This graph illustrates information about population growth in developing states and industrialised states from 1750 to 2000, with a prediction to 2050.
Looking at this visual data it is easily to say that the number of people leaving in industrialised countries shows an upward trend, where it waas increased gradually from 1750 to 1950, and then it was skyrocketed from 1950 to 2050, where population reached around 10 billions.
However, the quality of inhabitants of developing governments was growing as mush as population in industrialised countries from 1750 to 1950, but in contradiction to value in industrialised states, the number of people leaving in developing countries continued to surge slowly, so it was a third as high as population of industrialised governments. Consequently, this value has a small growth from 1950 to 2050, where it reached the biggest point, almost 2 billions, but this value is almost a sixth as big as in industrialised states.
Overall, this graph shows that the number of people leaving in industrialised countries has skyrocketed, whereas the quality of inhabitants in the develop countries was increased gradually.
