Explaining the Mechanism of Growth in the Past Two Million Years Vol. I
Ron W. Nielsen

TL;DR
This paper challenges traditional theories of long-term growth, showing that human population and economic growth over two million years followed a hyperbolic pattern, contradicting accepted doctrines like stagnation and takeoff.
Contribution
It introduces a simple mathematical model explaining growth mechanisms, refuting major existing theories and emphasizing the hyperbolic nature of growth over two million years.
Findings
Growth was predominantly hyperbolic in nature.
Traditional doctrines like stagnation and takeoff are contradicted by data.
The proposed model simplifies understanding of long-term growth mechanisms.
Abstract
Economic growth and the growth of human population in the past 2,000,000 years are extensively examined. Data are found to be in a clear contradiction of the currently accepted explanations of the mechanism of growth, which revolve around two fundamental but incorrect doctrines: (1) the doctrine of stagnation (inappropriately labelled also as Malthusian stagnation, because Malthus never claimed that his positive checks would cause a long-lasting and wide-spread stagnation) and (2) the doctrine of explosion described also as a takeoff, sprint, spike or by other similar attributes. These doctrines and other related postulates are contradicted even by precisely the same data, which are used in the economic research and by the research results published in a prestigious scientific journal as early as in 1960. The generally accepted explanations are not based on a rigorous analysis of data…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEconomic theories and models · Global Energy and Sustainability Research
