Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Demographic_dividend> ?p ?o. }
Showing items 1 to 27 of
27
with 100 items per page.
- Demographic_dividend abstract "Demographic dividend refers to a period – usually 20 to 30 years – when fertility rates fall due to significant reductions in child and infant mortality rates. This fall is often accompanied by an extension in average life expectancy that increases the portion of the population that is in the working age-group. This cuts spending on dependents and spurs economic growth. As women and families realize that fewer children will die during infancy or childhood, they will begin to have fewer children to reach their desired number of offspring,further reducing the proportion of non-productive dependents.However, this drop in fertility rates is not immediate. The lag between produces a generational population bulge that surges through society. For a period of time this “bulge” is a burden on society and increases the dependency ratio. Eventually this group begins to enter the productive labor force. With fertility rates continuing to fall and older generations having shorter life expectancies, the dependency ratio declines dramatically. This demographic shift initiates the demographic dividend. With fewer younger dependents, due to declining fertility and child mortality rates, and fewer older dependents, due to the older generations having shorter life expectancies, and the largest segment of the population of productive working age, the dependency ratio declines dramatically leading to the demographic dividend. Combined with effective public policies this time period of the demographic dividend can help facilitate more rapid economic growth and puts less strain on families. This is also a time period when many women enter the labor force for the first time. In many countries this time period has led to increasingly smaller families, rising income, and rising life expectancy rates. However, dramatic social changes can also occur during this time, such as increasing divorce rates, postponement of marriage, and single-person households.".
- Demographic_dividend wikiPageExternalLink unpp.
- Demographic_dividend wikiPageID "6636946".
- Demographic_dividend wikiPageRevisionID "598956025".
- Demographic_dividend hasPhotoCollection Demographic_dividend.
- Demographic_dividend subject Category:Ageing.
- Demographic_dividend subject Category:Demographic_economics.
- Demographic_dividend subject Category:Demographics.
- Demographic_dividend subject Category:Demography.
- Demographic_dividend type Abstraction100002137.
- Demographic_dividend type Cognition100023271.
- Demographic_dividend type Datum105816622.
- Demographic_dividend type Demographic106022076.
- Demographic_dividend type Demographics.
- Demographic_dividend type Information105816287.
- Demographic_dividend type PsychologicalFeature100023100.
- Demographic_dividend type Statistic106021499.
- Demographic_dividend comment "Demographic dividend refers to a period – usually 20 to 30 years – when fertility rates fall due to significant reductions in child and infant mortality rates. This fall is often accompanied by an extension in average life expectancy that increases the portion of the population that is in the working age-group. This cuts spending on dependents and spurs economic growth.".
- Demographic_dividend label "Demographic dividend".
- Demographic_dividend label "人口红利".
- Demographic_dividend sameAs Demografische_Dividende.
- Demographic_dividend sameAs m.0gfmf0.
- Demographic_dividend sameAs Q3634022.
- Demographic_dividend sameAs Q3634022.
- Demographic_dividend sameAs Demographic_dividend.
- Demographic_dividend wasDerivedFrom Demographic_dividend?oldid=598956025.
- Demographic_dividend isPrimaryTopicOf Demographic_dividend.