecosystem, agriculture, forest health and recreational pleasures.

Although the USFS developed its “Forests on the Edge” program to emphasize preserving open space, no educational campaign can keep up with U.S. population growth and the urban sprawl that it generates. A NumbersUSA study, “Vanishing Open Spaces, Population Growth and Sprawl in America,” analyzed the projected long-term decline in per capita farmland. Using the projected cropland losses based on 1982-2010 data, and U.S. Census Bureau population estimates, the study found as follows: available cropland will have declined from 1.9 acres per person in 1982 to 0.3 acre per person in 2100, an 84 percent cropland loss decrease. After two centuries of nonstop development, little of the remaining acreage would be in pristine condition. Continue reading “Census Bureau: If U.S. Moves from ‘High’ to ‘Low’ Immigration, Population Growth Would Slow”

Population Pressures Drying Up Great Salt Lake

Guest post by Joe Guzzardi

Utah’s Great Salt Lake may disappear within the next five years, experts predict. A Brigham Young University report found that as of January 2023, the lake is 19 feet below its average level. Since 1850, the Great Salt Lake has lost 73 percent of its water and more than half of its surface area.

BYU ecologist Benjamin Abbott, noting “unprecedented danger,” called for emergency measures to save the Great Salt Lake from further collapse. Abbott wrote that despite encouraging growth in legislative action and public awareness, “most Utahns do not realize the urgency of this crisis.” Continue reading “Population Pressures Drying Up Great Salt Lake”

The Race to Earth’s Nine Billionth Inhabitant is Underway

Guest Post by Joe Guzzardi

The arrival of the planet’s 8 billionth human inhabitant, which the United Nations excitedly announced in mid-November, was greeted in some circles as a joyous event. UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres hailed 8 billion people as an occasion “to celebrate diversity and enhancements.”

For other population growth enthusiasts, 2037 can’t come fast enough. By then, only 17 years from today, the world population will hit 9 billion. The Washington Post’s editorial board wholeheartedly agrees with Guterres. In its op-ed piece, the editors wrote, dismissively, that “a growing population creates more pressure on the natural environment and man-made infrastructure alike. It is one factor in accelerating climate change.” Disdainfully, the Post encouraged readers not to fret because population growth is “mostly inevitable anyway.” The editorial overlooked, perhaps purposely, other harmful population growth consequences, including, but not limited to, drought and its inevitable water shortages, megafauna extinction and ground subsidence, as well as pollution in its multiple forms. Continue reading “The Race to Earth’s Nine Billionth Inhabitant is Underway”

Illinois Lost 1 Resident Every 4.3 Minutes In 2017, Dropped To 6th Most Populous State

Tyler Durden's picture

 

Illinois is drowning under a mountain of debt, unpaid bills and underfunded pension liabilities and it’s largest city, Chicago, is suffering from a staggering outbreak of violent crime not seen since gang wars engulfed major cities from LA to New York in the mid-90’s.  Here is just a small taste of some of our posts on Illinois’ challenges:

Given that, it’s hardly surprising that the Prairie State lost a net 33,700 residents in fiscal year 2017, according to the Census Bureau.  Also not surprising is the fact that the mass exodus from Illinois was the largest of any state in the country with lower taxed, lower cost of living states like Texas and Florida posting the biggest gains. 

Continue reading “Illinois Lost 1 Resident Every 4.3 Minutes In 2017, Dropped To 6th Most Populous State”

HEADING FOR THE HILLS

West Virginia is losing population because Obama has destroyed the coal industry. Why are people fleeing the rest of these shitholes?

Infographic: The Fastest Shrinking Cities In The U.S. | Statista
You will find more statistics at Statista

As of April 2016, the U.S. population stands at 323,341,000 with 81 percent of that number living in cities or suburbs. Even though America’s urban population has been increasing in recent years, at least 23 metropolitan areas have seen a population decline. Farmington, New Mexico, is the fastest-shrinking city in the country, having experienced a population decline of 8.76 percent between 2010 and 2015. It is known for having low income levels along with a violent crime rate in excess of the national average.


I’LL TAKE THE UNDER

Extrapolation doesn’t take into account the hubris, arrogance, and self destructive nature of human beings. We will obliterate vast portions of the world before 2100. There will be far less humans than 11 billion.

According to the United Nations, the world’s population reached 7.3 billion in the middle of 2015. During the past 12 years alone, another one billion people have been added to the planet’s population. It is forecast to increase by further billion over the next 15 years, reaching 8.5 billion in 2013. In 2050, it will pass the 9.7 billion mark, before topping 11.2 billion in 2100.

Infographic: The World's Population Is Set To Reach 11 Billion By 2100 | Statista
You will find more statistics at Statista


YOU ARE ONE OF THE RICHEST PEOPLE IN THE WORLD

The mind boggling aspect of this chart is how poor the vast majority of people in the world are. If you have net worth of $10,000, you are richer than 4.8 billion people on the planet. If you have net worth of $100,000, you are richer than 6.4 billion people on the planet. If and when things go south, there are going to be a lot more have nots looking to skewer the haves. It should be interesting.

