What are the marketing implications of rapidly growing vs stable population?
Due to the many more people being born and entering the labor market, the great mismatch between population growth and economic growth creates a problem in providing jobs for everyone.
Thus, countries with a rapidly growing population will find it harder to provide for its inhabitants, than a countries with a more stable population.
However, in developed countries where population has stopped growing or even is going backwards, the future will become costly due to all the old people that cannot work anymore, but still need taken care of.
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Geography and History
- What is self reference criterion (SRC)?
- What are Hofstede's cultural dimensions?
- Is the global environment a global issue or a national one?
- Why are the 1990s called the "Decade of the Environment"?
- Do world trade routes bind the world together?
- How do differences in people constitute bases for trade?
- Explain why the basis of world trade can be simply stated as the result of equalizing an imbalance in the needs and wants of society on one hand and its supply of goods on the other.
- How does the shift from rural to urban areas affect international marketing?
- What does it mean to examine the more complex effect on geography on general market characteristics, distribution systems and the state of the economy?
- Why study geography in international marketing?
- What are the long-term prospects for industrialization of an underdeveloped country with high population growth and minimum resources?