One of the higher-order skills in VCE Geography is the ability to compare — identifying both similarities and differences across places with different economic, political and social contexts. This key knowledge requires you to analyse population dynamics in contrasting settings.
When comparing population dynamics, address:
1. Birth rate / TFR
2. Death rate
3. Natural increase rate
4. Population structure (age-sex pyramid shape)
5. Life expectancy
6. Migration patterns
7. DTM stage
And link each to:
- Economic conditions (GDP per capita, development level, urbanisation)
- Political conditions (governance quality, policies, conflict)
- Social structures (female education, religion, culture, healthcare access)
Significant differences in population dynamics exist within countries, not just between them. This is often overlooked.
India (2024):
- Southern states (Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh): TFR 1.5–1.8, high female literacy (>90%), urbanised, well-developed healthcare → resemble Stage 4 demographics
- Northern states (Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Rajasthan): TFR 2.7–3.1, lower female literacy (~60–70%), more rural, less accessible healthcare → resemble Stage 2–3 demographics
- Cause: uneven economic development, female education and healthcare access create vastly different demographic experiences within one country
Brazil:
- Southern states (São Paulo, Rio Grande do Sul): TFR ~1.5, urbanised, high income → Stage 4
- Northern states (Amazonas, Pará): TFR ~2.2–2.8, more rural, lower income → Stage 3
China:
- Urban areas: TFR ~0.7–1.0 — one of the lowest urban fertilities globally, driven by housing costs and career pressures
- Rural areas: historically higher TFR (exemptions from one-child policy for rural families whose first child was a daughter)
Case Study Comparison: Japan vs Niger
| Feature | Japan | Niger |
|---|---|---|
| DTM Stage | 5 | 2 |
| TFR | 1.2 | 6.9 |
| CDR | ~11‰ (ageing) | ~11‰ (younger pop, poor healthcare) |
| CBR | ~6‰ | ~45‰ |
| Life expectancy | 84 years | 62 years |
| IMR | 1.8‰ | 80‰ |
| % aged 65+ | 28% | <3% |
| GDP per capita (PPP) | ~\$43,000 | ~\$1,300 |
| Female literacy | ~99% | ~25% |
| Pyramid shape | Deep urn/inverted | Classic expansive triangle |
Similarities: Both have roughly similar crude death rates — but for entirely different reasons. Japan’s CDR is elevated by an ageing population; Niger’s by poor healthcare. This illustrates why crude measures can be misleading.
Differences: TFR differs by nearly 6 children per woman; life expectancy by 22 years; IMR by 78 per 1,000 births. These reflect the gulf in economic development, healthcare infrastructure and female education.
Case Study Comparison: Australia vs Germany
| Feature | Australia | Germany |
|---|---|---|
| TFR | 1.6 | 1.5 |
| DTM Stage | 4 | 4–5 |
| % aged 65+ | 17% | 22% |
| Net migration rate | High positive (~10–15‰) | Moderate positive (varies) |
| Population trend | Growing | Broadly stable/slight decline |
| Key difference | Immigration-driven growth buffers ageing | More severe ageing, lower immigration historically |
Economic conditions:
- High income → low fertility (urbanisation, education, contraception access, child-rearing cost)
- High income → low mortality (healthcare quality, nutrition, clean water)
- Economic crisis can temporarily lower fertility (Russia in the 1990s; southern Europe post-2008)
Political conditions:
- Pro-natalist policies: France (TFR raised from 1.7 to ~2.0 through childcare and parental leave)
- Anti-natalist policies: China’s one-child policy created severe structural distortions (male:female imbalance, rapid ageing)
- Conflict: Syria’s TFR dropped from ~3.5 in 2010 to ~2.8 by 2020; life expectancy fell from 74 to 63 years
- Governance quality affects healthcare delivery and, thus, mortality rates
Social structures:
- Female education: the single strongest predictor of TFR across all world regions. Each additional year of female schooling is associated with approximately 0.3 fewer children per woman
- Religion: Catholic and Islamic traditional teachings generally support higher fertility; but in practice, Catholic Europe (Italy, Spain, Poland) has very low TFR (<1.5), showing that economic and social factors override religious influence
- Cultural norms around gender roles, family size, and intergenerational care
KEY TAKEAWAY: Population dynamics vary both within and between countries, reflecting the intersection of economic development, political decisions and social structures. Understanding these variations — not just global averages — is the core analytical skill required.
EXAM TIP: VCAA comparison questions reward structured responses with explicit “both/while/however” language. E.g., “Both Japan and Niger have similar crude death rates, however this similarity masks very different causes: Japan’s elevated CDR reflects an ageing population while Niger’s reflects inadequate healthcare and high infant mortality.”
VCAA FOCUS: Be able to compare two specific countries for at least three population characteristics, explain the differences with reference to economic/political/social conditions, and comment on similarities where they exist.