 

Financial inequality is steadily rising alongside global wealth, which reached a grand total of $263 trillion in 2014. According to Crédit Suisse, people with a net worth of over $1 million represent just 0.7 percent of the planet’s population, but they control 41 percent of its wealth.

69 percent of the world’s population have a net worth of under $10,000 – they account for a mere 3 percent of global wealth. Meanwhile, 23 percent fall into the $10,000-$100,000 bracket and they control 14 percent of worldwide wealth. In order to be counted among the wealthiest half of the world’s citizens, a person requires a net worth of $3,650.

Infographic: 0.7% Of The World's Population Control 41% Of Its Wealth | Statista

You will find more statistics at Statista

Three unsustainable trends are about to collide

A perfect storm of demographics, debt and energy

The population of the United States is expected to continue growing.

It’s getting more and more difficult to write with interest about the challenges the world economy is currently facing. Not because there’s a shortage of interesting things to write about — wars, sanctions, failed money-printing experiments, the list is long — but rather because most of the negative news and major world events we see around us are symptoms of the disease, not the disease itself.

There are only so many times you can describe the disease, before it becomes too repetitive for both the writer and the reader. Instead, I find it far more interesting to focus on the root causes, because then real solutions can be explored that offer the possibility of actual remedy.

So let’s start here, with a simple grounding in the facts as we know them. No spin, no agenda; just some numbers.

Demographics

There are approximately 7.2 billion humans on the planet, and consensus estimates put that number at 9.6 billion by 2050. Over the same time period in the U.S., people aged 65 and older will increase from 46 million currently to 84 million, a 82% increase, while the entire U.S. population is projected to swell from its current 319 million to 400 million, a 25% increase.

Debts

Next, the net present value of the actual liabilities of the US federal government are somewhere between $69 trillion and more than $200 trillion depending on whether you prefer the Treasury as your source or the CBO.

The real fiscal deficit of the U.S. government, as opposed to what was reported, was just over $1 trillion in FY 2014 (as measured by the actual increase in the federal debt).

When your debts and liabilities are increasing at several multiples of your income growth, you have a math problem that sooner or later will catch up with you.

The only nonpainful way out of such a math bind is to reverse the situation and grow our income faster than our debts and liabilities. The painful way involves either a hard default or a stealth default via inflation. Let’s assume we all wish to avoid the painful route.

This means we have to ask some hard questions. What will be the engines of all that future growth? Why has growth been so difficult to come by of late? What if the hoped-for future growth doesn’t materialize? Even worse, what if we get a sustained period of negative growth? Then what?

Here’s where things get sticky.

Energy production

One of the more solid economic correlations we know of is that between a growing economy and growing energy usage. And oil is one of the main factors in this relationship, if not the key factor. For now, the U.S. is enjoying a resurgent period of oil production thanks to shale (or “tight”) oil. The U.S. can use that energy to grow its economy, or we can export it to other countries so they can grow theirs.

Now, let’s widen our view back out to 2050. Where is the U.S. tight oil story then? Well, according to the Energy Information Administration, it will be 31 years in the rearview mirror, as the EIA projects that U.S. tight oil production will peak in 2019. That’s right, in just five short years from now, the U.S. “shale oil miracle” will start becoming a historical artifact.

On top of that, virtually every single oil reservoir in the world currently in production will be in decline by 2050. Perhaps we’ll find additional oil under the Arctic, or in ultra-deep ocean deposits, or in even tighter rock formations, but it won’t be cheap oil —- the sort that we rely on to drive economic expansion.

These trends in oil, debt and demographics are stark all on their own, but together they are staggering.

And if we then tie them to the obvious ecological strains of meeting the needs of 7.2 billion souls (let alone the 9.6 billion by 2050), any adherence to the status quo seems worse than delusional. For example, since 1970, overall world wildlife populations have been reduced by 40% (land and sea) to 70% (river). Perhaps it’s time plot our course a bit more carefully, before those losses approach 100%.

The disease

The disease then is our blind adherence to growth at any cost. Its symptoms are the limits we are bumping into with increasing frequency along the way. They’re more numerous today than before the world’s central banks began their grand global money printing experiment and yet, like a quack doctor prescribing more Vicodin to mask a serious underlying malady, the central planners and their political overseers refuse to reconsider the situation.

As economist Herb Stein once said, “if something cannot go on forever, it will stop.” Someday, perhaps soon, the inexorable logic of simple math will force wrenching changes upon those who refuse to change on their own.

Which brings me to the title of this piece: Ready or Not. The unsustainable status quo will end, likely sooner than we want, whether we are prepared for it to or not.

Chris Martenson is is an economic researcher and futurist specializing in energy and resource depletion, and co-founder of PeakProsperity.com.