Overpopulation, the situation of having large numbers of people with too few resources and too little space, is closely associated with poverty. It can result from a high population or from low amounts of resources, or from both. Only a certain number of people can be supported on a given area of land, and that number depends on how much food and other resources the land can provide. In countries where people live primarily by means of simple farming, gardening, herding, hunting, and gathering, even large areas of land can support only small numbers of people because these labor-intensive subsistence activities produce only small amounts of food.
In developed countries such as the United States, Japan, and the countries of Western Europe, overpopulation generally is not considered a major cause of poverty. These countries produce large quantities of food through mechanized farming, which depends on commercial fertilizers, large-scale irrigation, and agricultural machinery. This form of production provides enough food to support the high densities of people in metropolitan areas.
High birth rates contribute to overpopulation in many developing countries. Children are assets to many poor families because they provide labor, usually for farming. Cultural norms in traditionally rural societies commonly sanction the value of large families. Also, the governments of developing countries often provide little or no support, financial or political, for family planning, even people who wish to keep their families small have difficulty doing so, because they do not know or unable to get contraception. For all these reasons, developing countries tend to have high rates of population growth.
Most developed countries provide considerable political and financial support for family planning. People tend to limit the number of children they have because of the availability of this support, for example contraception.
•Everywhere in the world, in every kind of culture, the poorest people have the most children. •Does having many children make people poor? Or does being poor make people have many children? •That is a hot question in the continuous struggle over how to spend foreign aid money. Those who think population growth causes poverty advocate programs in family planning and population education. Those who think poverty causes population growth favor direct economic aid, jobs, capital investment. Take care of development, they say, and the birth rate will take care of itself.
Poverty was mainly a result of over population which caused the want in jobs to increase therefore employement increased . However this meant whom ever was employed their wages where cut due to the number of workers. So basically no matter what unemployeed or not poverty was a problem because back then they did not have money to fall back on like we do know.
There are many reasons for poverty, but the top five would be: lack of education, environment, unemployment, illness - physical or mental, addiction, or bad luck. Of all five, education is the most likely to pull a person out of poverty over the long haul.
Over 75% of the people live in poverty in pakistan
Economic trends can often be impacted by and simultaneously impact levels of poverty, especially in developing nations wherein both of these factors are often in a state of great flux. High birth rates and an economic measure, for example, can often lead to over-population and increases in poverty levels.
high level of illiteracy and poverty
CAUSES OF POVERTY IN RWANDA -over population -illiteracy -low technology -familial conflicts -foreign aid -ignorance -discrimination of income
over population causes, poverty, crime, corruption, starvation, and destroys the country.
poverty and over population
the cause of povarity of over currepted leders.
There are thousands of Africans that live in poverty. It is estimated that over half of the population lives in poverty.
population is boon because it leads us to poverty
The reasons for an unhealthy India is poverty and over population.
over population and extreme poverty.
•Everywhere in the world, in every kind of culture, the poorest people have the most children. •Does having many children make people poor? Or does being poor make people have many children? •That is a hot question in the continuous struggle over how to spend foreign aid money. Those who think population growth causes poverty advocate programs in family planning and population education. Those who think poverty causes population growth favor direct economic aid, jobs, capital investment. Take care of development, they say, and the birth rate will take care of itself.
Poverty,religious persecution,famine,and over population.
I would think poverty, dept and over-population.