Answer:
Some countries are less developed than others because they lack resources and there are structural inequalities. Nepal is still a less developed country because of the rugged geography and endemic poverty of a large part of its population.
Explanation:
Using the Human Development Index Nepal is ranked as a medium in the human development category. The Human Development Index considers factors life expectancy
, average years of schooling, and the GNI per capita. Between 1990 and 2018 Nepal improved on these indicators by 52%. This is impressive for a country that in 1950 was still an isolated and highly agrarian society with very few schools or hospitals. There was a lack of roads and communication, and there was little to no electric power to fuel industries.
Today, agriculture still dominates the economy. About 65% are employed in agriculture and it makes up close to 32% of Nepal's GDP. Only about 20% of the terrain is cultivable. The rest is mountainous or forested and the economy is shored up by foreign remittances of workers who emigrate temporarily or semi-perminantly to other countries.
Who's asking the questions?
How are the questions being phrased?
To whom will these result be pandered to?
Consumer/producer rivalry
Answer:
D - Mental.
Explanation:
Determining that the driving risk is too high, be it for medical reasons (physical, physiological, mental, etc), is enough reason to strongly consider alternative transportation choices. Not only because the risk is for the driver, but for any other people out on the streets, passengers, other drivers, etc. Driving is no simple task, and should be taken with all the seriousness possible.
The answer to this question is: A.<span>unconstitutional under the supremacy clause.
Under supremacy clause, whenever the state law and the federal law are contradicting each other, the court must follow the law that written within the federal law and rules the lesser law as unconstitutional
This clause is created to make sure that all laws in each state are up to a certain standard.</span>