"Japan’s demographic crisis provides some lessons for where America might be headed."
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Nancy Watson's curator insight,
April 19, 2019 10:40 AM
Population unit
Isabella Thoulouis's curator insight,
October 6, 2019 1:29 AM
This article is about how Japan's decline in population could be a warning sign to the US. In this article it talks about the different effects of why a population decreases in different regions. It also talks about steps that could be taken to prevent a large negative drop in population, which is what Japan is doing.
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GTANSW & ACT's curator insight,
December 17, 2016 11:46 PM
Migration at a global scale changes places
Syllabus Students investigate reasons for and effects of internal migration in Australia and another country, for example:
Students investigate the reasons for and effects of international migration to Australia, for example:
Geoworld 9 NSW 8.1 Migration: people own the move 8.2 Australia: destination nation 8.3 Where do immigrants settle 8.4 Culturally diverse australia: trends in migration
8.8 Australians are mobile people 8.9 Mobile indigenous populations 8.19 Lifestyle migration 8.11 The power of resources: the Pilbara 8.12 Migration changes the USA Geothink
Brian Wilk's curator insight,
March 23, 2015 7:08 PM
Demographics seemingly started with age as a metric many years ago and have evolved into marketing tools, political footballs, and ways to combat everything from obesity to social security. Africa is clearly the youngest and probably for a very morbid reason; AIDS and Ebola among other diseases have taken their toll on the sexually active and thus have reduced the average age of their population. Germany seems to be the place to go for a job as the labor shortage will mean higher wages for the folks who are left. Japan has another issue; a healthy aging population that will strain the government's ability to financially take care of them. I wonder if the unevenness of Europe is an indication of the two World wars that were fought mostly on the turf. Did some countries lose more than others? If more soldiers, presumably of baby making age, perished did this affect the countries ability to keep pace with the Germany's and Spain's of Europe? Diet seems to play a large part as well as the Mediterranean is well represented in terms of age. Does their healthy diet of fish, nuts, legumes and olive oil make a difference? I could spend all day postulating, but I'll leave some of the findings for you to discover...
Deanna Metz's curator insight,
March 1, 2016 8:05 PM
The median age of a population call be a quite telling statistic--almost a surrogate for a population pyramid. I post this with a special attention to Sub-Saharan Africa; the youngest 15 countries in the world are all in Africa, one of the major demographic realities confronting African economies and politics. Here is a map with the median age of U.S. counties. Tag: population, demographic transition model, population pyramids.
Olivia Campanella's curator insight,
October 31, 2018 11:55 AM
In the article there are 1.2 billion people between the ages of 15 and 24 in the world today. Meaning that, countries around the world have populations younger than ever! 15 of the youngest countries are in Africa. And of the 200 million young people of Africa, about 75 million are unemployed. The worlds youngest country is Niger with a population and median age of 15.1 and coming in a close second is Uganda with 15.5, but Japan and Germany are some of the Worlds oldest countries ranging in a median age of 46.1!
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Deanna Wiist's curator insight,
September 12, 2017 9:00 PM
Questions to Ponder: What geographic and socioeconomic factors shape mortality rates? What is better about society today then before? Has anything worsened? How come?
Tags: mortality, medical, development, regions, USA, population, statistics. |