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The image presents a line graph comparing birth rates in China and the USA from 1920 to 2000. In 1920, China’s birth rate is 9 while the USA's is slightly higher at 11.5, with 1925 showing China at 14 and USA at 14.5. The 1930 data indicates China at 13 and USA at 15, then 1935 records China at 12 and USA at 13. A mark of 15 for China and 12 for USA in 1940 precedes an increase to 20 in 1945 for China and 17 for USA. Both rates peak in 1950, at 22 for China and 20 for USA, before declining, hitting 17 for China and 19 for USA in 1955. China then descends sharply to 7 in 1960, and 6 in 1965, whereas the USA's gradual decrease sets it at 18 in 1960 and 14 in 1965. By 1970, China is at 5, with USA at 15; in 1975, China remains at 5, and USA is at 14. In 1980, both countries stand at 10, China remains at 4 in 1985 and USA adjusts to 13. By 1990, China reaches 4, and USA is at 12; by 1995, China’s birth rate is at 5 contrasted by USA’s 13. The final year, 2000, marks stable rates with China at 7 and USA at 12.
Given the complexity of the image, the above description may not be entirely accurate.
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A glance at the graph provided reveals how the fertility rates in America and China altered over a 80-year period from 1920 to 2000.
Overall, both nations witnessed marked fluctuation, with notable troughs in the 1940s and peaks in the 1950s. Birth rates in USA and China was broadly comparble up to mid century prior to the increaing divergence between the two countries.
Increasing from approximately 10% to 15% in 1935, the birth rate in China then plung to a low of 5% in the next five years. This was followed by a dramatic surge, with birth rate quadrupling to reach a peak at 20% in 1950. Thereafter, this figure declined consistently, finishing the century at below 3%, the lowest level shown.
The fertility rate in USA, meanwhile, fluctuated some where at 11% to 13% in 1940 before dropping sharply less than 5% in 1945. The following five years experienced a rapid climb in this rate to somewhere in the vicinity of 15% (5% lower than that of China). Additionally, unlike China, however, the US birth rates experienced a steady fluctuation thereafter toward the end of period.
It is interesting to note that, while the fertility of both countries was comparable up to 1950, a gap between the two suddenly widened after this time as fertility in China slid away.
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