
More or Less Paul Ehrlich: The man who bet England wouldn’t exist by the year 2000
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Mar 21, 2026 A look back at Paul Ehrlich’s dire 1960s prediction of mass famine and his claim England might not exist by 2000. Discussion of how insect-ecology thinking was applied to humans. Exploration of why food production and calorie availability rose instead of collapsing. Examination of fertility trends, human innovation and the Green Revolution that changed the trajectory.
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Ehrlich's Population Alarm And Its Basis
- Paul Ehrlich warned in 1968 that population growth would outstrip food supply, predicting mass famine and even that England might not exist by 2000.
- Ehrlich extrapolated from rapid 20th-century growth (1.5bn in 1900 to 3.5bn in 1968) and insect-ecology thinking without accounting for falling fertility trends already emerging.
Population Growth Happened But Fertility Fell
- Global population did surge from 3.5 billion in 1968 to about 8.2 billion today, so Ehrlich was partly right about growth.
- But declining fertility began earlier than he noted; UN projects a mid-2080s peak near 10 billion, and some expect an earlier, lower peak.
Green Revolution Kept Famine At Bay
- The Green Revolution massively increased crop yields from the 1960s onward, overturning Ehrlich's short-term famine predictions.
- Innovations like Norman Borlaug's high-yield wheat, better breeding, fertiliser and pesticides raised cereal yields by roughly 250% since 1961.




