Social Science and Humanities SB For Web PDF
Social Science and Humanities SB For Web PDF
Social Science and Humanities SB For Web PDF
HUMANITIES
and
THE
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Social Science teachers from
Myanmar's technological universities
planning and preparing lessons with
Social Science and the Humanities.
Contents
How To Use Social Science and the Humanities 2
1 Social Science and the Humanities 4
1.1 Society 6
1.2 What Is Social Science? 9
1.3 What Are the Humanities? 15
2 Philosophy and Ethics 18
2.1 Philosophy 20
2.2 Epistemology 21
2.3 Ethics 24
2.4 Philosophies from around the World 32
3 The Environment 34
3.1 What Is the Environment? 36
3.2 Maintaining a Balance in Nature 38
3.3 Resources 41
3.4 Human Impacts on the Environment 46
4 Economics 62
4.1 What Is Economics? 64
4.2 Microeconomics 66
4.3 Macroeconomics 73
4.4 Economic Indicators 78
4.5 Taxes and Fiscal Policy 84
4.6 International Trade 88
5 Development 92
5.1 What Is Development? 94
5.2 A History of Development 96
5.3 Economic Development 100
5.4 Criticisms of 'Economic Development' Models 103
5.5 Measuring Development 106
5.6 Measuring Poverty 108
5.7 Social and Community Development 110
5.8 Sustainable Development and the SDGs 116
5.9 Impacts of Development 118
6 Public Health 122
6.1 Health 124
6.2 Public Health 132
6.3 Public Health Policy 150
Sources and Acknowledgements 154
How to use Social Science
and the Humanities…
Before you use this book, read the information on these pages. It will help you to understand
how it works. The aim of this book is to help you learn more about a range of social science and
humanities subjects, to develop relevant skills, and to reflect upon important ideas in the social
sciences and humanities.
Task Types
To help you in your learning, there are three kinds of tasks:
• Exercises focus on increasing your knowledge of the subjects in this book.
• Activities focus on developing and practicing important social science skills such as
inferring, reasoning, comparing and contrasting, interpreting graphs and charts and statistics,
understanding cartoons and thinking critically.
• Discussions focus on how the issues and ideas in the book relate to you, your community and
society. They encourage you to develop your understanding by expressing your opinion and
listening to the views of others.
Structure
This book is divided into six chapters. Chapter 1 briefly introduces social science and the
humanities and some of the main subjects within those areas of study. Chapters 2–6 explore
some of those subjects in detail. We look at philosophy and ethics, the environment, economics,
development and public health. Throughout the book we build upon, and show links between, topics
that we have previously explored.
… there is a glossary
of key words and
phrases. Read them
before the chapter or
refer to them if you
see a word in bold in
the text that you do
not know.
As you read…
… every section and subsection starts with a Preview. … Activities are designed to help you
These encourage you to think about the topic you are practise useful skills. These include inferring,
going to study. They focus on what you already know, interpreting data, comparing and contrasting
and your ideas about the topic. and thinking critically.
Additionally…
themes
Chapter 1 looks at the idea of 'society', and at societies throughout history. It introduces the major subjects
studied within social science and within the humanities. It also considers the benefits to society and to
humanity of studying social science and humanities subjects.
learning goals
Knowledge Skills
By the end of this chapter you will increase your By the end of this chapter you will develop your
understanding of: ability to:
• what society is; • compare and contrast living conditions across
• what social science is; different societies;
• reasons to study social science; • identify skills used in social science;
• skills used in studying social science; • categorise different skills used in social science;
• subjects that are studied in social science; • reference social issues to social science
• what the humanities are; subjects;
• subjects that are studied in the humanities. • describe relationships between personal
interests and humanities subjects.
glossary
assess (v) – qef;ppftuJjzwfonf impact (n) – oufa&mufrI
bias (n) – bufvdkufrI? rsufESmomay;rI interpretation (n) – t"dyÜm,fazmfqdkcsuf
constitution (n) – zGJUpnf;yHktajccHOya' livelihood (n) – oufarG;vkyfief;
crossover (n, v) – aygif;ul;qufpyfrI? moral (n, adj) – udk,fusifhw&m;?
qufpyfwlnDaeaom usifh0wfESifhnDaom
custom (n) – "avhxHk;pH natural sciences (n) – obm0odyÜH
data (n) – tcsuftvuf peasant (n) – awmifol
empire (n) – tifyg,m systematic (adj) – pepfusaom
exist (v) – wnf&Sdonf
The George Peabody Library, Johns Hopkins University, Maryland, USA
Social Science and the Humanities
Industrial Post-industrial
People began to use machines for agriculture and in Instead of making physical things, some
factories instead of making things with their hands. Factories people use computers and the internet to
could make a lot of things, like tools or clothes, very quickly. create software for computers, applications
These things could be traded between countries. This was for smartphones, or websites for businesses.
'industrialisation'. Today, many people live in ‘industrial’ Societies where people do this type of work
societies. They live in large cities, working in factories or are called 'post-industrial' societies. However,
other jobs where they earn money to buy things that they people still need physical things like clothes,
need. Transport, communication, medicine and education shoes or cars, so industrial societies are still
improved during industrialisation. However, inequality very important. Post-industrial societies can be
between rich and poor has increased, and pollution of the found in different countries, or in parts of the
environment has become a problem. same country, alongside industrial societies.
http://yangontimemachine.com/
8
Chapter 1: Social Science and the Humanities
9
Social Science and the Humanities
1. From sentences a-d (below), choose the best summary each for
exercise paragraph one and paragraph two of the text above.
a. People's relationships are studied in social science.
b. Social science helps us understand and participate in society.
c. Research is an important skill for social science.
d. Social science skills are valuable skills for work.
2. Match skills a-c from paragraph three to the examples (i-iii) that
best demonstrates that skill.
a. data collection b. thinking critically c. analysis
i. Ma Mary interviewed people ii. U Kyaw Lin sorted what iii. Daw Moe didn't believe
from 30 households in her people said in each interview what she read on the website
village about why some people into categories: people who of a factory about protecting
there could not access medical live in towns and people who the environment. So she read
care. live in the country; men and reports by environmental
women; and employed and groups about the factory and
unemployed. spoke to local people.
10
Chapter 1: Social Science and the Humanities
i. A new road is being built through your town. You want to find
out more about its effects on people, the economy and the
environment.
ii. You collect and read newspaper articles about the planned
road.
iii. You read one article carefully and notice it only talks about how
the road will be good for the town and not any problems that it
might cause.
iv. You look online to find out about the person who wrote the
article and see they are working for the road building company.
v. You then search online for information about the results of an
environmental impact assessment for the planned road the
company had submitted to the Ministry of Conservation.
vi. You conduct interviews with people living near where the road
will go.
vii. You read each interview and place concerns people mentioned
about the road into three categories – livelihoods, economy
and environment – to see which of those concerns occur the
most.
viii. For each of the three main effects, you break them down into
concerns held by men and concerns held by women, to see if
they are the same or different.
ix. You write a report about what you found from your analysis of
the interviews and distribute it to the people affected by the
road and to the company building it.
Which skills for studying social science do you believe are most
useful? Why?
discussion
11
Social Science and the Humanities
a. c.
b. d.
12
Chapter 1: Social Science and the Humanities
e.
f.
13
Social Science and the Humanities
Match the social science subjects from pages 12–13 to the actions
exercise below.
1. You interview people about what makes them feel more
comfortable in new situations and how they think about those
situations.
2. You study the constitutions of different countries around the
world.
3. You study how the amount of fresh vegetables available affects
their prices in local markets.
4. You work on a project to assess the effects of new roads on the
lives of small farming communities.
5. You need to find out why many people in a village are getting
sick after drinking from the local water supply.
6. You want to find out if cutting down trees in a local forest is
reducing the number of species of birds living in the area.
14
Chapter 1: Social Science and the Humanities
15
Social Science and the Humanities
16
Chapter 1: Social Science and the Humanities
17
Chapter 2: Philosophy and Ethics
themes
Chapter 2 looks at some of the key concepts in the Western philosophical tradition and considers both
rationalist and empiricist perspectives on the nature of knowledge and learning. It looks at ethics, at the
possible sources of ethical behaviours and at different ethical aproaches. Finally, it examines philosophical
and ethical traditions from around the world to see where ideas and beliefs may overlap.
learning goals
Knowledge Skills
By the end of this chapter you will increase your By the end of this chapter you will develop your
understanding of: ability to:
• the origins of philosophy; • identify rationalist and empiricist ideas about the
• the main branches of philosophy; nature of knowledge;
• ideas about what knowledge is and how it is • relate ethical ideas and their sources;
gained; • apply an ethical framework to everyday ethical
• rationalism and empiricism; decisions;
• ideas about the sources of ethics; • categorise rules and laws;
• ethics in everyday life; • identify rule-based and consequential
• rule-based and consequential ethics; approaches to ethics;
• ideas about philosophy from around the world. • compare and contrast philosophical ideas from
around the world.
glossary
enforce (v) – jy|mef;onf? (Oya') sensation (n) – tm½HkcHpm;rI
touf0ifaponf spiritual (adj) – udk;uG,frIqdkif&m?
evidence (n) – oufao ouf0if,HkMunfrIqdkif&m
fundamental (adj) – tajccHusaom testimony (n) – oufaocHcsuf
perception (n) – todtjrif? oabmxm;tjrif
Busts of Greek philosophers on display at the British Museum.
