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Life Expectancy in India: Pre- and Post-Independence Comparison
In the final years of British rule, life expectancy at birth in India was approximately 27 years. Within fifty years of gaining independence, this figure rose to 63 years. Based on these figures, the life expectancy more than tripled during this period.
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The Impact of Political Change on Living Standards
A historian argues that for some nations, the end of colonial interference was a critical turning point for improving the population's well-being. Which piece of evidence regarding India provides the strongest support for this argument?
During the final years of British rule in India, life expectancy at birth was just 27 years. Within fifty years of gaining independence, this figure more than doubled, rising to approximately ____ years.
In the fifty years immediately following India's independence, the average life expectancy at birth saw only a minor improvement from the levels observed during the final years of British rule.
Interpreting Public Health Data
Analyzing Post-Independence Public Health Improvements
In the final years of foreign colonial rule, a large Asian nation had a life expectancy at birth of just 27 years. Fifty years after gaining its independence, this figure had risen to 63 years. Based solely on this information, which of the following is the most reasonable conclusion to draw?
Match the historical period in India with the corresponding average life expectancy at birth.
In a large developing nation, historical records show that the average life expectancy at birth was 27 years in the final decade of foreign colonial rule. Fifty years after the nation gained independence and began self-governance, the average life expectancy had risen to 63 years. Which of the following statements offers the most critical and nuanced evaluation of this data?
A political commentator reviews historical data for a large nation, noting that average life expectancy at birth rose from 27 years during the final period of foreign colonial rule to 63 years fifty years after the nation gained independence. The commentator concludes, 'This data proves that the colonial power was deliberately keeping the population unhealthy.' Which of the following statements provides the most accurate critique of the commentator's conclusion?
In the final years of British rule, life expectancy at birth in India was approximately 27 years. Within fifty years of gaining independence in 1947, this figure had more than doubled to 63 years. Based on this information, what is the most logical inference about the conditions in India during these two periods?
Factors Driving Post-Independence Life Expectancy Growth
In the final years of British rule, life expectancy at birth in India was approximately 27 years. Within fifty years of gaining independence, this figure rose to 63 years. Based on these figures, the life expectancy more than tripled during this period.
Interpreting India's Post-Independence Life Expectancy Data
Evaluating the Impact of Governance on Public Welfare
In the fifty years following India's independence, the average life expectancy at birth increased from approximately 27 years to 63 years. This represents a total increase of ____ years.
Match each historical period in India with the description that best characterizes its public health outcomes, based on the provided life expectancy data.
The following statements describe a significant demographic and political shift in India during the 20th century. Arrange them in the most logical order to form a coherent argument connecting the events to the outcomes.
An economic historian argues that colonial governance was generally beneficial for the public welfare of the governed populations. Consider the following data for India: in the final years of British rule, life expectancy at birth was approximately 27 years. Within fifty years of gaining independence, this figure rose to 63 years. How does this specific data relate to the historian's argument?
In the 50 years after India gained independence, life expectancy at birth rose from approximately 27 to 63 years. A skeptic argues this improvement was not due to the change in governance, but was simply part of a global trend of improving health technology available to all countries during that period. Which of the following statements most effectively refutes the skeptic's argument?