<span>During the 1950s a steady outflow of refugees from the Soviet occupation zone to the West consisted primarily of young people of working age. By 1950 some 1.6 million had migrated to the western zones</span>
Because of asylum seekers or something
-civil terrorism
-poverty
-i guess coz its not that developed or something
-more tourism
-industriliazation
Answer:
a. achieving stage.
Explanation:
Warner Schaie is a developmental German psychologist who has focused on the cognitive stages of people along their lifespan.
According to him, people go through different stages of cognitive development (since childhood and until they are old) along their life span.
The Achievement stage is the second stage of his theory and it takes place in young adulthood, according to Schaie during this stage the individual's primary cognitive tasks are to achieve personal goals in the long term future (starting a family, being successful in their careers, make contributions to society) by applying the intellectual skills that they learned when they were younger (adolescents).
Engaging in international trade- increase in foreign demand for goods.
Investing in physical capital- increase in production speed and quality.
Investing in human capital- increase in literacy rate
Hope this helps :))))
Answer:
Find answer below.
Explanation:
In 1943, Abraham Maslow a humanist psychologist in his work titled "A theory of Human Motivation" stated that five categories of human needs influences or impact the behavior of an individual. The five (5) human needs include;
I. Physiological needs.
II. Safety needs.
III. Love and belonging needs.
IV. Esteem needs.
V. Self-actualization needs.
Hence, from the above we can deduce the following theories;
1. The acquired needs model proposes that when a need is strong, it will motivate a person so much that she/he will engage in certain behaviors to satisfy that need.
2. People always want more, needs depend on what they already have. A need that has been satisfied is not a motivating tool for the doer. Only unmet needs can influence behavior.