what is the differences between the public facilities of developed and developing countries
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in developed countries public facilities are good enough and easy to accommodate .....
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Public Facility Law and Legal Definition. Generally speaking public facility can be any facility, including, but not limited to,buildings, property, recreation areas, androads, which are owned, leased, or otherwise operated, or funded by a governmental body or public entity.
(i) Basic education Government provides school and other educational facilities like chair, books etc to be used by the public. But its use and performance is depended on collective response and community cooperatio
(ii) Basic health facilities Government provideshospitals, vaccine programmes to maintainbasic quality of life.
(iii) Law and order facility/security The more the country will secure, the more it will attract investment public by which people Alts,may live peacefully.
(iv) Provide for Public Distribution System Government opens PDS shops or ration shops through which it supplies basic food items like rice, wheat, pulses, etc at very low price/subsidised rate to the lower income group or poor people. But functioning of these facilities depends on the community awareness and public cooperation.
Other facilities are infrastructure facilities like road, irrigation projects drinking water supplies.
Developed countries have infrastructure in place - such as roads, bridges, water pipes, fuel lines, electrical wiring, fiber optic wiring, and septic/sewage and runoff drainage or treatment systems, to name a few - and the technical capacity to take care of all their citizens with such infrastructure services as mechanical repair or maintenance facilities, doctors and medical facilities, etc.
In short, a developed country has three things: It has stuff, it has people to take care of that stuff (and of other people), and it has people who make money and give up part of that money to pay for stuff. Almost all of these economies are fairly stable, and least emerging.
Underdeveloped country has a lot of people, but lacks some (or all!) basic infrastructures for some or all of its citizens, and so the people have no stuff and must make money which they are then expected to give to their government, who will then give them stuff. This doesn't often happen, however, because governments in these kinds of countries are invariably so corrupt that calling them 'governments' at all is ridiculous.
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(i) Basic education Government provides school and other educational facilities like chair, books etc to be used by the public. But its use and performance is depended on collective response and community cooperatio
(ii) Basic health facilities Government provideshospitals, vaccine programmes to maintainbasic quality of life.
(iii) Law and order facility/security The more the country will secure, the more it will attract investment public by which people Alts,may live peacefully.
(iv) Provide for Public Distribution System Government opens PDS shops or ration shops through which it supplies basic food items like rice, wheat, pulses, etc at very low price/subsidised rate to the lower income group or poor people. But functioning of these facilities depends on the community awareness and public cooperation.
Other facilities are infrastructure facilities like road, irrigation projects drinking water supplies.
Developed countries have infrastructure in place - such as roads, bridges, water pipes, fuel lines, electrical wiring, fiber optic wiring, and septic/sewage and runoff drainage or treatment systems, to name a few - and the technical capacity to take care of all their citizens with such infrastructure services as mechanical repair or maintenance facilities, doctors and medical facilities, etc.
In short, a developed country has three things: It has stuff, it has people to take care of that stuff (and of other people), and it has people who make money and give up part of that money to pay for stuff. Almost all of these economies are fairly stable, and least emerging.
Underdeveloped country has a lot of people, but lacks some (or all!) basic infrastructures for some or all of its citizens, and so the people have no stuff and must make money which they are then expected to give to their government, who will then give them stuff. This doesn't often happen, however, because governments in these kinds of countries are invariably so corrupt that calling them 'governments' at all is ridiculous.
Here is your answer friend
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manas994638:
thank you sooo much ....... its been very very helpful
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