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Terms You Need To Know - : Population

This document defines key terms related to population such as birth rate, death rate, population structure, and population pyramid. It then discusses reasons for high population growth in Pakistan including economic, social, religious, and political factors. Some problems caused by high population growth are insufficient resources for development, unemployment, pollution, and poverty. Solutions proposed to reduce population growth include education initiatives, job creation, and public awareness campaigns.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
30 views9 pages

Terms You Need To Know - : Population

This document defines key terms related to population such as birth rate, death rate, population structure, and population pyramid. It then discusses reasons for high population growth in Pakistan including economic, social, religious, and political factors. Some problems caused by high population growth are insufficient resources for development, unemployment, pollution, and poverty. Solutions proposed to reduce population growth include education initiatives, job creation, and public awareness campaigns.

Uploaded by

Unknown Trackz
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Population

Terms you need to know

 Birth Rate:- Average number of births per thousand people.


 Death Rate:- Average number of deaths per thousand people.
 Rate of Natural Increase = Crude Birth Rate- Crude Death Rate
 Overpopulation:-When an area’s population is too large to be supported by its
available resources.
 Demographic Transition Model:- Graph suggesting sequence of change in
relationships between birth and death rates.
 Population Structures:-It is the percentage of males and females in different age
groups. Depends on population’s birth and death rates and life expectancy of a
particular area. It is divided into age groups and into males and females.
 Population Pyramid:- A population pyramid is a graphical representation of
population structures.
 Employed:-All persons of ten years of age and above who worked one hour
during the reference period and were either “paid employed” or “self employed”.
 Primary Occupations:-All such occupations that extract raw materials directly
from earth or sea eg fishing , farming , mining , forestry, animal husbandry.
 Secondary Occupations:- Includes occupations which process and manufacture
the primary products eg cloth making , garment making, furniture making etc
 Tertiary Occupation:- Occupations which provide services eg teaching, banking,
counseling, insurance, bus driving, politician, tourist guides, hotellers etc
 Unemployment:- State of being unable to find a paid job. This situation occurs
when authorities are unable to generate enough economic opportunities for skilled
and unskilled workers. This situation creates a wide gap between demand and
supply of labour force.
 Disguised Unemployment/Underemployment:- When number of workers in an
area is more than is actually needed.
 Population Distribution:- It refers to the spread of people in an area. The
distribution is normally uneven and it changes as time passes.
 Population Density:- Number of people living per unit area. The density of
population is obtained by dividing the total population of a country(province,
district etc) by its area.
 Migration:-Movement of people from one area to another. Migration can be of
different types depending on course, duration, distance, origin, destination.
 Immigrants:- People who arrive in a country from other countries. Immigrations
increase population of a country.
 Emmigrants:- People who leave a country for other countries. Emmigrations
decrease population of a country.
 Internal Migration:-Migration within a country eg rural to urban migration,
seasonal migration
 International Migration:- Migration to other countries.
Notes

Reasons For High Population Growth:-

Economical
 Child labour is common in Pakistan. Therefore large families are considered to be
advantage.
Social
 Early marriages
 High illiteracy rate/ People are unaware of problems caused by high birth rate
 Strong desire for sons
 Effective control over natural climatics eg flood , droughts, epidemics
 Joint family system
 Children wanted as security for old age

Religious
 Deterministic outlook of Muslims. They believe that Allah gives Rizq to everyone
 Family Planning programmes meet opposition on religious grounds

Political
 Frequent change of governments hinders consistency of population welfare
projects
 Migration of Afghan refugees in Pakistan between 1979 and 1990 due to Russian
Afghan war

Problems caused by high population growth:-


 Government has insufficient money to pay for needed developments
 Not enough schools
 Not enough facilities for elderly….
….geriatric wards in hospitals/old age homes
….doctors/nurses
 More jobs are needed by people/Unemployment
 Increase in pollution
 Low life expedency
 Child labour may increase
 Shortage of food/medicinal supplies etc leads to increased imports. Economic
progress is halted
 Poverty increases. People don’t get basic facilities of life
 Increasing problems in housing and settlements leads to formation of
slums/Kaccha Abadis
 Wide gap between production and demand. Prices rise cause inflation and cost of
living rise steeply
 Increase in crime rate
 Dense traffic on roads lead to traffic problems eg traffic jams, road accidents etc

