First published in 1798, An Essay on the Principle of Population by Thomas Robert Malthus remains one of the most provocative and influential works in the history of economic thought. In this groundbreaking study, Malthus presents a stark and unsettling idea: while population tends to grow geometrically, the means of subsistence increase only arithmetically. From this imbalance arises an inevitable tension—one that shapes societies through cycles of prosperity, crisis, and hardship. Famine, disease, and war, he argues, are not mere accidents of history, but natural checks that restore equilibrium. Both controversial and visionary, Malthus’s essay sparked debates that continue to this day, influencing thinkers from Charles Darwin to modern economists and policymakers. His insights remain strikingly relevant in a world grappling with overpopulation, resource scarcity, and environmental limits. This edition invites readers to engage with a timeless question: can human progress overcome the constraints of nature, or are we bound by laws we cannot escape? A foundational text—challenging, unsettling, and essential.
Thomas Robert Malthus (1766–1834) was an English economist, cleric, and scholar best known for his influential work on population dynamics. A fellow of Jesus College, Cambridge, and later a professor of political economy at the East India Company College, Malthus became one of the founding figures of classical economics.
His most famous work, An Essay on the Principle of Population, introduced the idea that population growth tends to outpace food production, leading to inevitable social and economic pressures. This theory sparked widespread debate and deeply influenced thinkers such as Charles Darwin and Alfred Russel Wallace. Malthus’s writings remain central to discussions on economics, sustainability, and the limits of human progress, securing his place as one of the most enduring and controversial voices in modern intellectual history.