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3 answers

Not sure but give me a minute...
stage 1-birth rates and death rates are high
stage 2- birth rates are high, deathrates are low
stage 3-birth rates start to fall b/c of various reasons
stage 4-both birth rates and death rates are low
That's the sum of it on Wikipedia-I don't think anybody has bothered to alter the info; there are more details there; there's also reasons why some feel it's not a reliable model

2007-10-29 16:19:43 · answer #1 · answered by strpenta 7 · 3 0

Demographic Transition Stages

2016-12-17 18:15:22 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Demographic Transition Model Definition

2016-09-28 11:42:38 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

I think the followings are four stages of demographic transition.
1) High staionary
2) Early expandsion
3) Late expandsion
4) Low staionary
and predict stage of Declining.

2007-10-29 16:52:26 · answer #4 · answered by Shelly S 4 · 1 2

RE:
What are the four stages of the demographic transition model?

2015-08-04 07:46:50 · answer #5 · answered by Christopher 1 · 0 0

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Japan is on stage four for the demographic transition model olrite.. this happens because the birth rate and the death rate are both low... population growth become steady. the reason for what happen at stage four: the high rate of development makes the families feel the need to work harder - thus making it harder for them to get the time needed on planning to 'expand' their family. they tend to use contraceptives because of their awareness on family planning. widely available contraceptives in developed countries (such as Japan) also the reason why people do not want to get children. they also know the family economic limitation so they prefer to keep their family small. it is different with stage 1 or stage 2 or stage 3, where mainly (mostly) their awareness on family planning is relatively low. beside that, there are limited contraceptions available (compared to what developed countries have). apart from that, there are also religious reasons, why countries that are in stage 1, 2 and 3 prefer to have more children. we also have to take into considering, that the good medical facility also resulting to low death rate (compared with those from stage 1-4). I reckon these can explain fairly well on the low birt rate and low death rate. you can also consider picking on the topic from multiple perspective that rooted back answering WHY the birth rate and death rate low. ie: technology, education, awareness, busy with career, low social interaction etc.. if you want to know more, or you want more explaination, i suggest you to see the differences between stage four and the other stages. That might get you going. good luck

2016-03-29 06:26:32 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The demographic transition model describes the different stages of population growth.

Stage one: High fluctuation
Stage two: Early expansion
Stage three: Late expansion
Stage four: Low fluctuation

Stage One is where we have a high birth rate AND a high death rate and therefore you have a stable population

Stage Two is where we continue to have a high birth rate but the death rate starts to fall and therefore the population expands and you get population growth

Stage Three is where the death rate is low and your birth rate starts to fall, but your population is still rising because your birth rate is still higher than the death rate. We have entered this stage now. In the 1800s the death rates fell significantly due to the improvements in health, medicine and sanitation.

Stage Four low fluctuation where you have both a low birth rate and a low death rate. Therefore, they cancel each other out but the population remains high. This seems the most likely model we will see from about 2050 onwards. We will not see a decline We have entered this stage now. In the 1800s the death rates fell significantly due to the improvements in health, medicine and sanitation.

Stage Four low fluctuation where you have both a low birth rate and a low death rate. Therefore, they cancel each other out but the population remains high. This seems the most likely model we will see from about 2050 onwards. We will not see a decline in the size of the population, but we will see a rapid decline in the rate at which the population is expanding.

2007-10-29 16:27:03 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 8 2

1. High Fluctuating: Death and birth rates both are high e.g in LDCs
2. Early Expnading: bIrth rate high death rate falling, bangladesh. nigeria
3. Late Expanding: Birth and death rate falling, china brazil
4. Low Fluctuating; Birth and death rate both are low, britain

2007-10-29 19:27:27 · answer #8 · answered by nadia a 2 · 1 3

Sheesh Trev. Google it!!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demographic_transition

2007-10-29 18:49:28 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 3

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