Social Science and the Humanities
Branches of Philosophy
The study of the very basis of reality and existence is a branch of
philosophy called metaphysics. Metaphysics goes beyond what we
can know just from physical evidence. For example, metaphysics asks
whether there is a god or whether there are other dimensions of space
or time beyond those we currently know of.
The study of knowledge itself is called epistemology. It asks
questions about knowledge, what it is, how we gain it and whether we
can truly know what we think we know.
There is also a branch of philosophy that asks questions about our
actions. For example, what the right way to behave is or how we
should treat other people, animals or the environment. This is called
ethics. We use ethics in our daily life, often without realising it. For
example, we might reject a plastic bag from a shop because we believe
plastic bags are bad for the environment. Or, we might not eat meat
because we believe it is wrong to kill animals. In making these types
of decisions we are thinking about what we believe is right or wrong,
and why. We are making decisions about ethics.
In this chapter, we look mainly at epistemology and ethics.
Descartes
20
Chapter 2: Philosophy and Ethics
Rationalism
René Descartes lived around 400 years ago. He asked, 'What can we
truly be certain of ?' He imagined a situation where all of our physical
sensations, thoughts and memories could have been put into our
minds by an 'evil genius'. Everything around us, and our experiences
of them, might not be real. The evil genius is probably not true;
however, this is an example of a 'thought experiment'.
e Cave'
f th
yo
o r
ll e g
21 'The A
Social Science and the Humanities
Empiricism
About 300 years ago, the philosopher John Locke stated that it was
not possible to know reality just through thinking and reasoning,
as Plato or Descartes had claimed. He also argued that people are
born without any pre-existing knowledge. To gain knowledge, Locke
believed that people have to physically observe and experience things
around them through their own senses. This belief – that we are born
without knowledge and gain it through sense-based experience – is called
empiricism.
What is important about these ideas about knowledge is that they
encourage us to think critically and question our understanding of the
world around us. It is through this questioning that new knowledge,
Empiricism ideas, inventions and social change can happen.
a. 'Where is my brother? He i. 'I won't know where he is until I see him again.'
was here only a minute
ago…' ii. 'I know he must still be here.'
b. 'What will happen if I put i. 'It will probably hurt. Fires are very hot.'
my hand in the fire?' ii. 'I don't know. I will try it. Owwwww!'
c. 'I should know how to ride i. 'If I think about it how to do it for a very long time, I will be able to
a bicycle but I have never ride. I probably know how to do it anyway.'
ridden one.' ii. 'I will get on this bicycle and see what happens…'
i. 'No. I need to do the equation and check the result each time to know
d. 'One plus one always that it is true.'
equals two.' ii. 'Yes. If I know what is "one", and what is "plus", then I know that this is
always true.'
22
Chapter 2: Philosophy and Ethics
23
Social Science and the Humanities
24
Chapter 2: Philosophy and Ethics
RESPECT
IS A TWO
WAY STREET
i. ii. iii.
iv. v.
Where do you think that ideas about right and wrong come from –
from people or from a god or religion? Why?
discussion
25
Social Science and the Humanities
26
Chapter 2: Philosophy and Ethics
?
a. A friend posts on Facebook. It says negative things about a
different ethnic or religious group. Would you share it? Why?
?
c. The person in front of you in the street throws an empty
plastic water bottle on the path. What would you do? Why?
e. The day before you sit an exam, a friend offers you a copy
of the answers. Would you take them? Why?
g. During a test in class, you see your best friend looking over
at the answer book of the person next to them. What would
you do? Why?
27
Social Science and the Humanities
28
Chapter 2: Philosophy and Ethics
29
Social Science and the Humanities
Consequential Ethics
The opposite of rule-based ethics is consequential ('teleological')
ethics. Think again about the man with the gun. If you lie to him
about where your friend is, he is unlikely to find or harm them. The
consequence of telling a lie, in this example, is a greater good than
not telling a lie. In consequential ethics, the consequences of actions
decide if the actions are considered right or wrong.
Utilitarianism
Utilitarianism grew out of consequential ethics. It is the idea that an
action is ethically right if the consequences of an action produce
the 'greatest good for the greatest number' of people. A criticism of
utilitarianism is that a good outcome for the majority of people does
not mean a good outcome for everyone. For example, imagine a small
boat with too many people in it that is sinking in the sea. If one person
was pushed out of the boat into the sea, the boat would be able to keep
floating with the other people who could be saved. While this might
produce a good outcome for most of the people who are on the boat, it
would be a very bad outcome for the person who was pushed out.
Match examples 1–4 to the ethical idea that they best demonstrate.
exercise a. rule-based b. consequential/utilitarian
1. You hear about a new medicine that can cure a serious disease but it makes about one in every 10,000
people very sick. The government allows it to be used because it cures most people of the disease.
2. You believe children should always have access to education and should never have to work before the
age of 15.
3. You were once arrested and spent a week in jail. The police did not keep an official record of your
arrest. You are at an interview for a new job and the employer asks if you have ever been arrested. You
say yes.
4. You need to take your mother to hospital because she is very ill. You have no money for the taxi. Your
friend's wallet is on the table. You take 10,000 MMK for the taxi fare.
30
Chapter 2: Philosophy and Ethics
b. You have no food or money and your family are starving. You see a blind beggar
on the side of the road. He has enough money in his cup for you to buy food for
your family. Would you steal the money? Why?
c. A small child is on her way to the dentist to have a tooth extracted. She has
never been to the dentist before and she is very scared. You know that it will
hurt. She asks you if it will hurt. Would you tell her? Why?
d. You are a doctor. A patient has a serious disease. You know that they only have
a 50% chance of surviving it. They ask you what their chances of surviving are.
Would you tell the patient? Why?
e. A man has put a bomb in a large shopping mall. It will explode in ten minutes
and you cannot get everyone out before it explodes. You have arrested the
bomber. You want him to tell you where the bomb is before it explodes. Would
you torture him to tell you where the bomb is and stop it? Why?
f. You have also arrested the bomber's wife and child. Would you torture them to
make the bomber tell you where the bomb is and stop it? Why?
g. You don't have much money, and need to support your family as well as
yourself. You see a person who looks poor. They drop 5,000 MMK on the road.
You pick it up. Do you keep it? Or run after the person and give it back? Why?
h. You don't have very much money and need to support your family as well as
yourself. You see a person who looks rich. They drop 5,000 MMK on the road.
You pick it up. Do you keep it? Or run after the person and give it back? Why?
31
Social Science and the Humanities
c. The Chinese philosopher Mozi (468–391 BCE) d. The Islamic Hadiths (the record of words and
stated that the truth of a claim can be found actions of the Prophet Mohammad) state,
through 'the historical records' and 'the eyes 'None of you truly believes until he wishes for
and ears of the common people.' his brother what he wishes for himself.'
g. The Chinese philosopher Mozi (468–391 BCE) h. Hindu Sankhya and Nyaya philosophy says
said that for social order, people must be that sources of proof for knowledge include
concerned for each other and not merely for perception, inference, comparison and
themselves or their own families. testimony.
32
Chapter 2: Philosophy and Ethics
i. The Chinese philosopher Confucius (551–479 j. Chinese philosopher Wang Yangming (1479–
BCE) stated that moral order was aligned with 1523 CE) asked, 'Is there any affair in the world
heaven. outside of the mind?'
Epistemology Ethics
Idea or Epistemology or Divine
Rationalism Empiricism Golden Rule
Quote Ethics? Command
a. Ethics X
b. Epistemology X
c.
d.
e.
f.
g.
h.
i.
j.
k.
l.
