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Explore the Chart 2 Exercises with Answers
1. Read the definition of growth rates then use the data from Chart 2 to complete the following table:
| GNP growth rate |
Population growth rate |
GNP per capita growth rate |
|
| Low-income economies (with China and India) | [6.7%] | [1.9%] | [4.7%] |
| Low-income economies (without China and India) | [4.1%] | [2.4%] | [1.6%] |
| Middle-income economies | [2.3%] | [1.6%] | [0.7%] |
| High-income economies | [2.7%] | [0.6%] | [2.0%] |
2. When calculating data trends by country income groups, the low-income country group data are frequently calculated both with and without China and India. This is because China and India are so large that trends in their individual populations, economies, and environments can overshadow trends throughout the remaining countries in the group.
3. Study the growth rate data from the table you created for question 1. Imagine you are the leader of a country and have pledged to improve the standard of living for your average citizens. Which income groups GNP growth rate would you try to match? Explain. [The low-income countries with China and India because their GNP growth rate is the highest of any group.] Which income groups population growth rate would you try to imitate? Explain. [The high-income countries, because their population growth rate is the lowest of any group.] Why would this be a good combination? [Because a high GNP growth rate coupled with a low population growth rate would result in a high GNP per capita growth rate. This would mean that the average persons standard of living would most likely improve.]
4. Looking back at the text and at the data in the table you created for question 1, argue for or against the following statement:
"Raising standards of living in low-income countries depends
on one thing only: reducing population growth."
Explore the Chart 2 Exercise: Print version without answers | Work on line
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