In AP Human Geography, a developed country is a nation with high economic output, advanced technology and infrastructure, and a high standard of living, typically showing low birth rates, long life expectancy, high literacy, and an aging population in later stages of the demographic transition.
A developed country is a nation with a high level of economic development. Think high GDP per capita, advanced technology and infrastructure, strong healthcare and education systems, and a high standard of living. Examples you'll see constantly are Japan, Germany, the United States, and Canada.
For AP Human Geography, the label matters less than the demographic package that comes with it. Developed countries sit in the later stages of the demographic transition model, so they have low birth rates, low death rates, long life expectancy, and slow (sometimes negative) natural increase. That combination produces the signature population pyramid shape, narrow at the base and wide in the middle and top. When you see a pyramid that looks more like a column or an upside-down triangle, you're almost certainly looking at a developed country.
This term lives mostly in Unit 2 (Population and Migration Patterns and Processes). It supports LO 2.3.A and 2.3.B, since population composition and pyramid analysis depend on recognizing developed-country age structures (EK PSO-2.F.1 says pyramids assess growth and decline and predict markets). It supports LO 2.9.A directly, because aging populations are overwhelmingly a developed-country problem, with rising dependency ratios and political, social, and economic consequences. It also connects to LO 2.7.A, since developed countries with shrinking workforces are the ones adopting pronatalist and pro-immigration policies (EK SPS-2.A.1). The developed/developing distinction also shows up in Unit 4 and beyond whenever the exam compares countries' political and economic relationships, like the 2025 FRQ that paired a developed Country X with a developing Country Y in a trade scenario.
Keep studying AP Human Geography Unit 2
Human Development Index (HDI) (Unit 7)
HDI is how geographers actually measure development, combining income, education, and life expectancy into one score. 'Developed country' is the casual label; HDI is the receipt that backs it up.
Aging Populations (Unit 2)
Aging is basically the bill that comes due for being developed. Low birth rates plus long life expectancy means fewer workers supporting more retirees, which drives up the dependency ratio (LO 2.9.A).
Population Policies (Unit 2)
Developed and developing countries push in opposite directions. Developed countries like Japan and France use pronatalist policies (baby bonuses, parental leave) to fight shrinking workforces, while many developing countries have used antinatalist policies to slow growth (LO 2.7.A).
Age Sex Pyramid (Unit 2)
The pyramid is the visual fingerprint of development. A narrow base and bulging older cohorts screams 'developed country,' and the exam expects you to read that shape and predict what it means for schools, healthcare, and markets (EK PSO-2.F.1).
You won't be asked to recite a definition. You'll be asked to recognize and reason with the developed-country profile. Multiple-choice stems give you a population pyramid, birth rate data, or a policy and expect you to infer the development level, like the practice question asking which demographic scenario would most rapidly accelerate population aging in a developed country (answer logic: falling birth rates plus rising life expectancy). FRQs use the label as scenario setup. The 2025 FRQ Q2 opened with 'Country X is a developed country, and Country Y is a developing country' and built every part around that contrast, and the 2025 SAQ Q2 centered on reading population pyramids. Your job is to attach the right consequences to the right label: aging, high dependency ratios, pronatalist and immigration policies, and economic leverage in trade relationships.
These are two ends of the same spectrum, not a clean binary. A developing country has lower income, higher birth rates, a youthful population (wide pyramid base), and a younger dependency burden. A developed country has the opposite profile, with low birth rates and an old-age dependency burden. The trap on the exam is assuming developed means 'no demographic problems.' Developed countries trade a youth bulge for an aging crisis, so both labels come with consequences you need to explain.
A developed country has high income, advanced infrastructure, strong healthcare and education, and a high standard of living, like Japan, Germany, or the United States.
Developed countries sit in the late stages of the demographic transition, with low birth rates, long life expectancy, and slow or negative natural increase.
Their population pyramids look like columns or top-heavy shapes, with a narrow base of children and large elderly cohorts.
Aging populations and rising dependency ratios are the defining demographic challenge of developed countries, which is why many adopt pronatalist or pro-immigration policies.
On FRQs, 'developed country' is a signal to apply the whole package: low fertility, aging, high HDI and GDP per capita, and stronger economic position in trade relationships.
A developed country is a nation with high economic output, advanced technology and infrastructure, and a high standard of living, typically with low birth rates, long life expectancy, and an aging population. Japan, Germany, and the U.S. are classic examples.
Developed countries have high GDP per capita, low birth rates, and aging populations, while developing countries have lower incomes, higher birth rates, and youthful populations. The 2025 FRQ contrasted them directly, with a developed Country X trading with a developing Country Y.
Usually no, at least not through births. Most developed countries have fertility below the replacement level of about 2.1, so any population growth tends to come from immigration. That's why countries like Japan and Germany face shrinking workforces.
It looks like a column or even an upside-down triangle, with a narrow base (few children) and wide middle and top (large working-age and elderly cohorts). The exam expects you to read this shape and connect it to aging and the dependency ratio.
Because low birth rates and aging populations shrink the future workforce while the number of retirees grows, raising the dependency ratio. Pronatalist policies like cash incentives and paid parental leave try to push birth rates back up (LO 2.7.A).