33
Chapter 3: The Environment
themes
Chapter 3 looks at the ideas of the 'natural' and 'human-made' environments and the relationship between the two. It
considers the role that natural resources play in human societies, how their use relates to human-made climate change,
and problems caused by waste and pollution on individuals, on society and on the environment.
learning goals
Knowledge Skills
By the end of this chapter you will increase your By the end of this chapter you will develop your ability
understanding of: to:
• natural and human-made environments; • identify natural and human-made parts of the
• relationships between people and the environment; environment;
• ecosystems and biodiversity; • list human uses of the natural environment;
• natural resources; • identify cause and effect in human impacts on the
• fossil fuels; environment;
• human uses of water; • identify differences between renewable and non-
• climate change and responses to it; renewable resources;
• waste and recycling; • outline steps in the process of climate change;
• chemical pollution. • compare and contrast the effects of climate change;
• categorise adaption and mitigation responses to climate
change;
• create possible solutions to reduce and recycle waste;
• interpret maps, pictures and data;
• infer meaning in political cartoons.
glossary
adaptation (n) – jyifqifcsuf fumes (n) – tcdk;taiGU
agribusiness (n) – pdkufysdK;a&;vkyfief; glacier (n) – a&cJawmif
aquaculture (n) – a&owå0gpdkufysdK;arG;jrLa&; greenhouse effect (n) – zefvHktdrf tmedoif
atmosphere (n) – avxk hydropower (n) – a&tm;vQyfppf
biodiversity (n) – ZD0rsdK;uGJpHkvifrI insecticide (n) – ydk;owfaq;
clearance (n) – &Sif;vif;jcif; interconnected (adj) – tjyeftvSef csdwfqufaeaom
clear-cut (adj) – wdus&Sif;vif;jywfom;aom invest (v) - &if;ESD;jr§KyfESHonf
climate change (n) – &moDOwkajymif;vJrI market (n) – aps;uGuf
compensation (n) – avsmfaMu; mitigation (n) – avsmhyg;oufomapjcif;
compost (n) – ajraqG; natural gas (n) – obm0"mwfaiGU
concentration (n) – yg0ifrI palm oil (n) – qDtkef;
concession (n) – uif;vGwfcGifh polar ice cap (n) – 0if½dk;pGef;a&cJawmifrsm;
disposable (adj) – wpfcgoHk; radiation (n) – "mwfjzmxGufrI
ecological (adj) – a*[pepfESifhqdkifaom renewable (adj) – jyefjynfhNrJjzpfaom
ecosystem (n) – a*[pepf sediment (n) – te,ftESpf
export (v, n) – wifydkYonf? ydkYukef side effect (n) – ab;xGuftusdK;oufa&mufrI
fault line (n) – ivsifaMum toxic (adj) – tqdyfoifhaom
food security (n) - &du©mzlvHkrI waste (n) – pGefYypfypönf;? trdIuf
fossil fuel (n) – ½kyf<uif;avmifpm web (n) – uGef&uf
Deep inside a bamboo forest in Japan.
Social Science and the Humanities
36
Chapter 3: The Environment
Look at the picture on page 36 and put the things in it into the
Venn diagram based on whether they are:
exercise
• part of the natural environment;
• part of the human-made environment; N at u r al m an- m ade
• shared between both. Hu
1. Do you think there are more things that are natural or human-
made in the area around you? Why?
discussion
2. Do you believe that the natural or human-made environment is
more important? Why?
37
Social Science and the Humanities
38
Chapter 3: The Environment
2. For each effect (i-iv), think of its possible effects on both human
and animal populations in the surrounding areas.
Example:
All the trees in Plants begin to die Animals which eat plants
a forest are cut because there is too are no longer able to
down. much sunlight. feed.
39
Social Science and the Humanities
FOCUS ON … MYANMAR
DEFORESTATION THREATENS BIODIVERSITY AND COMMUNITIES
13/05/15 — Clearing forests for
commercial agriculture is increasing
in Myanmar. According to a new
report from a forest conservation
organisation, this puts biodiversity at
risk. It also increases the chances of
conflicts over land. The government
has allocated at least 5.2 million acres
of forestland and identified a further
eleven million acres as suitable to
be cleared for private agribusiness
projects.
Many of the forests are on land where
there have been historical conflicts
and current land claims by local ethnic
minority groups. Forest clearance could increase armed conflict in these areas. The report also predicted
the loss of wildlife in Myanmar from increased deforestation.
The report investigated forest clearance in two areas. In Kachin State, forests are being cut down for rubber
and biofuel plantations. In Tanintharyi Region, oil palm and rubber plantations are replacing natural forests.
However, agricultural crops had been planted in only 15% of cleared areas in Kachin and Tanintharyi.
According to the report, '75% of cleared forest lands are still not planted. Often, the businesses do not follow
environmental protection regulations or protect local communities from negative impacts.'
Also, the cleared forest land is not always used for agriculture. The report says, 'It is difficult to obtain logging
rights in Myanmar, so businesses want the rights of palm oil concessions. This allows them to clear-cut
forests. They may not ever plant the oil palm and instead just sell the cleared land later, to make money.'
Source: http://www.dw.com/en/deforestation-in-myanmar-threatens-biodiversity-and-communities/a-18314594
40
Chapter 3: The Environment
Fossil Fuels
One of the main ways that resources are used is for fuel. Coal, oil
and natural gas are examples of non-renewable 'fossil fuels'. Fossil
fuels are made from dead plants and animals that have been buried
underground for millions of years. They are taken from the ground
and burnt for energy. Petrol and diesel (from oil) are used in motor
vehicles. Coal and natural gas are used by factories and for heating.
When fossil fuels are burned, gases are released into the atmosphere,
including carbon dioxide (CO2). Increasing levels of CO2 in the
atmosphere is one of the main causes of climate change (see 3.4.1).
1. For each list of words below, choose the odd one out.
a. cars, houses, computers, plants
exercise
b. aeroplane, car, coal, factory
c. wind, oil, sun, water
d. oil, gold, gas, trees
e. iron, oil, coal, gas
2. What is the odd one out an example of, and what do the other
three things have in common?
41
Social Science and the Humanities
Matching – Resources
exercise 1. Match the pictures to the following resources:
i. petrol iv. wind vii. hydropower
ii. gas v. solar viii. wood
iii. nuclear power vi. coal ix. charcoal
2. Is the resource is renewable or non-renewable.
3. State whether each resource is used in your community or
country, and for what purpose.
A. B.
C. D. E.
F. G.
H. I.
42
Chapter 3: The Environment
Water
Water is necessary for all living things on earth. Humans, plants and
animals all need water to survive. Most of the water on earth is in
the oceans and is salt water. Only 3% of water on earth is fresh water
(water that does not contain salt). Only fresh water can be drunk by
humans and animals and used to grow plants.
Water moves through a cycle. It can change from liquid to solid (ice)
to gas (water vapour). Humans see this cycle as rain and snow. As
it moves through the cycle, water sometimes becomes trapped as
ice or as underground water. Most fresh water on earth is in ice –
in glaciers and polar ice caps – or underground. Humans access
underground water by digging wells and using pumps.
Rivers provide fish to eat, and rich sediments for growing crops.
Rivers are also used for transport and to generate electricity at
hydropower dams. Human civilisations have often developed along
rivers, and on river deltas such as the Mekong or Ayeyarwaddy deltas.
Although water is a renewable resource, it can be overused or
polluted by humans. Rivers are affected by overuse for irrigation
for farming, fishing, and especially by dams for hydropower. These
activities can affect other people living by rivers or downstream.
They might also depend on the river for fishing or for farming.
Rivers sometimes cross (or even form) borders between countries.
Consequently, how rivers are used by one country can even affect its
relations with other countries that share the same river.
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Mekong
Delta
44
Chapter 3: The Environment
FOCUS ON … MYANMAR
DAM PROJECTS IN NORTHERN MYANMAR
29/08/17 — A Chinese company will
build four dams on the Ngo Chang Hka
River. The Ngo Chang Hka flows into the
N'Mai River, one of two rivers that join
to form the Ayeyarwaddy. A report from
The Kachin Development Network Group
(KDNG) says that the dams will damage
an ecologically-sensitive river valley.
The dams will produce around 1,200
megawatts of electricity per year. 50% of
the power from the planned dams will be
exported to China.
KDNG estimates that 4,500 people living in the Ngo Chang Hka valley will be affected by the project. They
have received no information about the impacts of the dams, or the size or location of the areas that will be
flooded. Many local villagers live in the river valley and farm where the soil is richest. KDNG warns that the
dams will flood farmland and cause disruption to local people's lives. According to KDNG, the project is very
unpopular with the local population. Zawng Lum lives in the valley. He says, 'We refuse to let our ancestral
homelands and natural resources be destroyed.'
According to KDNG, another dam in Kachin, built on the Chipwe River in 2013, has had negative
consequences. KDNG says the dam provides an important lesson for those in the Ngo Chang Hka valley.
The report on the Chipwe dam says, 'Valuable farmlands were destroyed without proper compensation.
Villagers downstream now suffer from muddy, polluted water from the dam that destroys riverside crops,
kills fish and makes bathing dangerous.'
Chinese officials decided not to build dams on the Nu River across the border in Yunnan. This is because of
a fault line, and earthquakes that could be caused by the weight of dam reservoirs. According to the KDNG's
research, one of the planned dams on the Ngo Chang Hka River is 30 km away from the same fault line.
