I don't follow why this is the case. Doesn't it rely on falling population density which doesn't make intuitive sense to me. I don't see a reason why the area occupied by a population increases faster than that population. If you're putting 500 people in one square kilometre of land, adding another 500 people gives only one more square kilometre. I realise this is making assumptions about the effects of population growth on population density, but I don't see why they're any less plausible than yours.Alyrium Denryle wrote:Simple geometry. As a population grows and a city expands, the area said city occupies and thus the number of police needed to patrol it efficiently increases exponentially. Same with roads, electrical grid maintenance, and waste disposal , which are a function of area and not population. Schools have limited service areas and thus deal with that same issue as well.
The same issue exists with ant foraging (Just applying the same principles from what I know of social insect colony infrastructure to human developments, because they are governed by the same rules). As a colony grows in number the amount of area it covers to forage, and thus the area it must cover in order to patrol that foraging area and defend it against rival colonies increases exponentially with colony size. The size of the nest itself increases in volume the same way, etc.
Edit: I suppose zoning laws might have an effect, in the UK we tend to have quite strict laws about where you can build which might not be as strong as in the US and these would presumably encourage denser expansion.