Title: Population, Poverty and the Local Environment
Author: Partha S. Dasgupta
A:
B:
The semiarid regions of sub-Saharan Africa and the Indian subcontinent, economists have typically not regarded poverty, population growth and the local environment as interconnected.Disaster in not something the poorest have to wait for, it is occurring even now.consider the # of live babies a woman would normally have if she managed to survive through her childbearing years. Some parts of sub-Saharan Africa as many as one woman dies for every 50 live births. Fortunate gaining international recognition. In developing countries, decisions on whether to have a child and on how to share education, food, work, health care and local resources are in large measure made within small entities such as households.Policies increasing women's productivity at home and improving their earnings in the marketplace would empower them. It stems from children's being valuable to their parents not only for future income but also as a source of current income.If access to shared resources continues, parents produce too many children, leading to crowding and susceptibility to disease and more pressure on the environmental resources. Families with greater access to resources are in a position to limit their size and propel themselves into still higher income levels.
C:In some of the poor country their population is increase rapidly, and the reason why their population is high is it beacuse the lack of resources. But in some on family they want to have a limit # of children because they have a way of accessing the resource. They creating offspring to help finding declining resources leads to more loss of the resources, because having to support more family members with those resources.
So What?
Difficult to discern which of these factors are causing and which are merely correlated with high fertility. Many factors militate aganist poor households' taking advantage of subsidies education. If children are needed to work inside & outside the home, then keeping them in school is costly.
What If...?
The price that women pay is maternal mortality?
Say Who?
Partha S. Dasgupta
This Remind Me Of
Sharing of resources within a household is often unequal even when differences in needs are taken into account.Men and boys usually get more sustenance than do women and girls, and the elderly her less than young.
Author: Partha S. Dasgupta
A:
- economists have typically not regarded poverty, population growth,the local environment as interconnected.
- None of the 3 elements directly causes the other 2 rather each influences
- Disaster in not something the poorest have to wait for, it is occurring even now.
- shared equally by adults, investigators had taken an altogether too benign view of the process.
- often unequal even when differences in needs are taken into account.
- Men and boys usually get more sustenance than do women and girls, and the elderly her less than young
- consider the # of live babies a woman would normally have if she managed to survive through her childbearing years.
- The price that women pay is maternal mortality
- sub-Saharan Africa as many as one woman dies for every 50 live births
- Difficult to discern which of these factors are causing and which are merely correlated with high fertility
- Many factors militate aganist poor households' taking advantage of subsidies education
- If children are needed to work inside & outside the home, then keeping them in school is costly
- Fortunate gaining international recognition
- child and on how to share education, food, work, health care and local resources are in large measure made within small entities such as households.
- Policies increasing women's productivity at home
- improving their earnings in the marketplace would empower them
- Greater earning power for women would raise for men the implicit costs for procreation
- more to population problem than gender inequalities.
- several pathways through which the choice becomes harmful to the community
- It stems from children's being valuable to their parents not only for future income but also as a source of current income.
- If access to shared resources continues, parents produce too many children, leading to crowding and susceptibility to disease and more pressure on the environmental resources
- Families with greater access to resources are in a position to limit their size and propel themselves into still higher income levels
B:
The semiarid regions of sub-Saharan Africa and the Indian subcontinent, economists have typically not regarded poverty, population growth and the local environment as interconnected.Disaster in not something the poorest have to wait for, it is occurring even now.consider the # of live babies a woman would normally have if she managed to survive through her childbearing years. Some parts of sub-Saharan Africa as many as one woman dies for every 50 live births. Fortunate gaining international recognition. In developing countries, decisions on whether to have a child and on how to share education, food, work, health care and local resources are in large measure made within small entities such as households.Policies increasing women's productivity at home and improving their earnings in the marketplace would empower them. It stems from children's being valuable to their parents not only for future income but also as a source of current income.If access to shared resources continues, parents produce too many children, leading to crowding and susceptibility to disease and more pressure on the environmental resources. Families with greater access to resources are in a position to limit their size and propel themselves into still higher income levels.
C:In some of the poor country their population is increase rapidly, and the reason why their population is high is it beacuse the lack of resources. But in some on family they want to have a limit # of children because they have a way of accessing the resource. They creating offspring to help finding declining resources leads to more loss of the resources, because having to support more family members with those resources.
So What?
Difficult to discern which of these factors are causing and which are merely correlated with high fertility. Many factors militate aganist poor households' taking advantage of subsidies education. If children are needed to work inside & outside the home, then keeping them in school is costly.
What If...?
The price that women pay is maternal mortality?
Say Who?
Partha S. Dasgupta
This Remind Me Of
Sharing of resources within a household is often unequal even when differences in needs are taken into account.Men and boys usually get more sustenance than do women and girls, and the elderly her less than young.