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Allometric Growth
in many countries the fertility rates have fallen due to proper knowledge on sex and new contraceptives
the organisms get ill or die
Yes, pigments can affect plant growth since plants absorb energy from the sunlight at different rates depending on the pigments each plant has.
Some of the factors include: -Population Momentum -Affluence -Technology -Whether or not a country is Developing/Developed -Disease -Immigration and Emigration -Respect for Women ( countries that treat women as second-class citizens often have higher fertility rates) -Epideimiologic Transition -Birth Rate -Death Rate
False. Most Latin American countries have a higher growth rate than Canada or the US.
As of 2021, countries with negative growth rates include Venezuela, Syria, and Zimbabwe. These countries are experiencing economic challenges, political instability, and social unrest that have contributed to their negative growth rates.
GDP per capita is generally lower, and poverty rates are generally higher, in countries with lower standards of living.
In the past, medical advances and better hygiene practices saw a sudden growth of population in many countries. Today, Immigration, lower mortality rates, and younger pregnancies cause the population to grow.
becase it constly changeing
Not everyone can write. Different countries have different literacy rates. Most countries in the western world have literacy rates of around 99%, whereas developing countries have much lower literacy rates.
Countries in Asia and Africa typically experience rapid population growth, with many classified as less developed countries (LDCs) facing significant population increase due to factors like high birth rates and improving healthcare. Meanwhile, more developed countries (MDCs) usually have slower population growth rates primarily due to lower birth rates and better access to family planning and education.
Estonia and Kazakhstan currently have the largest GDP growth rates of any Eastern European countries. However, they both have considerably high external debt rates. Montenegro and Albania have considerably low external debt rates, but moderately low GDP growth rates. Any of these countries could be considered doing economically well in Eastern Europe.
The recent growth literature has underestimated the importance - and ignored the implications - of the instability and volatility of growth rates. In particular, the use of panel data to investigate the effects of long-term growth in developing countries - especially with fixed effects estimates - is potentially more problematic than helpful. Except during the Great Depression, the historical path for per capita GDP in the United States has been reasonably stable exponential trend growth, with modest cyclical deviation. Graphically, growth in the United States displays as a modestly sloping, only slightly bumpy, hill. But almost nothing that is true about per capita GDP for the United States (or for other OECD countries) is true for developing countries. First, per capita GDP in most developing countries does not follow a single time trend: For a given country, there is great instability in growth rates over time, relative to both average level of growth and to cross-sectional variance. These shifts in growth rates lead to distinct patterns. Some countries have had steady growth (hills and steep hills); others have had rapid growth followed by stagnation (plateaus); others have had rapid growth followed by declines (mountains) or even catastrophic declines (cliffs); still others have experienced continuous stagnation (plains) or even steady decline (valleys). Second, volatility - however measured - is much greater in developing than in industrial countries. These stylized observations about growth rates, Pritchett concludes, suggest that it may be useless to use panel data to investigate long-term growth rates in developing countries. Perhaps more can be learned about developing countries by investigating what initiates (or halts) episodes of growth. There is something of a professional split in growth literature, Pritchett observes. Macroeconomists studying industrial countries discuss steady-state growth and ponder whether all countries in the convergence club will reach the same happy level in the end. Development economists, on the other hand, are the pathologists of Economics, having discovered that developing countries are most emphatically not all alike. Developing countries have found ways to be ecstatic but they have also discovered many different ways to be unhappy.
Mountains are characterized by their high elevation, steep slopes, and rugged terrain. They typically have cooler temperatures and support unique ecosystems due to their varying altitudes. Plains, on the other hand, are flat or gently rolling landscapes with low elevation and are typically covered in grasslands or agricultural fields. They have more moderate temperatures and are often used for farming and grazing.
Birthrates, Death Rates, and the age structure of a population help predict why some countries have high growth rates while other countries grow more slowly.
Birthrates, Death Rates, and the age structure of a population help predict why some countries have high growth rates while other countries grow more slowly.