Source: https://www.irrawaddy.com/news/burma/dam-project-in-northern-myanmar-will-destroy-remote-river-valley-environmentalist-
group-warns.html
45
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Chapter 3: The Environment
47
Social Science and the Humanities
i. Chart showing the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere (in parts per
million) from 1960 to 2010.
ii. Chart showing the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere (in parts per
million) from 400,000 years ago to the year 2010.
2. What do the charts tell us about the amount of historical CO2 in the
atmosphere?
3. Discuss the questions.
a. Which chart do you think is the most useful when thinking about
climate change? Why?
b. Based on the information in the charts, do you think that humans
are the biggest cause of climate change? Why?
A.
B.
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Chapter 3: The Environment
FOCUS ON … VIETNAM
CLIMATE CHANGE WILL AFFECT RICE FARMING IN VIETNAM
02/07/13 — Asia's many large river deltas are vulnerable
to sea-level rise, which is accelerating around the world.
During the twentieth century, global sea levels rose at an
average of 0.07 inches (1.8 millimetres) per year. However,
between 1993 and 2003, the average rate of sea-level rise
increased to 0.12 inches (3.1 millimetres) per year.
A new report says that as early as 2040, Southeast Asia's
major rice-growing region – the Mekong River Delta in
Vietnam – will see crop production drop by about 12% due
to an estimated sea-level rise of 30 cm (nearly one foot).
A rice paddy on the Mekong Delta
The Mekong Delta is often called the, 'rice bowl' of
Vietnam. It is home to some 17 million people and makes up half of Vietnam's total agricultural production.
It contributes significantly to the country's rice exports.
The report says, 'Any shortfall in rice production in this area because of climate change would affect the
economy and food security of Vietnam and would also affect international rice markets.'
The Mekong Delta is also Vietnam's most important fishing region. It is home to almost half of Vietnam's
marine fishing vessels and produces two thirds of Vietnam's fish from aquaculture.
An increase in saltwater associated with sea-level rise is already affecting farms. By 2050, the sea-level rise
is expected to increase by over 30% of the total current area – 1.3 million hectares – affected by increased
salt water in the Delta.
Sources: http://www.rfa.org/english/commentaries/east-asia-beat/climate-change-07022013165938.html
http://www.climatehotmap.org/global-warming-locations/mekong-river-delta-vietnam.html
1. What is the problem for Asia's river deltas and what is causing it?
2. How will the problems facing Vietnam also affect people in other countries?
3. What other industries will be affected by climate change in the Mekong Delta?
4. Why is sea water a problem for growing crops?
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Social Science and the Humanities
50
Chapter 3: The Environment
activity
Categorising – Adaptation or
Mitigation?
1. Classify the activities (a-m)
into adaptation or mitigation
strategies. Put them in the
table. Some activities may be
both.
Adaptation Mitigation 2. In pairs, explain for each
example why you chose that
category. Discuss possible
effects of that action.
a. Changing to crops that grow in the new climate. g. Having fewer children.
b. Redesigning buildings. h. Building sea walls.
c. Using alternatives to fossil fuels, like hydro, solar i. Improving drainage.
or wind power. j. Moving people from low-lying areas.
d. Changing our diets so that we eat less meat. k. Planting or replanting trees and forests.
e. Using fossil fuels more efficiently. l. Reducing the use of fossil fuels.
f. Raising the level of streets. m. Higher taxes for businesses which produce CO2.
activity
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Social Science and the Humanities
1. For each list of words below, choose the odd one out.
exercise a. charcoal, petrol, air, natural gas
b. bag, bottle, can, land
c. mining, manufacturing, water, construction
d. herbicides, humans, fertilisers, insecticides
2. What do the other three things in the list have in common?
3. For the odd one out, say how you think it could be affected by
the other things in its list.
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Chapter 3: The Environment
FOCUS ON … ASEAN
PLASTICS INDUSTRY PROMPTS OCEAN POLLUTION FEARS
22/06/17 — The plastics and packaging industry
in Asia is booming. Rising plastic pollution in
rivers and oceans is becoming a concern. China
has contributed more than 20% of global plastic
production. Southeast Asia accounts for a further
20% of global plastic output.
Southeast Asian countries sold almost $40 billion of
plastics abroad in 2013. Thailand consumes large
amounts of plastics each year – nearly 40 kilograms
of plastic per person. Malaysia reports 35 kg per
person and Indonesia 17 kg per person.
However, the plastics and food packaging industries
The body of a sea bird, its stomach filled with plastic.
have a dark side. Plastic pollution in rivers and
oceans has created floating islands of plastic waste which are eaten by marine life. A research paper
published in the Nature Communications journal said, 'The top 20 polluting rivers, mostly in Asia, account for
67% of the global total.' China's Yangtze River had, 'considerably higher plastic concentrations than any
other sampled river worldwide.' The river dumped 330,000 metric tons of plastic into the East China Sea.
The United Nations Secretary General António Guterres recently warned plastic pollution could outweigh
fish by 2050. Environmentalists estimate more than eight million tons of plastic ends up in the oceans each
year. The plastic kills around one million sea birds, some 100,000 sea mammals and millions of fish.
The United Nations has called on nations to take steps to reduce plastic consumption. China, Thailand,
Indonesia and the Philippines have committed to reduce plastics consumption. New Zealand-based
environmental activist Anna Dawson says the food industry should be a target to reduce plastics use. 'This
could include compostable packaging or just encouraging people to eat more fresh fruit and vegetables by
shopping at local markets instead of supermarkets.'
Source: https://www.voanews.com/a/asia-plastics-industry/3911586.html
1. What evidence is given in the article for the economic importance of the plastics industry?
2. How does most plastic get into the oceans?
3. What types of living things are killed by plastic in the oceans?
4. What is the connection between the food industry and plastic?
5. What are alternatives suggested in the article to using plastic?
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Social Science and the Humanities
54
Chapter 3: The Environment
Match the examples (a-e) below to the appropriate 'R' from the
previous page.
exercise
1. You give back cardboard boxes to the shop that put your
groceries in them.
2. You give all your plastic bottles to a new organisation that can
make small buildings using bricks made out of unwanted
plastic bottles.
3. You always ask people in shops not to put the things you
buy into plastic bags.
4. You now buy most of your fruit and vegetables at the
market rather than buying them at supermarkets
where they are individually wrapped in plastic.
5. When you go shopping, you take plastic bags with
you that you were given before by other shops, so
you can use them again.
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Chapter 3: The Environment
Insecticides Herbicides
Tonnes of active ingredients
2001 419 46
2002 519 41
2003 541 71
2004 513 89
2005 661 115
2006 1,987 242
2007 1,718 211
2008 872 116
2009 592 150
2010 1,812 294
2011 2,370 478
2012 1,677 471
2013 1,245 874
Based on official data reported on FAO
2014 2,211 1,950 Questionnaires from countries
Total Data Source: Food and Agriculture
Organisation (FAO) of the United Nations
Mean http://www.fao.org/faostat/en/#data/RP
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Social Science and the Humanities
FOCUS ON … LAOS
PESTICIDES A DANGER IN LAOS
16/04/16 — The Laos government has banned the use of pesticides in banana plantations in northern
Laos. More than 10,000 hectares of banana plantation in Bokeo Province, owned by foreign investors, are
spayed with these herbicides and insecticides. The governor of Bokeo said, 'Impacts on the environment
and people are due to a lack of government management and monitoring. As a result, fertilisers, and harmful
pesticides have been used.'
Studies show more than 100 different chemicals were regularly sprayed in banana plantations in northern
Laos. The Lao Upland Rural Advisory Service (LURAS) reported two districts north of Vientiane had been
sprayed with 19 million litres of herbicide last year. The NGO Field Alliance says the amount sprayed is
usually not recorded, but what is more important is how toxic the chemicals are.
Maize is a dominant crop in Laos, where 75% of the workforce works in the agriculture sector. The LURAS
paper said, 'Due to the maize boom, these chemicals have become a threat to human health and contribute
to the loss of biodiversity and declining soil fertility.' Field Alliance said that farmers in Laos sometimes
could not read labels on packaging because they were in other languages. Farmers also mixed different
pesticides together.
Source: http://www.straitstimes.com/asia/se-asia/chemicals-are-killing-laos-farmlands
1. Who would be likely to make the most money from the banana plantations?
2. Who is it suggested should do more to control use of fertilisers and pesticides?
3. Apart from not knowing how much is being sprayed, what is considered a bigger problem about
the use of herbicides?
4. In Laos, which part of the economy employs the most people?
5. Why would that be significant in relation to the use of pesticides?
6. What problems do the pesticides cause to the natural environment?
7. What are two reasons why farmers might use pesticides dangerously?
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Chapter 3: The Environment
Mercury
Mercury is a very poisonous chemical. It is used in chemical
processes in factories and in mining. Mercury that is released into
oceans and rivers can accumulate in fish and shellfish. When people
eat the fish and shellfish they can get mercury poisoning.
