Examples of demographics in the following topics:
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- Demographic changes: demographic factors influence economic growth by changing the employment to population ratio.
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- Some differences in wage rates across places, occupations, and demographic groups can be explained by compensation differentials.
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- These systems include (but are not limited to) economic, political, religious, social, geographic, demographic, legal, and moral systems.
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- Estimates are available by demographic characteristics of householders and by the composition of households.
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- In demographic terms, this often manifests as a transfer from older individuals, who are wealthier and tend to hold their savings in more conservative assets such as cash and bonds, to younger individuals, who have more debt and tend to hold their savings in more aggressive assets such as stocks.
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- Demographics: demographics change the employment to population ratio as well as the labor force participation rate.
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- Politics must find a way to mitigate the negative consequences while increasing the positive effects, allowing for balanced and healthy consumption across all demographics.
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- These indicators in turn, reflect underlying drivers such as employment levels and skills, household savings rates, corporate investment decisions, interest rates, demographics, and government policies.
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- The five largest contributors to global output contraction were Italy, Finland, Bulgaria, Algeria, and the Demographic Republic of Congo.
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- Current trends suggested that by 2030, there would be fewer than three workers for every person over the age of 65, compared to seven in 1950 -- an unprecedented demographic transformation that the CED predicted would leave businesses scrambling to find workers.