I kinda went on a little research spree on economics this afternoon but at one point I figured it’s probably good to know if it’s possible for, say, at least 98% of people on earth to live a happy fulfilled life at all.

I know there’s plenty of people who’d be more than happy to have literally nothing more than a house, food and water, but that still leaves a whole lot of people who want other things in life.

Do we have any metrics or data on wether the earth can sustain roughly 8 billion humans?

  • TubularTittyFrog@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Yeah people really don’t get it. Certain resources are only in certain places. Hence why most countries populations are on rivers, coasts, and other crop viable areas. Certain minerals and fossil fuels… also only in certain places and that has been a de terminating factor in why some countries are rich and others are poor. Not to mention under developed societies, even if they have resource wealth, don’t have the industrial/technological means to extract it. Hence colonialism in the past, present, and future.

    Which is also why most of the worlds population on livings on like tiny slice of it’s landmass. Vast majority of the land in the world is uninhabitable. 95% of the world population lives on 10% of it’s landmass. and only about 15% of landmass in the globe is developed, as in people live there, so the other 5% of people are living on another 5% of the land. 85% of the land has zero people living there.