FOCUS ON … MYANMAR
THE MERCURY MENACE
07/09/16 — Mercury is a highly toxic chemical that
endangers the health of small-scale gold miners who use
it in northern Myanmar. It has been detected in one of the
main waterways flowing through Yangon.
Small-scale miners in Kachin State use mercury when
they mine for gold. They mix liquid mercury by hand into
sediment and it bonds with the gold. The mercury is then
burnt off, leaving pieces of pure gold.
The World Health Organisation says that direct handling
of liquid mercury can cause corrosion to the skin, eyes
and digestive tract, as well as lungs and kidneys. Children
exposed to mercury fumes can suffer from lower growth and mental development.
Miners often do not have the education to access information about health risks caused by mining chemicals.
U Tun Tun was a small-scale gold miner for seven years. He said, 'Many people don't know that there are
any effects from using mercury.' U La Seng has worked for two years as a small-scale gold miner. He said
he knew there were side effects from using mercury, but his knowledge was limited.
The use of mercury by gold miners along rivers in northern Myanmar poses a serious threat to the environment
as well as health. According to the Nyein (Shalom) Foundation, 'Large pools of mercury are sitting on the
edge of the water sometimes. No one is told how to dispose of it, so it's just left in the river.'
Japanese researchers have found increased levels of mercury in waterways as far south as Yangon's
Ngamoeyeik Creek. Gold mining does not happen there. They concluded that mercury from upstream had
travelled down into the area.
To reduce the harm, alternative methods to extract gold from sediment such as direct smelting or the use of
borax or magnets have been suggested. Researchers also suggested that gold miners receive training in
the proper disposal of mercury after it is used. They also suggest that the regulation of mercury is included
in the Myanmar Mines Law in future.
Source: https://frontiermyanmar.net/en/the-mercury-menace (Text used with permission from Victoria Milko and Frontier Myanmar.)
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Social Science and the Humanities
Text (previous page) and photos used with permission from Victoria Milko and Frontier Myanmar.
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Chapter 3: The Environment
61
Chapter 4: Economics
themes
Chapter 4 looks at the two interconnected subject areas of microeconomics and macroeconomics. Within
microeconomics, it considers core concepts such as goods and services and supply and demand, and briefly explores the
idea of 'the market'. Within macroeconomics, it examines issues that relate to the economics of whole countries, such as
inflation, taxation, imports and exports and free trade and protectionism.
learning goals
Knowledge Skills
By the end of this chapter you will increase your By the end of this chapter you will develop your ability
understanding of: to:
• goods, services, needs and wants; • apply economic concepts to real life scenarios;
• supply and demand; • categorise real-life purchases into goods and services,
• markets; needs and wants;
• economic systems; • interpret supply and demand graphs;
• gross domestic product, unemployment and inflation; • categorise factors that influence supply and demand;
• taxes and tax systems; • express information in graphic format about markets
• fiscal policy; into picture diagrams;
• imports and exports; • reference examples to economic systems;
• free trade, tariffs and subsidies; • infer meaning from quotes;
• economic integration and free trade agreements. • interpret data for GDP, unemployment and inflation;
• assess the causes and effects of inflation;
• transfer information into graphs and diagrams.
glossary
basic needs (n) – tajccHvdktyfcsufrsm; labour (n) – tvkyform;
communist (adj, n) – uGefjrLepf0g'qefaom? uGefjrLepf means of production (n) – xkwfvkyfrIenf;vrf;rsm;
consumer (n) – pm;oHk;ol profit (v, n) – tusdK;tjrwf
corporate (adj) – aygif;pnf;xm;aom? purchasing power (n) – 0,fEdkifpGrf;tm;
toif;tzGJUESifhqdkifaom regulate (v) – pnf;rsOf;pnf;urf; owfrSwfonf
demand (n, v) – 0,fvdktm; revenue (n) – 0ifaiG
depression (n) – pD;yGm;a&;uyf self-interest (n) – udk,fusdK;
division of labour (n) – vkyftm;cGJa0rI services (n) – 0efaqmifrIrsm;
economic growth (n) – pD;yGm;a&;zGHUNzdK;wdk;wufrI shift (v, n) – ajymif;vJonf? tqdkif;
equilibrium (n) – rQajc socialist (adj) – qdk&S,fvpf0g'qefaom
exempt (adj) – uif;vGwfcGifh&Sdaom stimulate (v) – vSHKUaqmfonf
fiscal (adj) – b@ma&;qdkif&m supply (n, v) – taxmuftyHh? axmufyHhonf
foreign aid (n) – EdkifiHjcm;taxmuftyHh ay;ydkYonf
free trade (n) – vGwfvyfaom ukefoG,frI tariff (n) – oGif;ukeftcGef
globalisation (n) – *vdkb,fvdkufaZ;½Sif; trade barrier (n) – ukefoG,fa&; twm;tqD;rsm;
goods (n) – ukefypönf;rsm; transaction (n) – ta&mif;t0,f? vkyfief;wpf&yf
import (v, n) – wifoGif;onf? oGif;ukef value (n, v) – wefzdk;? wefzdk;jzwfonf
industrial revolution (n) - pufrIawmfvSefa&; variable (n, adj) – udef;&Sif? ajymif;vJEdkifaom
inflation (n) – azmif;yGrI wholesale (adj) – vuúm;jzpfaom
A container ship at sea, delivering goods to countries around the world.
Social Science and the Humanities
64
Chapter 4: Economics
1. Complete the labels for the two images below, based on the text.
exercise
a. The area of study of b. The area of study of
__________economics: __________economics:
Microeconomics Macroeconomics
* Looks at economic decisions of people,
households and businesses.
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Social Science and the Humanities
66
Chapter 4: Economics
67
Social Science and the Humanities
Look carefully at the axes for price and quantity and at the supply
exercise and demand curves in Graphs A-C to help you answer the questions.
1. Why does the supply curve slope upwards?
2. Why does the demand curve slope downwards?
3. If the supply curve moves to the right but the demand curve
stays the same:
a. Does it show an increase or decrease in supply?
b. What will happen to the price?
4. If the demand curve moves to the left but the supply curve stays
the same:
a. Does it show an increase or decrease in demand?
b. What will happen to the price?
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Chapter 4: Economics
Examples
a. People want to buy more new foreign cars after f. Bright green shirts are popular this year and
the government removed taxes on imported cars many people now want to buy them.
g. The price for rice is likely to rise in the next six
b. A new type of soft drink has become more
months so people are buying and stockpiling
popular because people believe it is better than
more rice now.
another similar type of soft drink.
h. Since the price of imported cars has fallen,
c. Machines and systems in clothing factories are
people are now using more petrol.
able to produce many more clothes per day than
by people sowing by hand in the past. i. The price of new tyres for cars has risen since the
international price for rubber has gone up.
d. The average wage for workers has decreased
over the last five years so people are buying less j. The government provides support to farmers to
luxury goods. plant and grow more beans.
e. Unusually cold weather has reduced the amount k. Clothes manufacturers think more people will
of coffee beans that have been grown and the want to wear jeans in the next year, so they have
price of coffee has gone up. increased production of them.
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Social Science and the Humanities
FOCUS ON … MYANMAR
ONION PRICES DECLINE
26/02/18 — According to traders in the
Bayinnaung onion wholesale market, the
average price of onions has declined to 700
MMK per viss because of the surplus onion
supply that will enter the market soon.
Onion prices were high in January 2018.
The average wholesale price of onions was
2,900 MMK per viss.
An onion trader at Bayinnaung Market said,
'This is the time to harvest new summer
onions. Therefore, the average price of
onions is now 925 MMK. The summer
onions will enter the market in March
from Pakokku, Myittha, Myingyan and
Taungdwin.' He added that the supply of onions will increase this year.
In December, Myanmar imported onions from China to decrease the price of local onions in the market.
The Permanent Secretary of The Ministry of Commerce said they had also suspended the export of local
onions since December. He said, 'We have suspended it because the onion price in the local market was
very high. If the onion growers association says it is advisable to allow onion exports to avoid a decline in
onion prices in the local market, we will allow it again.'
Source: http://www.globalnewlightofmyanmar.com/onion-prices-decline-due-glut-supply/
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Chapter 4: Economics
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Social Science and the Humanities
Diagramming – Markets
activity The diagram demonstrates the relationship of the labour and goods
and services markets.
1. In pairs, transfer the written information into a diagram using
pictures instead of words.
2. Compare your diagrams with other pairs.
an d Serv
o ds ic
Go es
ri e s a n d
, S ala Be
es ne
ag fi
W
ts
L
P
ab s
es
en r
t f d Se
o r Go
ods an
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Chapter 4: Economics
Economic Systems
There have been many different ideas about how a country's economy
should be organised, what it should produce, how it should produce
it and how the benefits of production should be distributed. The main
differences in economic systems are between market economies and
planned economies.
