yes, people can live in an area with a lack of industrial development if you are looking for a place to live it would be smarter to pick a place with at least a little bit of industrial development but people do still live on quite little country towns, some people have family owned businesses , but some commute to work, so the answer is yes. it's sometimes a burden, but people can make it work.
low capital accumulation lack of skilled labor lack of technology
The physical geography limits the economic development because of the lack of natural resources.
A lack of initiative leads people to be poor, because people just do not want to work. A lack of initiative might also be responsible for higher crime rates in an area. A lack of initiative will also make one area of the city poorer than another if many citizens in an area do not want to work.
The lack of water can negatively impact a country's development by impacting basic needs such as agriculture, sanitation, and hygiene. This can lead to food and water scarcity, malnutrition, and diseases, which in turn can affect the health and productivity of the population. Insufficient water availability can also hinder industrial and economic growth, limiting opportunities for development.
today is normal
The Industrial Revolution was harmful to children because of diseases carried by many people developing the land. Also because of the lack of food and weapons to protect themselves from others.
Aplasia
Fluid's lack of rigidity contributed to scientist's creation of the area of fluid mechanics.
The Appalachian Development Act of 1965 was part of President Johnson's War on Poverty. The Act provided money for the development of the Appalachian region of the United States. This region was suffering from intense poverty and a lack of development.
because of lack of capital, lack of local participation , lack of infrastructures of development ,FWDR is very poor in industry, lack of skilled manpower,due to insufficient farming land
aplasia
There does not seem to be any clear definition for non-industrial farming such as there is for industrial agriculture. However, it is clear that it generally refers to farming methods which do not utilize industrial agriculture methods, whether due to lack of input financing (subsistence farming), personal farmer choice (organic farming), or some other reason. Non-industrial agriculture would be typified by the lack of agricultural machinery such as tractors and combine harvesters, lack of biotechnology (GMO's), lack of chemical fertilizers and pesticides, and so on.