Exponential need not mean explosive

Earlier on this blog I’ve written about the misuse of the term “exponential” when it is used to describe explosive increase in a particular number. My suspicion is that this misuse of the word “exponential” comes from Computer Science and complexity theory – where the hardest problems to crack are those which require time/space that is exponential in the size of the data. In fact, the entire definition of P, NP and NP-completeness have to do with the distinction between problems that take exponential resources versus those that take resources that are a polynomial function of the size of data.

Earlier today, I shared this blog post by Bryan Caplan on Puerto Rican immigration into the United States with a comment “exponential immigration”. I won’t rule out drawing some flak for this particular description, for Caplan’s thesis is that Puerto Rican immigration took a long time indeed to “explode”. However, I would expect that the flak I get for describing this variable as “exponential” would come from people who mistake “exponential” for “explosive”.

Caplan’s theory in the above linked blog post is that immigration from Puerto Rico to the United states was extremely slow for a very long time. It was in the late 1890s that a US Supreme Court ruling allowed free access to Puerto Ricans to the United States. However, it took close to a hundred years for this immigration to “explode”. Caplan’s theory is that the number of people moving to the US per year is a function of the number of Puerto Ricans who are already there!

In other words, the immigration process can be described by our favourite equation: dX/dt = kX, solving which we will get an equation of the form X = a exp(kt), which means that the growth is indeed exponential in time! Yet, given a rather small value of X_0 (the number of Puerto Ricans in the United States at the time the law was passed), and given a small value of k, the increase has been anything but explosive, despite it being exponential!

The point of this post is worth reiterating: the word “exponential”, in its common use, has been taken to be synonymous with “explosive”, and this is wrong. Exponential growth need not be explosive, and explosive growth need not be exponential! The two concepts are unrelated and people would do well to not confuse one with the other.