Environmental issues include pollution and just all around filth.
Social issues include overpopulation/crowding in the city, dangerous living conditions, crime, etc.
The most polluted cities in developing countries often lack strict environmental regulations, infrastructure for waste management, and resources for pollution control measures. Rapid industrialization, urbanization, and prioritization of economic growth over environmental protection can contribute to high pollution levels in these areas. Additionally, factors such as population density, reliance on fossil fuels, and agricultural practices can also exacerbate pollution in developing countries.
poverty
It depends. If this developing country is wealthy, then the people can have a better life, but in your average developing country will just have to deal with it. If their economy isn't growing, they can't do anything about it, like Haiti.
developing countries
In still developing/ poor countries
Developing countries often lack resources and infrastructure to address challenges like poverty, health epidemics, and environmental degradation effectively. Inequality between developed and developing countries can lead to exploitation and perpetuate a cycle of poverty. Global issues such as climate change and trade policies can disproportionately impact developing countries, exacerbating their challenges.
The population growth rate of developing countries tends to be higher than that of developed countries. Factors such as high fertility rates, improved healthcare leading to lower mortality rates, and limited access to family planning services contribute to this faster growth in developing nations. This can put pressure on resources and infrastructure in these countries.
the developing countries kwashiokor
because of the availability of everything. food, jobs, health, education. everything.
less population
as developing countries with high populations become more industrialized pollution will increase.
The deteriorating air quality in developing countries can be linked to various factors, such as rapid industrialization, reliance on fossil fuels for energy production, increasing vehicular emissions, inadequate waste management, and lack of environmental regulations and enforcement. These factors contribute to high levels of pollution and pose severe health and environmental risks to the population.