Capitalist market economies follow the idea of a 'free market'.
The government has little role in the economy. There is individual,
private ownership of the 'means of production' like land and
factories. Profit, competition, and supply and demand (the 'invisible
hand' of the market) decide what and how things are made and
distributed, and how much people are paid. In the 19th and early
20th centuries, free market capitalist systems in the United States and
Western Europe created rapid economic growth. However, periods Below left: Famous portrait of
of economic growth ('booms') in capitalist systems have also been a mother and her children taken
followed by periods of collapse ('busts'), such as the Great Depression during the Great Depression; Below
right: Newspaper covers from 1929,
or the Global Financial Crisis in 2008.
during the 'Wall Street Crash' at the
beginning of the Great Depression.
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Social Science and the Humanities
Another issue with market-based systems is that some public goods and
services like police or fire fighters may not be best supplied by the free
market. For example, it would be a problem if you had to pay the fire
service before the fire truck would come to put out your burning house.
Planned economies have a central role for government. It
owns the means of production and plans how the economy is run.
The government decides what is produced, how much/many are
produced, how they are distributed and how much people are paid.
Public goods and services like health and education are often supplied
free to everyone. Planned economies have usually been associated
with the socialist and communist governments of the 20th century
(for example, the Soviet Union from 1917–1991) that were influenced
by the ideas of 19th century political philosopher and economist Karl
Marx (see box below).
Today most countries' economies are mixed economies. They
are a mix of both free markets and some government services and
regulations. The government supplies some public goods and services
like police, defence, education and roads. It also makes regulations
about issues such as working conditions or protecting the environment.
The government might also own a share alongside private businesses
in important industries or agriculture. Meanwhile, privately owned
businesses are able to produce and supply many other every-day
goods and services like clothes, food, houses, cars, cleaning services,
computers and so on.
The amount of government involvement in the economy varies
between countries. Some countries, such as the USA and Britain, for
example have a more market-based system. However, the government
still regulates services like health and education. Other public services,
like water or electricity, are provided by private companies.
In some Northern European countries, like Sweden or Denmark,
government has a bigger role, and many public services, such as higher
education, are free. However, countries that provide a lot of free public
goods and services also require people to pay higher taxes to the
government to pay for them.
Marx
philosopher and economist. paid workers who live and
He argued that the capitalist work in poor conditions. The
economic systems of 19th capitalists who owned the
century Europe, during the 'means of production' – like
Industrial Revolution, land and factories – grew
created an unequal class rich.
division. This results in a Marx argued that workers
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Chapter 4: Economics
Division of Labour
The division of labour means production of goods is divided between
people. Workers each perform a different part of the production of
goods on assembly lines in factories. This way, more things can be
made more quickly. For example, to make clothes, one worker might
dye cloth, then another cuts it, and yet another sews it together. The
division of labour has enabled the mass production of goods that we
use, like cars, clothes, computers or smartphones.
Division of labour was also central to industrialisation in the 19th
and 20th centuries. It influenced Karl Marx during the 19th century.
He believed that the industrial division of labour meant workers had
fewer skills because they only did one thing repeatedly and were being
exploited for profit by capitalists.
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Social Science and the Humanities
76
Chapter 4: Economics
a. b. c.
d. e.
f. g.
h. i. j.
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Chapter 4: Economics
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Social Science and the Humanities
Unemployment Rate
As well as supply and demand for goods and services, there is also
supply and demand in the labour market. If the demand for workers
falls, then people become unemployed. If people are unemployed they
may not be able to meet their basic needs like food and shelter, or
access healthcare. They also usually spend less money on their wants.
Employers make less profit and lay off more workers because they
cannot afford to pay them.
If there is a lot of unemployment in a society, problems like crime and
domestic violence can increase.
The unemployment rate is a percentage of people who are
unemployed in a country, as compared to the total number of people
who are able to work (the labour work force). The total number able
to work does not include people too young or too old to work, or
people who are unable to work.
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Chapter 4: Economics
Inflation
Inflation is a continuing rise in the price of goods and services over
time. It can be caused by either an increase in demand while supply
remains the same, or by a reduction in supply while demand remains the
same. In both cases, prices rise.
Demand for goods and services increases if people have more
money to spend. People may have more money because of increased
government spending, lower taxes or rising wages. Sometimes,
governments also print more money to stimulate the economy when
it is slow. In all these cases, the effect is that there is more money but
the same amount of goods and services. This causes 'demand pull'
inflation. Prices rise because people compete with each other with
more money for the same amount of goods and services.
Sometimes, an important resource (such as oil) may become harder
to get or more expensive. This causes a rise in the cost of goods and
services produced with this resource, so prices rise. This is known as
'cost push' inflation.
When prices rise, workers want higher wages to pay for the higher
prices of goods and services. The cost of making goods and services
increases, so producers and sellers raise their prices to pay the higher
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Social Science and the Humanities
wages and production costs. Prices, wages and the costs of production
go upwards in a spiral.
Inflation reduces the real value or 'purchasing power' of people's
money. Money becomes worth less than it was before.
Effects of inflation:
• People's savings lose value (because money is worth less).
• People withdraw savings from the bank and buy physical things
(like gold or land) that will keep their value.
• Businesses struggle because the costs of resources and labour
increase and it is harder to sell their goods for higher prices.
• Unemployment increases because businesses cannot pay workers
The effects of inflation:
Zimbabwean money. Due to higher and higher wages to keep up with rising prices.
economic problems, inflation in
To measure the rate of inflation in a country, economists measure the
Zimbabwe led to US$1 becoming
equivalent to Z$2,621,984,228 (2.6 change over time in the price of commonly-used goods and services. For
billion Zimbabwe dollars) in 2008. example, food, clothing, housing, transport, healthcare, and education.
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Chapter 4: Economics
32
30
28
26
24
22
20
18
a. During what period were
16
14 there large changes, from
12 year to year, of the annual
10 inflation rate?
8
b. During what period has
6
4 the annual inflation rate
2 remained almost steady?
0 c. What possible reasons
-2
can you think of for the
-4
98 99 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 difference between those
Year two periods?
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Social Science and the Humanities
MMK
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Chapter 4: Economics
Fiscal Policy
The government's decisions about its spending in the economy
are known as its 'fiscal policy'. Government spending has several
purposes. As already mentioned, it provides public goods and
services. When the government spends money on those things, it is
also creating jobs and paying people's incomes. This puts more money
into the economy. Those workers then spend their extra money buying
goods and services, shops have more customers with more money to
spend and producers have more demand for their goods.
Economies have 'cycles' Sometimes the economy grows and other
times it slows or even shrinks (booms and busts). Government
spending is often used to correct or reduce the effects of changes in
the economic cycle. When the economy slows down, governments
can increase their spending in the economy. For example, it could
build new roads and pay people to do that work. That means more
money enters the economy and those people start buying more goods
and services again, which leads to growth. When the economy is
growing, the government can then reduce the amount it spends in the
economy to avoid creating inflation.
1. Match the concept (a-f) with the examples (i-vi). Some examples
could match more than one concept.
exercise
2. Explain your answers.
a. Direct tax i. The government has put a 25% tax on all cigarettes.
b. Public goods and ii. The government has reduced the amount of new construction projects
services and people working on them it is paying for.
iii. Min Aung has to pay the tax on his income each year.
c. Fiscal policy to
decrease spending iv. The government has started building new roads. Lots of people are being
paid in new jobs working for construction companies to build the roads.
d. Progressive tax
v. To protect forests and the plants and animals that live in them, the
e. Fiscal policy to government provides forest protection officers who manage and guard
increase spending the forests.
f. Goods and vi. Aung Zaw Myo earns 600,000 MMK a month and Moe Moe Thet earns
services 1,000,000 MMK a month. Aung Zaw Myo pays 10% income tax and Moe
(consumer) tax Moe Thet pays 15% income tax.
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FOCUS ON … MYANMAR
THE MYANMAR TAX SYSTEM
INDIVIDUAL INCOME TAX ON PEOPLE'S WAGES OR SALARIES
Myanmar has a 'progressive' individual income tax system. The more that people earn, the larger the
percentage of tax that they are supposed to pay on that income. However, tax systems usually have
exemptions for some of a person's income. Exemptions mean some income that is not taxed. For
example, in Myanmar:
• if a person's total yearly income is under 2,000,000 MMK they do not have to pay any tax;
• the first 20% of a person's yearly income (up to 10,000,000 MMK) is exempt from taxation;
• 1,000,000 MMK of a person's yearly income is exempt from taxation if the person supports one parent,
and 2,000,000 MMK is exempt if they support two parents;
• if the person supports a non-working husband or wife, 1,000,000 MMK of the person's yearly income is
exempt;
• for each dependent child that the person has, 500,000 MMK of their yearly income is exempt.
