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Data
Exercises
1. Make a copy of the blank Comparative
Data Table and label the first column Countries, the second
column Access to safe water, 1990-96, the third Population
growth rate, 1980-98, and the fourth GNP per capita, 1998.
Then use the text and the Basic
Data Tables to fill in the chart according to the instructions below.
- Choose a low-income
country in Sub-Saharan Africa and one in Asia (South and East) and
the Pacific, and write their names in the first column.
- Choose a middle-income
country in Europe and Central Asia, one in Middle East and North Africa,
and one in South America, and add them to the first column.
- Choose a high-income
country in North and Central America and the Caribbean, one in Europe
and Central Asia, and one in Asia (South and East) and the Pacific,
and add them to the first column.
- Label each country
in your data table with an L, M, or H to show which income group it
belongs to: low, middle, or high.
- Read the definitions
of access to safe water,
population growth rate, and
GNP per capita. Go to
the Basic Data Tables,
and for each of your countries, find the percentage of population
with access to safe water (199096), average annual population
growth rate (198098), and GNP per capita (1998), and write this
information in the appropriate columns of your data table. If data
for one of the indicators are not available, select another country
from the same income group and region.
- Rank the countries,
with "1" equaling the highest access to safe water and "8"
the lowest. Write the appropriate ranking number in parentheses after
the data in column 2.
- Study your chart
and answer the following questions:
- In the countries
with less than 50 percent access to safe water, are the other
indicators high or low?
- In the countries
with 50 to 69 percent access to safe water, are the other indicators
higher or lower than in the below 50 percent access countries?
- In the countries
with 70 or more percent access to safe water, are the other indicators
higher or lower than in the other countries?
- Does access to
safe water follow the same trends as the other development indicators
in your chart?
2. Make a copy of
the blank Comparative Data Table and
label the first column Countries, the second column Access
to safe water, 1990-96, and the third column Access to sanitation,
1990-96. Compare access to safe water and access to sanitation in
six countries from six different regions of the world by following these
steps:
- In the column
at the left of the table, write the following countries and their
regions: Brazil (South America); Ghana (Sub-Saharan Africa); Philippines
(Asia, South and East, and the Pacific); Egypt (Middle East and North
Africa); Canada (North and Central America and the Caribbean); Uzbekistan
(Europe and Central Asia).
- Use the Environmental
Data Tables to find the percentage of the population with access
to safe water for each country and fill in column 2 in your table.
- Use the Environmental
Data Tables to find the percentage of the population with access
to sanitation for each country and fill in column 3 in your table.
- Compare the access
to safe water and access to sanitation data for each country. Within
each country, which indicator is higher, access to safe water or to
sanitation? Are there any countries that have a large difference between
the two? What are some possible reasons for this?
3. Take the Comparative
Data Table you prepared for question 2 above, and add a fifth column
labeled Access to sanitation, 1990-96.
- Use the Environmental
Data Tables to find the percentage of population with access to
sanitation for each of your countries and fill in column 5 in your
table. Within each country, which indicator is higher, access to safe
water or to sanitation? Compare your results with those in question
2d. Do your countries follow similar trends? If not, what could be
some possible reasons for the differences?
- Judging from
your data, which indicator tends to be more linked to country income
group, access to safe water or access to sanitation?
- Make a general
statement about access to safe water and sanitation and development.
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