no
it is to show how the population grows and falls. With the rise in birth rates and the rise in death rates. The decrease in births and the decrease in death. If births increase so does the death toll. If birth rates fall so does death.
40 years
Birth rate:30.4 births/1,000 population (2012 est.) / Death rate:9.96 deaths/1,000 population (July 2012 est.) ~ Source - CIA The World Factbook .
jomoda
no
it is to show how the population grows and falls. With the rise in birth rates and the rise in death rates. The decrease in births and the decrease in death. If births increase so does the death toll. If birth rates fall so does death.
No, Africa does not have the lowest birth rate and infant mortality rate in the world. African countries often have higher birth rates and infant mortality rates compared to other regions due to various factors such as inadequate healthcare infrastructure and high fertility rates.
40 years
Because there is a higher birth rate than death rate.
Niger has the highest rate of natural increase in the world. This is due to high birth rates and relatively low death rates in the country.
Birth rate:30.4 births/1,000 population (2012 est.) / Death rate:9.96 deaths/1,000 population (July 2012 est.) ~ Source - CIA The World Factbook .
The lowest birth rates in the world are the Peopls republic of China
In the demographic transition, birth rates initially fall due to improved healthcare, education, and increased access to contraception. As a society progresses, death rates also decline as healthcare and living conditions improve. This leads to an initial rapid population growth followed by stabilization at lower levels as birth rates continue to decrease.
Falling death rate. Birth rates have fallen too in the past century, but tend to lag behind deaths.
Countries with the lowest natural increase rates typically have low birth rates and/or high death rates. As of a 2021 United Nations report, countries like Bulgaria, Latvia, and Japan have some of the lowest natural increase rates in the world.
High birth rates can lead to overpopulation, putting pressure on resources and causing competition for food and habitat. Conversely, high death rates can impact population dynamics, potentially causing decline in certain species and disrupting the balance of the ecosystem. Both factors can have cascading effects on food chains and biodiversity within the ecosystem.