After these exemptions, the person's total taxable yearly income can Personal Income Tax Rates
then be calculated (see table, right).
From (MMK) To (MMK) Tax Rate
GOODS AND SERVICE TAX (CONSUMER TAX) 1 2,000,000 0%
Larger businesses in Myanmar have to collect goods and services 2,000,001 5,000,000 5%
tax (often called consumer tax in Myanmar) from customers and pay 5,000,001 10,000,000 10%
that tax to the government. An example of consumer tax is the 5%
10,000,001 20,000,000 15%
tax paid by restaurants in Myanmar. The restaurant buys tax stamps
20,000,001 30,000,000 20%
from the Inland Revenue Department or Post Office. When the
restaurant charges consumer tax to a customer, they put tax stamps 30,000,001 and above 25%
on the customer's receipt to prove that they have paid tax. For example, the bill at a restaurant might be
3,000 MMK. 5% of 3,000 is 150. So 150 MMK extra is added to the original bill and a consumer tax stamp
is attached to the receipt. The final bill, including tax, is 3,150 MMK.
CORPORATE INCOME TAX
Companies are usually expected to pay tax. Myanmar-owned and foreign-owned companies pay a corporate
tax of 25% on their yearly income. However, companies can deduct money that they spend on the running
of the business from the total amount of income that they are taxed on. Companies operating in special
economic zones (SEZs – see 5.4) follow different rules. They are exempt from paying any corporate tax for
the first seven years, and pay only 50% of the corporate tax rate for the following five years.
Source: http://www.vdb-loi.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Myanmar-Tax-Booklet_2017.pdf
Answer these questions based on the information about Myanmar's tax system.
1. What things can reduce the total amount someone has to pay personal income tax on?
2. How can companies reduce the amount of tax they have to pay?
3. How long can companies operate in special economic zones before they need to pay any taxes?
4. Your yearly income before tax is 10,000,000 MMK. You support one parent and two children.
a. What would your total taxable income be?
b. For that taxable amount, what is your percentage income tax rate?
c. How much tax would you pay?
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FOCUS ON … MYANMAR
STAMP TAX VIOLATIONS BRING 30 MILLION MMK FOR IRD
28/09/15 — About 30 million MMK in fines
have been collected from restaurants who
have failed to put consumer tax stamps on
their receipts. This amount was collected
from the beginning of 2015–16 fiscal year
(April) until the end of August 2015. Fines
were taken from 125 restaurants.
U Htin Linn Aung is assistant director
of the Internal Revenue Department
(IRD). He said, 'We have fined most of
the restaurants already. We asked the
restaurants to get the tax stamps from us, but they didn't use these tax stamps. Consumers and owners
are both responsible for this.'
Restaurants which fail to put tax stamps on receipts get a warning the first time, a 500,000 MMK fine the
second time and a 700,000 MMK fine for the third time.
IRD said a total of two billion MMK in commercial tax has been collected from restaurants this fiscal year in
Yangon. That amount is more than double the amount collected in the same period last year.
Source: https://www.mmbiztoday.com/articles/stamp-tax-violations-bring-k30-million-ird
1. Why would restaurants charge consumer tax but not put the consumer tax stamps on receipts that
they give to customers?
2. How does IRD get money from restaurants if they do not put consumer tax stamps on receipts?
3. What other ways do you think IRD could collect consumer tax?
4. What do you think a 'fiscal year' is?
5. Do all sizes of restaurants in Myanmar charge consumer tax? Why do you think this might be?
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Imports Exports
Exports Imports
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Are these statements (about the text on this and the opposite page)
exercise true or false? If false, say why.
1. People are worried that FTAs and transnational corporations will
increase the role of governments in the economy.
2. When barriers to free trade are removed, businesses may move
to countries where people will work for lower wages.
3. A bilateral free trade agreement includes many countries.
4. The European Union has a common agricultural policy to
remove subsidies for agricultural products.
5. The EU has made it easier for other countries to export
agricultural goods to Europe.
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91
Chapter 5: Development
themes
Chapter 5 looks at the meaning of development and the different forms that it can take. It also considers the problems
that some types of development can cause, and how individuals and communities can actively participate in development.
learning goals
Knowledge Skills
By the end of this chapter you will increase your By the end of this chapter you will develop your ability
understanding of: to:
• different ideas about what 'development' is; • identify types of development activity;
• the causes and effects of 'development' through history; • categorise different theories of development;
• economic development; • transfer information from history into a development
• theories and criticisms of development; timeline;
• indicators of development and measures of poverty; • order steps in the economic development model;
• social and community development; • design visual information about development;
• organisations involved in social and community • infer from quotes and from cartoons about development;
development; • interpret maps, data, tables and graphs about
• sustainable development and the SDGs; development;
• free, prior and informed consent for people affected by • categorise types of organisations involved in
development projects; development;
• environmental and social impact assessments. • apply community empowerment goals to real-life
scenarios;
• create possible solutions to community development
issues;
• analyse impacts of development projects.
glossary
absolute (adj) - vHk;vHk;vsm;vsm; life expectancy (n) - vlYoufwrf;
advocate (v) - axmufcHtm;ay;onf? literate (adj) - ta&;? tzwf? twGuftcsuf
&yfwnfta&;qkdonf wwfajrmufaom
cash crop (n) - pD;yGm;jzpf pdkufysdK;aomoD;ESH marginalised (adj) - cGJjcm;qufqHcH&aom
collective (adj, n) - pka0;xm;aom mortality (n) - udk,fusifhw&m; (odu©m)
conserve (v) - xdef;odrf;apmifha&Smufxm;onf neoliberalism (n) - acwfopfvpfb&,f0g'
deregulation (n) - ajzavQmhay;jcif; non-aligned (adj) - bufrvdkufaom (EdkifiHrsm;)
discriminate (v) - cGJjcm;qufqHonf nutritious (adj) - tm[m&jynhf0aom
empower (v) - ajrawmifajr§muf jr§ihfwifjcif; privatisation (n) - yk*¾vduydkifjyKaom
eradicate (v) - wdkufzsufonf relative (adj) - qufEG,faom
faith-based (adj) - ouf0if,HkMunfrIudk tajccHaom restructure (v) - jyefvnfzGJUpnf;onf
grassroots (adj) - tajccHvlwef;pm;rsm; slum (n) - qif;&Jom;&yfuGuf
hazard (n) - ab;tEÅ&m,fjzpfjcif; social justice (n) vlrIw&m;rQwa&;
income generation (n) - 0ifaiG&SmazGjcif; standard of living (n) - aexdkifrItqifhtwef;
indicator (n) - nTef;udef;rsm; superpower (n) - vGefpGm MoZmwduúr BuD;rm;aom
indigenous (adj) - Xmaewdkif;&if;om;jzpfaom sustainable (adj) - a&&Snfxdef;odrf;Edkifaom
infrastructure (n) - tajccHtaqmufttHk target (n, v) - ypfrSwf? ypfrSwfxm;onf
integrate (v) - pkpnf;aygif;pyfonf union (n) - tpnf;t½Hk;? or*¾
interest (n) - twdk; well-being (n) - usef;rmcsrf;omjcif;
Pakkoku Bridge, Ayeyarwaddy Region, Myanmar.
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Chapter 5: Development
a. b.
c. d.
e. f.
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Portuguese sailors, India, colonial period European imperial expansion increased a lot with the Industrial
Revolution. It helped European empires like Britain and France. They
had an advantage in machinery and weapons when they took control
over parts of Africa and Asia and established colonies there.
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Chapter 5: Development
Views on
Business
Control
over Lives
of People
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Chapter 5: Development
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The World Bank The World Bank and the or financial difficulty. The
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Chapter 5: Development
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Example: i.
a. Cause: Economic development
b. The other variable that affects or is affected by economic development: Poverty.
c. The cause and effect relationship: economic development (the cause) cures
(ends) poverty (the effect).
d. The quote promotes economic development (as the way to end poverty).
iii. Children born in poor areas are likely to have iv. The Saudi government's denial of basic
poor educational outcomes. If we end that, we can rights to women is not only wrong, it hurts
increase economic development. – Cory Booker Saudi Arabia's economic development,
modernisation and prosperity. – Barbara Boxer
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FOCUS ON … MYANMAR
THE DAWEI SPECIAL ECONOMIC ZONE
11/04/16 — Japan has signed on as a third
equal partner with Myanmar and Thailand
in the planned Dawei Special Economic
Zone (DSEZ). The 196 square km special
economic zone would become one of the
biggest industrial parks in Southeast Asia.
The DSEZ will be one of three special
economic zones in Myanmar. It is
expected to encourage growth by drawing
in foreign investment. It will include
automotive, electronics, canneries and
pharmaceutical factories. However, after
eight years, progress on the DSEZ has
stalled. Land has been ploughed but
construction has barely started.