Solutions to reduce population growth and its problems:-


 Initiating population welfare programs to counsel people about the problems of
population growth
 Increase in literacy rate by opening schools, colleges etc
 Creating more jobs eg by industrialization so that rate of economic development
outstrips rate of population growth.
 Setting up of education institutions for females so that early marriages can be
avoided
 Getting service of Ulemas to convince people that population growth is not
against religion
 Doing telivision campaigns to increase mass awareness

Interpretation of Demographic Transition Model

Stage 1:- High birth rates and death rates. Little possible increase in population

Reasons for high birth rates


 No birth control or family planning programs were in existence
 Large families were taken as a matter of pride
 Early marriages
 Farming was the main occupation/Children needed to work on land
 No use of contraceptives/Contraceptives not affordable
 Use of contraceptives against religion
 Desire for sons
 Children wanted as security for old age
Reason for high death rates
 High infant mortality rate/Children used to die of diseases like cholera,
malaria etc
 Shortage of food due to traditional methods of farming
 Poor hygienic facilities
 Little development in medicinal science/ little use of antibiotics and life
saving drugs
 Poor means of transporting doctors/medicines in needed areas

Stage II:- Birth rate remained high, death rate fell

Reason for fall in death rates


 Increased medicinal facilities. Increase in number of hospitals/ increased use
of antibiotics and other life saving drugs
 Improvement in sanitation and water supply
 Increase in food production due to better farming methods
 Decrease in infant mortality rate
 Better transportation system to move doctors/food to places where they are
needed
 Vaccination Programs (House to house vaccination facilities)
 Balanced diet/better nutrition
 Increase in doctors/nurses /medical colleges
 Free treatment in government hospitals
 Foreign aid

Stage III:- Birth rate fell

Reasons for fall in birth rates


 Campaigns conducted by family planning programs and NGO’s like “Subz
Sitara Clinics” and “Chabi ka Nishan” etc
 Increase in literacy rate
 More female members of society have become career oriented/Decrease in
number of early marriages
 Increase in machanisation and industrialization/Fewer manual labour needed
on farms
 Improvement in living standards / More desire for material wealth than
children

Problems associated with increase in dependent age group (0-14 years) and (65 and
above) / decrease in working age group (15-64 years)

 Dependency ration increases


 Comparatively fewer workers to pay for /feed more young and old
 Government has insufficient money to pay for needed developments
 People/Industry cannot afford to pay high taxes
 Not enough workers to increase social services….
…..more competition for industry /farms to get workers
…..more competion for armed services to get recruits
 Not enough schools
 Not enough teachers
 Not enough facilities for elderly……
…..geriatric wards in hospitals/old age homes
…..relatively less doctors/nurses
 More jobs will be needed as 0-14 age group moves up
 Child labour may increase
 Shortage of food/medicinal supplies leads to increase in imports halting
economic progress

Reasons for workforce concentration in primary occupations:-


 Tradition/Inheritance
 Low standard of education means secondary/tertiary occupations not open to
workers
 Large percentage of population live in rural areas
 Areas of Pakistan are suitable for farming
 Growing population requires feeding
 Pakistan has an agro based economy
 Pakistan is rich in minerals e.g. limestone/salt/petroleum/natural gas
 Forests are an important source of fuel
 Fishing employs many in coastal fishing/some involved in inland fishing
 Development of manufacturing industry started comparatively late
 Low standard of living has inhibited tertiary developments

Why people employed in tertiary occupations increasing:-

 Rising standards of living so greater demand for services


 Increase in literacy rate
 More population attracted by higher pay in tertiary services
 Rural to urban migration tends to mean a change from primary to tertiary
occupation
 Growth in tourism
 Extension of road network
 Growth in recreational activities
 Fewer people making their own clothes/grow their own food therefore need
for more shops
 Government efforts to improve services….
….drive to improve educational standards so more teachers/lecturers needed
….improving medicinal facilities so more doctors/nurses needed

Causes of Unemployment:-

 High rate of population growth


 Mechanized farming is becoming popular and fewer workers are needed on
farms
 Popualrity of use of computers and information technology. Demand for
manual labour has gone down
 Cultural restraints. People spend much in marriges and festivals and invest
little in economic activities eg industry, trade, farming
 Mismatch in demand and supply of labour force
 Many people who migrate from rural to urban areas remain unemployed
 Political instability has affected investment by foreign companies and
industrial growth in Pakistan

Why illiteracy rate is higher in Pakistan?


