Population Poverty and Local Environment
Gender equality does not exist in undeveloped countries. Culture and tradition play a crucial role of the inequality women are expect to just take care of their in laws and have children. Having children encourages overpopulation and places stress on the local environment, families still do this because of tradition and perceived economic benefit.Undeveloped countries lack resources such as fresh water and food. But if programs like family planning are place in more places of the undeveloped countries birth rates and death rates,in the sub-Saharan Africa. Family planning programs are already starting to have an affect on fertility rates.
The obvious trend in these countries is that they are in poverty. If people in these countries had easier access to water, food and education, births would go down because less children would be needed to continue the family. Access to birth control is also very low and knowledge on just how much it costs financially to raise a kid is not common.
- Third World countries are for the most part subsistence economies
- Population growth might be the cause of poverty and environmental degradation
- Control over a family’s choices is, after all, often held unequally.
- In poor households in the Indian subcontinent, for example, men and boys usually get more sustenance than do women and girls, and the elderly get less than the young.
- Men wield more influence, even though women typically bear the greater cost.
- A woman would normally have if she managed to survive through her childbearing years.
- This number, called the total fertility rate, is between six and eight in sub-Saharan Africa.
- In some parts of sub-Saharan Africa as many as one woman dies for every 50 live births.
- At a total fertility rate of seven or more, the chance that a woman entering her reproductive years will not live through them is about one in six.
Gender equality does not exist in undeveloped countries. Culture and tradition play a crucial role of the inequality women are expect to just take care of their in laws and have children. Having children encourages overpopulation and places stress on the local environment, families still do this because of tradition and perceived economic benefit.Undeveloped countries lack resources such as fresh water and food. But if programs like family planning are place in more places of the undeveloped countries birth rates and death rates,in the sub-Saharan Africa. Family planning programs are already starting to have an affect on fertility rates.
The obvious trend in these countries is that they are in poverty. If people in these countries had easier access to water, food and education, births would go down because less children would be needed to continue the family. Access to birth control is also very low and knowledge on just how much it costs financially to raise a kid is not common.