The lack of correlation
between income per capita and transportation and electricity emission per capita demonstrates that, at least among states of the U.S., there is no rigid relationship between affluence and emissions.
Not exact matches
«It resembles the difference
between GDP and GDP
per capita, which expands a lot more slowly than total national
income,» he says.
Therefore, improving productivity in Canada is the only sustainable way to reduce the sizable gap
between Canadian and U.S.
income per capita that has emerged in recent decades.
And a recent report by the Institute for Competitiveness and Prosperity shows that if the GDP
per capita gap
between the US and Canada were closed, Canadian families would have $ 12,200 more in annual personal disposable
income.
Moreover, statistical analyses indicate that the link
between religious salience, at the country level, and the total fertility rate (TFR), at the country level, is positive (p <.05), even after controlling for region, urbanicity, gross national
income per capita, and
income inequality in these countries.
Indeed, there is a statistically significant (p <.05) association
between religious salience, at the country level, and the percent of adults who are married, at the country level, even after controlling for region, urbanicity, gross national
income per capita, and
income inequality in these countries.
The already noticeable gap in
per capita income between the rich and the poor (whether nations or individuals) will continue to widen.
Between 2000 and 2008, average
per capita income across the region rose from $ 505 to $ 1140.
- GDP
per capita is still lower than it was before the recession - Earnings and household
incomes are far lower in real terms than they were in 2010 - Five million people earn less than the Living Wage - George Osborne has failed to balance the Budget by 2015, meaning 40 % of the work must be done in the next parliament - Absolute poverty increased by 300,000
between 2010/11 and 2012/13 - Almost two - thirds of poor children fail to achieve the basics of five GCSEs including English and maths - Children eligible for free school meals remain far less likely to be school - ready than their peers - Childcare affordability and availability means many parents struggle to return to work - Poor children are less likely to be taught by the best teachers - The education system is currently going through widespread reform and the full effects will not be seen for some time - Long - term youth unemployment of over 12 months is nearly double pre-recession levels at around 200,000 - Pay of young people took a severe hit over the recession and is yet to recover - The number of students from state schools and disadvantaged backgrounds going to Russell Group universities has flatlined for a decade
You read that the correlations are really phenomenal, that the U.S. is
between four and five times the world average
per capita income,
between four and five times the world average
per capita energy consumption and
between four and five times the world average
per capita CO2 emissions.
A new study has found that
between 2000 and 2015 global consumption of antibiotics jumped 65 percent.The data from 76 countries found that while antibiotic use soared in lower
income countries, consumption in high -
income countries was static but still considerably higher
per capita than LIMCs.
The relationship
between per -
capita income and primary enrollment is considerably less satisfying.
Mankiw's framework predicts a negative association
between skilled wages and
per -
capita income; instead, there is a very strong positive association.
Per capita median
income (in inflation - adjusted dollars) has also risen — by nearly 23 percent
between 1974 and 2013.
The allotment percentages shall be promulgated by the Secretary
between July 1 and September 30 of each even - numbered year, on the basis of the average of the
per capita incomes of the States and of the United States for the three most recent consecutive years for which satisfactory data are available from the Department of Commerce.
To figure this out, we checked the Bureau of Economic Analysis's personal
income summary numbers to see how much
per capita income changed
between 2006 and 2011.
The environmental Kuznets curve is a hypothesized relationship
between various indicators of environmental degradation and
income per capita.
Not necessarily because the real GDP
per capita of Los Angeles is twice that of Berlin ($ US 21,432)- rather because the urbanization patterns in cities from high -
income nations as Stockholm, Tokyo, and Berlin (with lower levels of GHG emissions) suggest that there is not necessarily an inevitable relationship
between rising
incomes, increasing use of private cars and increasing GHG emissions.
Multivariate cointegration and causality
between exports, electricity consumption and real
income per capita: Recent evidence from Japan.
SRES scenarios also assume convergence of national
per capita incomes, which is contrary to historical tendencies for
income gaps
between the rich and the poor to increase.
* These are obviously speculative (projections based largely on extrapolating past trends) and, since any nation's or region's level of urbanisation is strongly associated with their
per capita income, economic performance
between 2000 and 2030 will have a strong influence on the extent to which regional populations continue to urbanise.
2This index ranges
between 1 and 20 and is based on five factors:
per capita income, parents» educational level, the unemployment rate, occupational activities and comfort of housing, Belgian Official Gazette (2009).
Recent research conducted in mainland China found that obesity prevalence was higher among children in wealthier families, 4 but the patterns were different in Hong Kong with higher rates of childhood obesity among lower
income families.4 5 Hong Kong, despite having a
per capita gross domestic product of Hong Kong dollar (HK$) 273 550, has large
income differences
between rich and poor as reflected by a high Gini coefficient of 0.539 reported in 2016; approximately 20 % of the population are living in poverty as defined by a monthly household
income below half of the Hong Kong median.6 It is widely accepted that population health tend to be worse in societies with greater
income inequalities, and hence low -
income families in these societies are particularly at risk of health problems.7 In our previous study, children from Hong Kong Chinese low -
income families experienced poorer health and more behavioural problems than other children in the population at similar age.8 Adults from these families also reported poorer health - related quality of life (HRQOL), 9 with 6.1 % of the parents having a known history of mental illness and 18.2 % of them reporting elevated level of stress.
The
per capita income of the Johns Creek area population grew nearly 4 %
between 1990 and 2000.