People in the developed world tend to use more water per person than those in the developing world. This is often due to factors such as higher standards of living, increased industrialization, and more water-intensive diets and agricultural practices.
People in developed countries use about 3 times more water than people in developing countries. This discrepancy is mainly due to higher standards of living, industrial activities, and infrastructure that require more water consumption.
Experts claim that people in the developed world generally have higher levels of consumption and produce more waste compared to people in the developing world. This leads to a greater environmental impact in terms of resource depletion and pollution. Additionally, developed countries often have higher carbon footprints due to industrial activities and energy consumption.
China is the country in which most of the regions people do live
According to the Human Development Index, a development scale of 0-1, there are 35 countries and territories/dependencies with a development level of 0.9 or above, meaning "highly developed". The total population (as of 7/1/2008) of the countries in that category is 978,186,023 or 14.6% of world population (6,706,992,932). This means that 85.4% (5,727,771,964) of the world's population lives in developing countries.
According to the World Health Organisation in 2006 13% of the world's population still did not have access to safe drinking water or 887,000,000 people. This is an improvement since 1990 when 1,600,000,000 did not have access to safe water. Only about half the world's population can turn on a tap in their homes. Answer2: In the last five years,, some 20 million children have died of preventable waterborne diseases, and hundreds of millions of people continue to live with the daily misery of squalor associated with lack of clean drinking water and adequate sanitation. (from 1/2006 Awake magazine on Jehovah's Witnesses official website)
People in developed countries use about 3 times more water than people in developing countries. This discrepancy is mainly due to higher standards of living, industrial activities, and infrastructure that require more water consumption.
One thing people in a developed country would use more than someone in a developing country is a computer. Other things are a microwave oven, a digital television, a cell phone, and a tablet.
Experts claim that people in the developed world generally have higher levels of consumption and produce more waste compared to people in the developing world. This leads to a greater environmental impact in terms of resource depletion and pollution. Additionally, developed countries often have higher carbon footprints due to industrial activities and energy consumption.
People in developing countries have access to innovations of the developed world. This includes computers, and cutting edge medical innovations.
According to CIA world fact book it's a developed country.
Typically, more everything. More water, more oil products, more medicines, food and consumer products (at least per person, and usually in total as well).
You need to answer this prompt and show your critical thinking skills and how well you understood the lesson. We don’t do homework or write essays.
Sweden is a developed country.
Less developed than the US or Europe, more developed than some others.
Scandinavia is a very developed region. In fact, it is most likely the most developed region in the world.
Mcdonalds.
No. Third world.