Is this what the earth's population would look like as a village of 100 people?

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Is this what the earth's population would look like as a village of 100 people?"


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Claim: List summarizes what proportions of common traits would be like if we could shrink the earth's population to a village of precisely 100 people. ORIGIN This item summarizing what


proportions of common traits would be like if we could shrink the earth's population to a village of precisely 100 people has been circulated on the Internet for many years, and many


readers seem to find the contrasts it highlights between the "haves" and "have-nots" of the world compelling. However, much of the information it presented was


questionable, out of date, or poorly-defined even when it was new, and the passage of time has only made it less accurate. > EXAMPLE:   _[Collected on the Internet, 2001]_ >  > If 


we could shrink the earth's population to a village of precisely > 100 people, with all the existing human ratios remaining the same, > it would look something like the following.


>  > There would be: >  > - 57 Asians >  > - 21 Europeans >  > - 14 from the Western Hemisphere, both north and south >  > - 8 Africans >  > - 52 would 


be female >  > - 48 would be male >  > - 70 would be non-white >  > - 30 would be white >  > - 70 would be non-Christian >  > - 30 would be Christian >  >


 - 89 would be heterosexual >  > - 11 would be homosexual >  > - 6 people would possess 59% of the entire world's wealth and all 6 > would be from the United States. >


  > - 80 would live in substandard housing >  > - 70 would be unable to read >  > - 50 would suffer from malnutrition >  > - 1 would be near death; 1 would be near birth


>  > - 1 (yes, only 1) would have a college education >  > - 1 would own a computer Since we first wrote about this item back in 2000, all the information presented below is


relative to conditions as they existed in that year: > 57 Asians >  > 21 Europeans >  > 14 from the Western Hemisphere, both north and south >  > 8 Africans According to


the United Nations World Population Prospects document, the world population in the year 2000 was about 6.7 billion, with this geographic distribution: - Africa: 794,000,000 - Asia:


3,672,000,000 - Latin America and Caribbean: 519,000,000 - Europe: 727,000,000 - North America: 314,000,000< - Oceania: 51,000,000 If we calculate the corresponding percentages (and lump


North America, Latin America, the Caribbean, and Oceania into the "western hemisphere" category), we get the following ratios for our population of 100: - Asians: 60< -


Europeans: 12< - Western Hemisphereans: 15 (9 Latin Americans/Caribbeans, 5 North Americans, 1 Oceanian) - Africans: 13 > 52 would be female >  > 48 would be male According to


that same United Nations document, the world population in the year 2000 consisted of 3,051,099,000 men and 3,005,616,000 women, which (with a little rounding) breaks down to 50 men and 50


women in a population of 100. > 70 would be non-white >  > 30 would be white Here we run into definitional problems trying to lump entire continents' worth of people into one


class based on some nebulous concept of color. What makes a person "white" or "Black"? If we say that Africans are considered "Black," does that categorization


apply equally to Nigerians, Egyptians, and South Africans? (Is the Middle East part of Africa or Asia?) Should the classification of Asians as "white" or "non-white" be


based solely upon skin tone, or upon geographical and cultural factors as well? The numbers given here seem to be based upon the classification of Europeans and Western Hemisphereans as


"white" and Africans and Asians as "non-white" (and the assumption that those continents are homogeneous in racial composition). With those qualifications, a population


of 100 (based on year 2000 numbers) would include 27 whites and 73 non-whites. > 70 would be non-Christian >  > 30 would be Christian According to the chart at Adherents.com, which


provides estimates of "the number of people who have at least a minimal level of self-identification as adherents" of a particular religion, the world's population in early


2001 was 33% Christian. So, our reduced population of 100 would be composed of 33 Christians and 67 non-Christians. > 89 would be heterosexual >  > 11 would be homosexual This one


is almost impossible to estimate with any reasonable degree of accuracy. The classification of people as being either "heterosexual" or "homosexual" is too dependent upon


subjective criteria, and the answers of respondents to surveys about their sexual habits are too easily influenced by other social factors. The common figure of "10% of the population


is homosexual" is often bandied about, but that number is derived from a misapplication of a Kinsey study which was not based upon a representative sample of the population. One can


find estimates that place of the percentage of the population considered to be homosexual anywhere between 1-2% and 25%-35%, but a reasonable survey of the more controlled studies would put


the figure in about the 2-3% range (for males, at least). > 6 people would possess 59% of the entire world's wealth, and all 6 > would be from the United States. This claim


demonstrates the precariousness of trying to summarize a very large, diverse population in a few simple statistics. For starters, our miniature world of 100 people only includes 5 people


from all of North America, so any statement involving 6 people from the United States just doesn't compute. "Wealth" is a concept difficult to measure with any precision, but


we can use Gross Domestic Product (GDP) as a reasonable approximation. If we take some figures from the CIA's World Factbook 2000, we find that the estimated GDP of the United States in


1999 was $9.255 trillion, out of a world total of $40.7 trillion. In other words, in 1999 the United States possessed about 23% of the world's wealth. If we assume that all 5 North


Americans in our miniature world are from the United States, and that they have inherited an amount of wealth proportional to that held by the United States in the "real" world,


together they'd still have only 23% of the world's wealth, not 59%. Even if you could find some combination of 6 people in our putative population of 100 who held 59% of the total


wealth, they wouldn't all be from the United States. > 80 would live in substandard housing This statement can't be assessed without knowing the definition of


"substandard" being employed here. "Substandard" by whose standards? And if a full 80% of the world's population truly lives in "substandard" housing,


doesn't that indicate whatever standard is being used must be too high? Estimates for this figure are all over the map as well (some United Nations housing statistics are informative


but don't really answer the question), but a 1999 article in International Wildlife puts the estimate at 33%, not the 80% figure offered here. > 70 would be unable to read A 1998


UNICEF study put the world illiteracy rate at 16%, well short of the 70% claimed here. > 50 would suffer from malnutrition The World Health Organization puts the malnutrition figure at


about 33%. > 1 would be near death >  > 1 would be near birth This statement is simply too vague to evaluate. At any given time, one person in a hundred is near death? Just how


"near"? Is age a factor in this statistic? > 1 (yes, only 1) would have a college education Again, we have to know whether our miniature world's inhabitants represent


current population trends in age as well as other factors. According to the United Nations World Population Prospects document, the median age of the world's population was 26.5 in


2000, with that figure being lower in less developed (and more populous) areas of the world. (The median age of Africans, for example, was only 18.4 in 2000.) So, this statistic could be


true simply because much of our miniature population would be too young to have finished college yet (assuming that "having a college education" means "graduated with the


equivalent of a bachelor's degree"). However, if we assume everyone in our miniature world is of sufficient age and apply the current graduation rates of the USA (33%) to its share


of the population (5), we'd have almost two college graduates from America alone. And other parts of the world (e.g., New Zealand, Netherlands, Britain, and Norway) have graduation


rates equal to or higher than the USA's. > 1 would own a computer Computer ownership rates in the USA now indicate that over 50% of American households have computers, so if we


assume that "households" can be equated with "people" in our miniature world, our 5 Americans alone would have at least two computers between them.


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