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demography |
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demographyStudy of the size, structure, dispersement, and development of human populations to establish reliable statistics on such factors as birth and death rates, marriages and divorces, life expectancy, and migration. Demography is used to calculate life tables, which give the life expectancy of members of the population by sex and age. Demography is significant in the social sciences as the basis for industry and for government planning in such areas as education, housing, welfare, transport, and taxation. Demographic changes are important for many businesses. For example, the fall in the number of people aged 10–20 during the 1980s and the first half of the 1990s has led to many school closures, a shrinkage in the potential market for teenage clothes, and a fall in the number of young people available for recruitment into jobs by employers. Equally, the forecast rise in the number of people aged 75+ over the next 20 years will lead to an expansion of demand for accommodation for the elderly.
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The journal Demography has published a study claiming that 50 per cent of cohabitating couples separate within one year; 90 per cent separate within five years. If the percentage of minority students who graduate from high school does not increase at least on par with that of their white peers, the nation's economy will weaken, according to the Alliance for Excellent Education's new issue brief, Demography as Destiny: How America Can Build a Better Future. ABS director of demography Patrick Corr said by 2051 the number of people aged 65 and over is expected to double from 13% to 26%, and those under 64 would drop from 59% to 67%. |
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