Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Julian Simon was right: More humans equals more abundance
Julian Simon was right: More humans equals more abundance
Apr 26, 2026 8:08 PM

Population growth continues to correspond with greater overall abundance, pointing to the dignity and creative capacity bound up in humans made in the image of God.

Read More…

In 1968, biologist Paul Ehrlich published “The Population Bomb,” a best-selling panic manifesto that predicted mass starvation and global catastrophe due to overpopulation. “The battle to feed all of humanity is over,” Ehrlich proclaimed. “In the 1970s hundreds of millions of people will starve to death” and “nothing can prevent a substantial increase in the world death rate.”

Such prophecies never came to pass, of course. Even still, Ehrlich remained steadfast in his pessimistic perspective, constantly updating his predications about human deprivation while gaining notoriety from the media and influence among the masses.

By 1980, economist Julian Simon had heard enough, and proceeded to propose a wager to test his peting theory. Contrary to Ehrlich, Simon saw humans as “the ultimate resource,” believing that more humans would mean more abundance, not less.

Ehrlich agreed to Simon’s wager, and was joined by ecologist John Harte and scientist John P. Holdren. NPR summarizes the infamous bet as follows:

Simon proposed that they bet on what would happen to the price of five metals — copper, chromium, nickel, tin and tungsten — over a decade. And the logic was that these metals were essential for all kinds of stuff — electronics, cars, buildings.

So, if Ehrlich was right, more people on the planet would mean we would start running out of stuff, and the price of these things should go up. But, if Simon was right, the markets and human ingenuity would sort things out, and the prices would stay the same or even go down.

Simon won, and his victory was decisive. The population continued to grow, but instead of crumbling under the weight of our own appetites, humans triumphed over scarcity. We learned how to do more with less, driving unprecedented declines in global poverty and hunger.

By 1990, Ehrlich quietly admitted defeat in the form of a check for $576.07, written to Simon.

Simon’s thesis is still being proven correct, and is formally assessed as part of the The Simon Project, whose Simon Abundance Index “measures the relationship between population growth and the abundance of 50 modities, including food, energy, materials, minerals, and metals.”

According to the latest report, authored by economist Gale Pooley and policy analyst Marian Tupy, “the Earth was 608 percent more abundant in 2020 than it was in 1980.”

To reach these findings, the researchers looked at “personal resource abundance,” which assesses resource availability from the standpoint of the individual. “How much more abundant have resources e for an average inhabitant of the planet or a typical U.S. worker between two points in time?” they ask.

They then assessed “population resource abundance,” which expands the analysis to global population trends. If the former looks at “the size of a slice of pizza per person,” this view assesses “the size of the entire pizza pie.” Their conclusion?

Between 1980 and 2018, the world’s population rose by 71.2 percent. Yet [population resource abundance] PRA rose from one pie to 4.01, or 301 percent. The [annual growth in PRA] amounted to 3.72 percent, indicating a doubling of PRA every 18.97 years. Furthermore, we found that every one percent increase in population corresponded to a 4.23 percent increase in the PRA of the five metals.

In other words, population growth continues to correspond with greater overall abundance, decades after Simon’s original wager. Indeed, stretching the analysis to begin in 1900 makes the trend even more pronounced.

(Image credit: HumanProgress.org)

“We found that humanity is experiencing what we term Superabundance – a condition where abundance is increasing at a faster rate than the population is growing,” the authors conclude. “Data suggests that additional human beings tend to benefit, rather than impoverish, the rest of humanity.”

To some, it may seem as though Simon just got lucky. But the deeper one goes into the data, and the longer the trend continues, the more apparent it es that Simon simply had deeper insight into the promise and potential of the human person, particularly when situated within a civilizational context of economic freedom and “associational life.”

Why did Ehrlich lose?

Ehrlich and his group lost because they thought like biologists. In 1971, for example, Ehrlich and Holdren wrote that as “a population of organisms grows in a finite environment, sooner or later it will encounter a resource limit. This phenomenon, described by ecologists as reaching the ‘carrying capacity’ of the environment, applies to bacteria on a culture dish, to fruit flies in a jar of agar, and to buffalo on a prairie. It must also apply to man on this finite planet.”

Why did Simon win?

Simon won because he thought like an economist. He understood the powers of incentives and the price mechanism to e resource shortages. Instead of the quantity of resources, he looked at the prices of resources. He saw resource scarcity as a temporary challenge that can be solved through greater efficiency, increased supply, development of substitutes, and so on.

The relationship between prices and innovation, Simon insisted, is dynamic. Relative scarcity leads to higher prices, higher prices create incentives for innovations, and innovations lead to abundance. Scarcity gets converted to abundance through the price system. The price system functions as long as the economy is based on property rights, the rule of law, and freedom of exchange. In relatively free economies, therefore, resources do not get depleted in the way that Ehrlich feared they would. In fact, resources tend to e more abundant.

At its core, it’s a lesson in the importance of our attitudes and imaginations about the human person – our “anthropology,” as we call it at Acton.

