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# Population Growth Stages This document presents a table illustrating different stages of population growth categorized by socioeconomic trends. **Type of Survivorship Curve** The document starts by highlighting that while humans generally follow type 1 survivorship curve, a comparison is useful...
# Population Growth Stages This document presents a table illustrating different stages of population growth categorized by socioeconomic trends. **Type of Survivorship Curve** The document starts by highlighting that while humans generally follow type 1 survivorship curve, a comparison is useful. **Table 1: Population Growth Stages** | Stage | Type | Socioeconomic Trends | Examples | |---|---|---|---| | Stage 1 (Expanding) | Type 3 | Manual labor (including children), limited healthcare and education, family planning, few rights for people with uteruses. | Developing countries. | | Stage 2 (Expanding) | Type 2 | Improved (but still limited) healthcare, sanitation, education, family planning | Developing and some developed countries. | | Stage 3 (Stationary) | Type 1 | Increased access to healthcare, sanitation, education, family planning, wealth accumulation | Many developed countries. | | Stage 4 (Contracting) | Type 1 | Same as type 3, but more so- possible economic stagnation due to aging population | Some developed countries (e.g., Japan, Germany, Italy). | **Phases of Population Growth** The table includes a section on phases of population growth: **Table 2: Phases of Population Growth** | Phase | Description | |---|---| | Phase 1 | Pre-industrial: Slow population growth | | Phase 2 | Industrializing: Rapid population growth | | Phase 3 | Industrialized: Stable population growth | | Phase 4 | Post-industrial: Declining population growth | **Image Details** The image also contains several diagrams showcasing age pyramids for male and female populations in different stages (expanding, stationary, contracting). The diagrams visually represent the proportion of the population in different age groups. **Additional Notes** The examples given for each stage are noted as debatable or possibly containing exceptions.