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- 1From:The EconomistTHIS APRIL will mark 45 years since "Dallas", a hit soap opera, first aired. The show, with its greedy oilmen, sun-soaked cattle ranches and lilting drawls, introduced the Lone Star State to the world. But it's not just...
- 2From:The EconomistTexas keeps getting bigger. In the year to June 2022 the Lone Star State added 471,000 people, nearly as many as live in Atlanta, Georgia. More than one in three of the net new jobs created in America since February 2020...
- 3From:Women's Health Weekly2023 MAR 9 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Women's Health Weekly -- Keeping babies alive will lower population growth - new research New research showing high infant mortality rates are contributing...
- 4From:The EconomistA country without self-knowledge cannot be well-governed T HREE YEARS ago India's government was scheduled to pose its citizens a long list of basic but important questions. How many people live in your house? What is...
- 5From:The EconomistFifty years ago, the European Union began its enlargement. It is the secret of its current success W HEN SIX western European countries including France and West Germany created the European Economic Community (EEC) in...
- 6From:The Economist
India will soon overtake China as the world's most populous country; Rising tiger, crouching dragon.
But it will struggle to reap the benefits of a young workforce Since 1950 India and China have provided 35% of the world's population growth. But China's strict family-planning rules--the so-called one-child policy... - 7From:The EconomistBut it will struggle to reap the benefits of a young workforce To read more of The Economist's data journalism visit our Graphic Detail page. T HE WORLD'S population pecking order is about to change. In April India...
- 8From:The EconomistTo read more of The Economist's data journalism visit our THE WORLD'S population pecking order is about to change. In April India is expected to overtake China as the China's self-inflicted demographic slump spells...
- 9From:The EconomistAs China shrinks, India continues to add citizens THE WORLD'S population is expected to reach 8bn on November 15th. But, such is the uncertainty entailed by counting every person on the planet, that milestone may...
- 10From:Modern Healthcare (Vol. 52, Issue 24)Byline: Alex Kacik Texas, Arizona, Florida and Idaho are home to some of the fastest-growing cities in the country, and hospitals and health systems in those metropolitan areas may be merger or acquisition targets next...
- 11From:The EconomistEngland looks increasingly like north London T HE BRITISH government is having a nativist moment. Suella Braverman, the home secretary, talks of the "invasion of our southern coast" by asylum-seekers in small boats...
- 12From:Geographical (Vol. 94, Issue 10)The global population is projected to reach eight billion any day now. In July, the UN released its latest report on population trends, revealing that the world's population could continue to grow until 2086, peaking at...
- 13From:The EconomistIn a speech to the Vatican in January, Pope Francis made an observation fit for an economist. He argued that declining fertility rates might lead to a "demographic winter". In every European country the total fertility...
- 14From:Intertribal LIfe (Vol. 43, Issue 2)OTTAWA, Ont.--In late September, Statistics Canada presented reports based on the 2021 census. The census report includes expected, and surprising data, on the Indigenous population in Canada. Some of the findings: *...
- 15From:The EconomistAre Catholics now the majority in Northern Ireland? G ERRY ADAMS was asked in 2001 whether a higher Catholic birth rate in Northern Ireland could deliver a united Ireland. The former leader of Sinn Féin, the political...
- 16From:Spectator (Vol. 349, Issue 10119)This week, the world is gripped by the risk of conflict between the US and China. The People's Liberation Army has fired live missiles into the Taiwan Strait in retaliation for US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's visit to...
- 17From:The EconomistAs China shrinks, India continues to add citizens THE WORLD'S population is expected to reach 8bn on November 15th. But, such is the uncertainty entailed by counting every person on the planet, that milestone may...
- 18From:The EconomistBritish cities all grow at roughly the same speed. That is bad for the economy F EW ENGLISH cities are more successful than Oxford. Wages there are higher than the national average, and the proportion of adults with...
- 19From:State LegislaturesSmaller and suburban places drew most of the population growth in the first pandemic year, between mid-2020 and mid-2021, according to U.S. Census Bureau estimates. The numbers confirm a trend predicted by a Stateline...
- 20From:The EconomistAs much of a mix, but less of a magnet The new demography of the Golden State is at odds with the old California Dream W ALLACE STEGNER, a novelist, once called California "America…only more so". To judge by...