Economy, asked by komalsandhu094, 16 days ago

examine
the nature of Population in India​

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
4

Explanation:

India is one of the densely populated countries of the world. It has to support about 15% of the world population, although its land area is merely 2.4% of the land area of the world. In 1950-51, India's population was 361 million. According to 2001 census it was 1,027 million.

Answered by ItzCutePrince1947
14

The Nature of India’s Population Problem:

The number of people which a country can support largely, if not entirely, depends upon its existing natural resources, the methods it uses in production, and the efficiency of labour which af­fects labour productivity. It appears from current standards that India should have about 400 mil­lion in 2002 instead of 1,027 million.This excess population is itself a symptom of over-population. This problem is becoming more and more acute day by day due to rapidly increasing population— by about 22 million persons a year. So, India is over-populated.

However, a small minority of peo­ple see that India is not really over-populated be­cause it is a vast country with plenty of natural resources. These resources have not been fully used as yet. They express the view that, if all the resources are fully employed, India can maintain a larger population than what it is having now and in much greater comfort.

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