“The ultimate resource is people,” wrote Simon in “The State of Humanity.” “… skilled, spirited, and hopeful people who will exert their wills and imaginations for their own benefit, and so, inevitably, for the benefit of us all.”

Yes, Simon “thought like an economist,” but more importantly, he had an intuitive grasp of the dignity and creative capacity bound up in human persons made in the image of God.

Humans are not just consumers, but producers, a lifeblood to the earth, destined for abundance. We are makers of love, wealth, culture, and otherwise, crafted by a creator-God to be gift-givers – sharing, exchanging, collaborating, and innovating alongside the grand family of humankind.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The Little Corporal Gets a Little Film
Director Ridley Scott has made a film about Napoleon that will never be described as Napoleonic. The director of such film-fan favorites as Blade Runner, Alien, and Gladiator has apparently met his Waterloo. Read More… Among all art forms, the movies have the greatest propensity to glorify violence, brutality, and savagery of all sorts. Because the medium is inherently kinetic, cinema captures the thrill, terror, and barbarism of battle; and because it is empathetic, cinema trains audiences to identify with...
Put Down the Phone and Pick up the Psalms
The disembodied, unreal reality of our digital age threatens to rob us of an authentic existence. A new book offers solutions short of throwing our iPhones in the trash. Read More… Digital Liturgies: Rediscovering Christian Wisdom in an Online Age makes pelling argument. Its author, Samuel James, asks readers to consider how long it’s been since they’ve checked a phone for notifications, or whether they’re in the habit of checking email while talking with people in person—or checking texts while...
Javier Milei and the Promise of a New Argentina
The election of Argentina’s first libertarian holds much promise for economic reform and an end to the status quo that has wrecked Argentina’s economy, once one of the most robust in the world. But can the new president fulfill his promises, especially given the “caste” arrayed against him? Read More… Nothing guarantees that a country will remain prosperous forever. President Reagan stated that “we are never more than one generation away” from doing lasting damage to the primary institutions of...
The Capitalist Manifesto
Entrepreneurs of the world unite! You have nothing to lose but your quintiles! Read More… Fulton Sheen once remarked that “not over a hundred people” hate the Catholic Church, but “there are millions, however, who hate what they wrongly believe to be the Catholic Church.” The same might be said for free market economics. While attacks on capitalism abound, many of them are in fact critiques not of capitalism but of a misunderstanding of capitalism. That is why every generation...
The Quiet Revolution of Place
A new book offers concrete solutions to entrenched problems that have contributed to the fragmentation, isolation, and desolation munities across the country. Step one is to start right where you are. Read More… Sociologist Robert Nisbet declared our era to be “singularly weak” in social inventiveness. In a new book on local solutions to America’s social ills, author Seth Kaplan agrees—with some exceptions. “Our modern era is not the first one in which the U.S. has weathered rapid social change,”...
Reforming the Sword of Justice
A new book offers biblically based arguments for reforming the criminal justice system without succumbing to the Scylla of indifference or the Charybdis of “defund the police” utopianism. Read More… In Reforming Criminal Justice: A Christian Proposal, Matt Martens has written an indispensable guide for Christians engaging with questions of criminal justice reform. While Dagan and Teles’ Prison Break: Why Conservatives Turned Against Mass Incarceration had outlined the hopeful story of bipartisan, and even conservative, criminal justice reform in 2016,...
Can the State Love God?
Philosopher Sebastian Morello makes the case for the political establishment of religion. Has the time e for conservatives to agree that this may be the only way out of our current moral morass? Read More… The 20th century was an outlier in the history of the human race. For the first time, secularizing movements spanned the globe. In many places, they succeeded by suppressing the political expression of religion. The great religions lost their capacity to direct culture and society....
Religious Freedom Upheld in Finland—Again
A prominent Member of Parliament and a Lutheran bishop have been found not guilty of “hate speech” for publicly quoting Scripture and confessing their Christian faith in Finland. But is their trial really over? Read More… In Finland, a prominent politician and a Lutheran bishop have been acquitted of hate crimes for the second time in as many years. On November 14, 2023, the Helsinki Court of Appeals issued its unanimous decision that Finnish Member of Parliament Dr. Päivi Räsänen...
The Holdovers and the Odor of Sanctity
Already winning pre-Oscar awards and gaining attention for its performances, The Holdovers proves to be both a throwback to an earlier era and a step forward for director Alexander Payne. Read More… When es to film genres, the kinds, the sorts, the categories of picture defined by certain conventions and characteristics, we’re all familiar with sci fi, the western, the detective crime drama, the war epic, edy (which includes mini-genres like , absurdist (think Airplane!), black (think Dr. Strangelove). Then...
Mental Illness and the Suffering Word
A searingly personal and poignant account of a battle with mental illness and how Word and Liturgy can calm the mind will speak both to sufferers and those who e alongside them. Read More… He knows. This John knows. How? Has he peered down into the bottomless pit in the middle of the Wilderness? Seen the Stranger trapped in a small iron Cage lowered on a long iron chain so far into the darkness that only a pinprick of light...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved