Iosef Cross wrote:However, the US had 100 million people, 2.5 times the population of Italy, with per capita industrial production 5 times of Italy. So the difference between Italy and Russland was in per capita industrial production was much smaller than the difference between the US and Italy.
It's not just the industrial production, but also other indicators. Besides, this fully proves Italy was more industrialized than Russia, and despite this, it had a smaller population growth rate. The dynamics should've been different, were we to listed to Iosef the master of demographics.
Iosef Cross wrote:China wasn't industrialized in the 1960. An industrialized country needs to have the bulk of it's population in urban areas. China had 20% of their population in urban areas in 1960.
So? The USSR was not industrialized in the year 1932, when famine struck, likewise - most of it's population was rural. In your terms, it would be a pre-industrial society and thus prone to famine.
Iosef Cross wrote:If growth in per capita income is entirely driven by technology, population growth wouldn't affect it.
Despite this, nations with small populations can industrialize rapidly and often reach a very high per capita income, while large populations lag behind, often severely so. A case in point - Japan, European nations, USA - most of these nations had a small population (and it's still relatively small). China and India, two large-population nations, industrialize late. It's easier to bring a given technology to a small population, than it is to a large population. *shrugs* Or so it seems, like I said.
Iosef Cross wrote:I read in an article about wages in 1875, Italy had the lowest wages of the sample.
You have to answer my point, Iosef, not provide trivia:
Why Italy didn't have Russia's abysmal levels of infant and general mortality, then?
Iosef Cross wrote:Pré industrial duh.. I mean medieval!
Go fuck yourself, Iosef - your constant re-definitions tire me. You said pre-industrial. Your own fucking words. Hell, you said China was pre-industrial before the 1980s.
Iosef Cross wrote:Latin America in the 20th century is not preindustrial.
I meant the XIX century, idiot. The population growth was still WAY above zero or 0,1. You bullshited. Deal with it.
Iosef Cross wrote:You saying that pre industrial countries tend to have higher population growth than modern countries... Please, that's fuking retarded in your part.
Prove me wrong, then. I see that the population growth in some nations has decreased in the XX century relative to XIX century, and in general is decreasing as a nation is becoming more advanced. Your explanations to that are?
Iosef Cross wrote:The USSR's territory should have now 750 million, at the same densities.
Why? Russia had a lower population density. It's geographical and climatic conditions differ severely. Most of Russia is very sparsely populated.
Iosef Cross wrote:It was region of the same development level as the USSR. Hence, it is the closest comparison. To compare with Germany and Britain is truly off-topic.
Why? Latin America did not take part in World War I, and in general does not correspond to European culture. I'm not sure what you tried to prove (other than that you can use wrong numbers). Eastern Europe had an average population growth rate of 0,7 percent in the XIX century, it seems. That is way different from Latin America of the same period. In fact, there's a 2 times difference (probably owing to climatic conditions) for these nations in pre-industrial period:
Eastern Europe 1820-70: 0,7% average growth.
Latin America 1820-70: 1,6% average growth.
In terms of population growth, the two regions are thus not similar.
Now, as for the progression - the more industrialized a nation became, the less was it's population growth (for the First World nations on the average, at least, it seems). This is well illustrated by, say, Western Offshoots:
1820-70 1870-1913 1913-50 1950-73 1973-92
4.8 - 2.4 - 1.4 - 1.9 - 1.1.
Western Europe as the first region to industrialize, and the first region to lower birthrates, in general, had a more or less constant low growth rate:
1820-70 1870-1913 1913-50 1950-73 1973-92
0.8 0.9 0.6 0.8 0.3
In terms of pop growth, Eastern Europe including Russia better corresponds to Western Europe:
1820-70 1870-1913 1913-50 1950-73 1973-92
0.7 1.1 0.4 1.0 0.4
And even then, at it's most advanced industrial phase, the last half of the XX century, Western Europe's rates dropped thrice from what they were.
On the other hand, many "lagging behind" regions such as Latin America, Eastern Europe, Asia, exhibited a different pattern connected to upshoots in population growth rates. *shrugs*
Now, what is your point again?