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We are, of
course, at the heart of the problem. When Malthus wrote his essay, the
human population was about a billion. Over the next century and a half,
it tripled to 3 billion and by the turn of the 21st century, it had more
than doubled again to 7 billion. Remarkably, even as the human population
expanded from 3 to 6 billion, the fraction of people enduring chronic hunger
had fallen from half to about a sixth. But if Malthus thought the game was
already over in 1800, how did we manage to grow 7-fold and reduce the
fraction of the hungry at the same time?
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