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082 _a312 AGA
100 _aAgarwala, S.N.
245 0 _aIndia's population problems
250 _a2nd ed.
260 _aNew Delhi
260 _bTata McGraw-Hill
260 _c1977
300 _a231p. : ill.
520 _aWITHIN THE past two decades, vast changes have occurred in many aspects of life in practically every country of the world. Perhaps the most significant. has been the recognition that rapid rate of population growth influences every sector of economic and social development. Population policy is rapidly becoming an accepted part of the development programmes. It is astounding that world opinion on the subject of family planning has been altered so appreciably. Two decades ago, India was the only country where the government had developed a population policy that promoted family planning. Today over 60 per cent of the 2.5 billion people in developing nations live in countries which have adopted population policies favouring family planning. World-wide interest in the problems evolving from rapid population growth has been promoted by two major considerations: an increasing concern about the relation between population growth and available resources and a growing awareness that unrestricted population growth tends to impose a strong con straint on the standard of living, happiness and even survival of mankind through the spiralling consumption of the fixed quantity of resources. Developing countries have come to realise that population growth rates of 2 to 3 per cent and even higher have, in most cases, negated major benefits which might have accrued from the developmental process; and for a country event to stand still on a percapita basis it is necessary that achievements of social and economic development must at least match population growth.
650 _aPopulation
942 _cB
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