 Pakistan is a poor country/lack of money
 Lack of schools/colleges in rural areas
 Many only have primary education/leave school early
 Schooling is not free/Parents can not afford to pay for schooling
 Private schools are very expensive
 Insufficient teachers/not enough teachers training colleges
 Most of population are rural
 Many in rural areas do not value education
 Children made to work from a very young age
 Girls are often not allowed to attend schools by parents
 Some landlords do not allow tenants to send children to school
 Many remote/isolated areas
 Many (people in remote areas) are nomads/semi nomadic

Reasons why female illiteracy is higher than male illiteracy:-

 Traditional attitudes (especially in rural areas)…


…..women’s place is in home
…..male dominated society
 Poorer teacher to pupil ratio in girls’ school
 Fewer girls given schooling
 Lack of “girls only” school
 Families spend limited money on boys’ education rather than girls’

Ways in which high illiteracy rate affects industrial growth:-

 Illiterate workers may produce low quality goods/ donot understand


technical matters
 Lack of skilled operators
 Lack of skilled management
 Lack of entrepreneurs
 Illiterate bosses fail to plan properly
 Discourages investors
 May need to import expensive skilled labour halting economic progress
 Illiterate workers provide cheap manual labour

Importance of training and literacy:-

 Increase in literacy ratio will reduce pressure on land in rural areas


 Literate labour can make economic activities more productive
 Trained and skilled labour have better job opportunities in country and
abroad
 Literate families are more concerned about standards of living and are
aware about advantages of small families
 Increase in agricultural yield as more farmers will use modern farming
techniques

Reasons for Rural to Urban Migration

Rural Push Factors


Urban Pull Factors

Rural Push Factors

 Unemployment…...
…due to mechanization
…due to insufficient farmland with increasing population
 Insufficient food / famine
 Drought
 Water logging/salinity
 Problems due to landlords/ zamindari/ feudal systems
 Poor law and order situation
 To escape from revenge/ lack of cultural freedom
 Lack of educational facilities
 Low standard of living/ poverty
 Lack of health facilities
 Lack of electricity/ gas
 Lack of clean water
 Poor sanitation
 Limited shopping facilities
 Limited entertainment facilities

Urban Pull Factors


 Better employment opportunities
 Modern amenities such as better health facilities, gas, telephone, means of
communication etc
 Better education
 Better job opportunities and high income
 Better entertainment and recreational facilities
 Better law and order situation
 Cultural / religious freedom
 More reliable sources of food

Consequences of Rural to Urban Migration on Urban Areas:-


 Burden on civic facilities eg electricity, water, telecommunications etc
 Increase in crime rate and violence
 Burden on housing facilities/ Formation of slums or kaccha abadis
 Increase in pollution
 Traffic Problems eg increased traffic jams and road accidents
 Composition of population is disturbed. As more male members come in
percentage of male members of population increase

Consequences of Rural to Urban Migration on Rural Areas:-


 Composition of population is disturbed as more male members migrate to
urban areas

Reasons for Emigration from Pakistan:-


 Lack of jobs in Pakistan
 For higher wages/higher standard of living
 Poor law and order situation
 For higher education
 To support family in Pakistan
 Better living standards in abroad
 For medical treatment
 Political Reasons/ to seek more liberal way of life
 Government encouragement so that foreign exchange is sent back

Positive Points of Emigration:-


 Overseas Pakistanis send remittances in the form of foreign exchange
 Emigration encourages flow of information technology in the country
 Pressure on limited employment opportunities relieved
 Overseas Pakistanis invest more capital in Pakistan than locals because of
their high income
 Helps to form cultural ties between nations

Negative Points of Emigration:-


 Loss of expertise
 Limits tertiary services
 Effects economic / scientific progress
 May increase imports halting economic progress

Reasons For Seasonal Migrations Within Pakistan

 To avoid scorching summers/ severe winters


 In mountains take animals up to higher pastures in summer/ when snow
clears…
…bring animals down to valley pasture for winter
 Move from mountain areas in winter to find jobs in plains…
….go back to farm in summers
 Nomadic movements in search of pastures/ water
 Work in cotton/ sugar mills after harvests then return home when work
finishes
 Move from active flood plain / summer bed of river to higher ground then
back when safe
 Ski instructors go to resorts in winters/ rich enjoy summer holidays in hill
stations etc.

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