Economic development is able to continue in the absence of the resources that first drove it because:
- Countries can trade to get the resources
- Economic development allows for diversification
When a nation is unable to access the resources that made it quite successful, it can resort to buying that resource and then improving on it.
For instance, the U.K. used to produce sufficient coal but now import more than they produce.
Another way a nation can continue developing is diversification. The income gained from the resource that has now finished, will enable a nation to go into other economic activities which will continue their development.
For example, China used to export only agricultural goods but diversified into industrial.
In conclusion, a country can keep developing if their primary resource is finished thanks to trade and diversification.
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Two challenges facing the Brazilian economy is about a quarter of the millennials are either not studying or working and the country is becoming even more poor and unequal.
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The energy stored in rocks as a result of plate movement can be released in an earthquake.
Answer:
The economic development in India followed socialist-inspired politicians for most of its independent history, including state-ownership of many sectors; India's per capita income increased at only around 1% annualised rate in the three decades after its independence.[1] Since the mid-1980s, India has slowly opened up its markets through economic liberalisation. After more fundamental reforms since 1991 and their renewal in the 2000s, India has progressed towards a free market economy.[1]
In the late 2000s, India's growth reached 7.5%, which will double the average income in a decade.[1] IMF says that if India pushed more fundamental market reforms, it could sustain the rate and even reach the government's 2011 target of 10%.[1] States have large responsibilities over their economies. The average annual growth rates (2007–12) for Gujarat (13.86%), Uttarakhand (13.66%), Bihar (10.15%) or Jharkhand (9.85%) were higher than for West Bengal (6.24%), Maharashtra (7.84%), Odisha (7.05%), Punjab (11.78%) or Assam (5.88%).[2] India is the sixth-largest economy in the world and the third largest by purchasing power parity adjusted exchange rates (PPP). On per capita basis, it ranks 140th in the world or 129th by PPP.
The economic growth has been driven by the expansion of the services that have been growing consistently faster than other sectors. It is argued that the pattern of Indian development has been a specific one and that the country may be able to skip the intermediate industrialisation-led phase in the transformation of its economic structure. Serious concerns have been raised about the jobless nature of the economic growth.[3][4]
China and Hong-Kong is having the rapid urbanization in eurasia