Birth rates rise as death rates fall?
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.
Birth rates can fall below death rates due to various factors, including increased access to education and contraception, economic changes, urbanization, and shifting societal values that prioritize smaller families. As women gain more opportunities in the workforce, they often delay childbirth or choose to have fewer children. Additionally, aging populations in many developed countries result in higher death rates, further contributing to population decline. This demographic shift can lead to challenges such as labor shortages and increased pressure on social services.
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My answer: The average age of the population is rising and since 1900, there has been drastic medical improvements. Due to better standards of medical treatment, life expectancy is higher meaning a fall in death rates. (Just to give you some ideas and jog your memory)You could also expand on points such as infant mortality, better medical knowledge, better living standards, ageism, aging population, positive aspects of retirement and beanpole families. - Chaz135 (Hope this helped!)
I believe it is 7
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.
It won't, hopefully. It's expected to rise from today's 7.2 billion to 11bn in the next century but to slow to a halt as birth rates fall to replacement level.
Demographic transition refers to the shift from high birth and death rates to lower birth and death rates as a country develops economically. In the early stages, populations grow rapidly due to high birth rates, but as a country advances, improved healthcare, education, and living standards lead to declining mortality rates first, followed by declining birth rates. This transition often results in a temporary population boom, but eventually stabilizes or even declines as the population ages and birth rates fall below replacement levels. Overall, demographic transition significantly influences the growth rate by altering birth and death rates over time.
Birth rates can fall below death rates due to various factors, including increased access to education and contraception, economic changes, urbanization, and shifting societal values that prioritize smaller families. As women gain more opportunities in the workforce, they often delay childbirth or choose to have fewer children. Additionally, aging populations in many developed countries result in higher death rates, further contributing to population decline. This demographic shift can lead to challenges such as labor shortages and increased pressure on social services.
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.
Malthusian theory of population is based on food supply with population growth that is whereas population is growing at a geometrical progression food supply on the hand is at arithmetic progression whiel on the other hand geographic transition theory is based on birth rates and death rates the theory says that population cycle begins with a fall in death rates ,continues with a phase of rapid population growth and concluding with a decline in the birth rates.
Populations can rise in a particular place due to factors such as high birth rates, lower mortality rates, immigration, or economic opportunities. Conversely, populations can fall due to factors such as higher death rates, outmigration, natural disasters, or declining economic opportunities. Various social, economic, environmental, and political factors can contribute to these population changes.
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Leo Fall's birth name is Leopold Fall.
By telling the reader that "it was spring". [APEX]
Nope there wasn't until God kicked Adam and Eve out of Eden
That birth rates vary from country to country, is a relatively new phenomenon. The reason why there are different birth rates is that the countries are in a different state of the so called 'demographic transition'. It usually has 4 stages which a country passes: Stage 1: High birth and high death rate (all countries before industrial revolution) Stage 2: High birth and falling death rate (some African countries) Stage 3: falling birth rate and low death rate (most of the developing countries) Stage 4: low birth rate and low death rate (developed countries) The birth rates fall because there's no need for children as workers anymore. Countries in stage 1 and 2 are rural societies that demand child labor in the fields. The people have also to compensate the high infant mortality rate. In stage 3 lesser and lesser people work in agriculture and children are no longer an economic benefit but a burden for the parents. There's also much divergence in the birth rate in stage 4 countries. Most of the developed countries will go to the Stage 5 of the transition, with a death rate higher than the birth rate. Only two developed countries will not: USA and Israel. This has cultural reasons.