Birth rate and death rate definitions
What can affect birth rates?
Access to contraception, infant mortality rate, education of women, traditions and culture
Average death rate
Between 5 per 1,000 and 20 per 1,000 per year
Average birth rate
Between 5 per 1,000 and 40 per 1,000 per year
Natural increase
Birth rate exceeds death rate and population grows
How do you calculate natural change?
Birth rate-death rate/10
Why do people have few children in stage 4 and 5
Children are expensive, women educated - marry later, have children later and therefore have fewer children.
Natural decrease
Death rate exceeds birth rate and population declines
Stage 5
Declining population in this stage
Life expectancy
The number of years a person is expected to live, usually taken from birth
Natural change
The difference between birth and death rate (as a percentage). Measure of populations growth or decline
Stage 1
Low and fluctuating population in this stage
Birth rate
Number of babies born per 1000 people per year
Death rate
Number of deaths per 1000 people per year
Zero growth
Population in balance
Stage 2 and 3
Rapidly growing population in these stages
What can effect the death rate?
Sanitation, access to clean water, affordable and accessible health care, vaccinations, war
Stage 4
Slowly growing population in this stage
Why are birth/death rates expressed as per 1000 people?
So that figures for countries of different sizes can be compared