Meanwhile, local opposition to the project has been growing. The Dawei Development Association (DDA) is
a local civil society coalition opposed to the project. According to a 2014 DDA report, the project will affect
more than 43,000 people living in 36 small farming and fishing villages along the coast of the Andaman Sea.
The report says residents who sold their land to investors for very little are still waiting to be paid. Some
other locals claimed their land was confiscated.
The report says there are also environmental threats. The government plans to use a 2,000 megawatt coal
plant to power construction. Mangrove forests that help protect the coastline have been cleared. Road
construction and deforestation have affected water supplies and erosion has dirtied rivers and streams. The
area is home to many fishing villages that rely on the coastline for their daily livelihood. If the project goes
through life in the villages will be changed forever.
However, some locals see the DSEZ as a chance they are willing to take, although they don't always
completely understand the effects that the project will have on their lives and their children's. Nga Pea Dat
is a fishing village half a kilometre away from the DESZ. Fishermen there remain hopeful that the DSEZ will
bring much needed jobs to the region. Creating new jobs was the main focus of how the project planners
originally presented the DSEZ to local villagers.
Source: https://thediplomat.com/2016/04/myanmar-the-dawei-special-economic-zone/
1. What three countries are investing in the Dawei Special Economic Zone?
2. What types of industries are expected to operate at the DSEZ?
3. What are the occupations of the people who will be affected by the DSEZ?
4. What issues have there been about how land for the DSEZ has been obtained?
5. What are possible environmental impacts from the DSEZ?
6. Who depends on the Andaman sea coast for their living?
7. What do some people expect the DSEZ to bring? Why?
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Chapter 5: Development
activity
activity
Inferring – a Development
Cartoon
What does this cartoon suggest
about economic globalisation and
development?
1. Write a paragraph that explains
the idea you believe the
cartoon is demonstrating.
2. Swap your paragraphs with
a partner and compare your
ideas about the cartoon's
meaning.
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Chapter 5: Development
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Chapter 5: Development
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1. Look at the acronyms (from the texts on pages 110–111) and, for
exercise each, state:
a. what the acronym stands for;
b. whether it relates to top-down development, bottom-up
development, or could relate to both.
c. what it does (or could do) in development.
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Chapter 5: Development
Community Empowerment
A central idea in bottom-up development is community empowerment.
People gain more power over their own lives and they get the
knowledge and confidence to undertake projects that improve their
own and other people's lives. Certain groups that have traditionally
had less power or participation in decision making, such as women or
youth, are often the focus for empowerment.
Some common issues addressed through community empowerment
include:
i. increasing participation of marginalised groups such as women or
youth in community decision making;
ii. improving access for marginalised groups to basic healthcare
services;
iii. improving education and literacy;
iv. promoting social justice through working for more equal
distribution of wealth and opportunity; activity
v. promoting human rights, including women's and children's rights;
vi. encouraging community participation in political and economic Matching – Community
decisions that affect them; Empowerment Goals
vii. promoting forms of development that are locally relevant and 1. Match the pictures to the
sustainable for people and the environment. issues (i-vii) addressed by
community empowerment.
These issues are often interconnected. For example, if someone Pictures may match more than
is illiterate (cannot read) they will also find it hard to be informed one issue.
about human rights, gender equality, political or social justice issues 2. In pairs, explain why you think
that affect their community. that picture matches to the
issue (or issues).
a. b. c.
d. e.
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FOCUS ON … THAILAND
THE INPAENG FARMERS' NETWORK
A lot of small farmers in rural northeast Thailand depend on growing 'cash crops' for export, including rice,
cassava and maize. The farmers are often in debt to banks because of loans that they have taken. Loans
to farmers are supposed to be for new farm equipment or education so the farmer can produce more and
earn more. However, many of the loans are instead used to buy food when the income from the cash crops
is not enough.
The Inpaeng Network was established in the 1980s in northeast Thailand. It was started by local farmers
together with a university scholar interested in traditional village life. It helps farmers develop locally-based
strategies to reduce debt and dependence on income from cash crops. Replanting of forests is a central
strategy as they are a source of food and medicine. Farmers also use 'integrated farming techniques.' For
example, they grow rattan trees that provide materials for shelter and produce food. The ecosystem of the
rattan trees supports the plants, animals and mushrooms that people eat. Farmers also grow fruits and
vegetables, and dig ponds to raise fish and frogs. As the network grew, they built a small factory that could
process local fruits and herbs into food and medicine products. These products have extra value and can
be sold for more money by the farmers in the network.
By 2012, the Inpaeng Network expanded to other provinces in the northeast with 30,000 members. The Thai
government's Agricultural Land Reform Office started to support it and included the network in decisions
about the use of natural resources. Members of the network now meet with farmers from other areas.
They encourage moving away from dependence on cash crops for income. Instead, they demonstrate the
Inpaeng Network's integrated farming approach, which combines traditional and new farming techniques.
Source: Istvan Rado. (2012). 'Sustainable community development in north-eastern Thailand: The Inpaeng Network,' in Linda
Brennan, Lukas Parker et al (eds), Growing sustainable communities: A development guide for Southeast Asia. Melbourne, Australia:
Tilde University Press. (pp.179–196).
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Chapter 5: Development
a. Provide cheap access to the internet in least i. Integrate ecosystem and biodiversity values into
developed countries by 2020. national and local planning and development
b. Strengthen ability to adapt to climate-related processes.
hazards and natural disasters in all countries. j. Achieve full and productive employment and
c. Promote effective public, public-private and civil decent work for all women and men .
society partnerships, building on the experience k. Provide safe and affordable drinking water for all.
and resourcing strategies of partnerships. l. Increase the amount of renewable energy.
d. End hunger and ensure access by all people m. Ensure equal opportunity by ending
to safe, nutritious and sufficient food all year discriminatory laws, policies and practices.
round. n. End extreme poverty, currently measured as
e. Reduce waste generation through prevention, people living on less than $1.25 a day.
reduction, recycling and reuse. o. Ensure access for all to adequate, safe and
f. Reduce the global maternal mortality ratio to affordable housing and basic services and
less than 70 per 100,000 live births. upgrade slums.
g. Ensure that all girls and boys complete free, p. Reduce violence and violent death rates.
quality primary and secondary education. q. Reduce marine pollution of all kinds, in particular
h. End all forms of discrimination against all from land-based activities.
women and girls everywhere.
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FOCUS ON … MYANMAR
MYANMAR'S ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT PROCEDURE
In 2015 Myanmar established its Environmental
Impact Assessment (EIA) Procedure. When
a company wants to start a new development
project, it must inform the Ministry of Environmental
Conservation and Forestry. The Ministry will then
decide if the project needs an environmental
impact assessment or not.
If the project needs an environmental impact
assessment, the planners must do an investigation
which:
• looks at all negative impacts of the project
(environmental, social, economic, health and
cultural);
• collects data (surveys, interviews, focus groups, engineering designs, photos, maps, etc.);
• analyses alternatives to the planned project and their potential impacts;
• includes the perspectives of communities affected by the project through public consultations;
• discloses to the public – through media and public consultations – information about the planned project.
The project planners write a report and submit it to the Ministry. The Ministry then makes a decision. The
project planners (if the report is rejected) have 30 days to appeal the decision. Affected individuals and
communities (if the report is accepted) have 30 days to appeal the decision.
Source: Ministry of Environmental Conservation and Forestry Notification No. 616 / 2015. Environmental Impact Assessment
Procedure
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Criteria
a. the need for the Project to deal f. protection of areas having a i. conservation and protection of
with an emergency situation; fragile ecosystem; biodiversity;
b. the interest of public health g. areas affected by cyclones, j. population density;
and safety; strong storms, flooding, and k. national, regional and global
c. the interest of national security; earthquakes; climate change conditions;
d. the lifespan of the Project; h. protection of water resources l. likely residual impacts or
e. protection of cultural and that serve or may serve as effects occurring some years
religious norms, and historical sources of public drinking after Project closure
and religious heritage; water;
Scenarios
i. Three cyclones in one month bring flooding v. Logging is planned in a forest that still has many
that causes a dam on a river to burst and flood rare and endangered birds and rare plants used
surrounding countryside. for medicine by local people.
ii. A rock quarry and a road to it are planned near vi. A strong earthquake has cracked a dam and
a very old temple that is sacred to local people people are being evacuated downstream from
living in the area. the dam.
iii. A new mining project will create new jobs but vii. A logging company wants to build a road to an
local people worry that people from outside area where it has an agreement with an ethnic
the area will come for jobs and there will be armed group to cut down trees but the road
overcrowding and conflict. will cut through the territory of another armed
iv. A large palm oil plantation is planned for an group.
area that has had dry weather over the last viii. Waste water ponds at an old abandoned
fifteen years and local farmers are worried it will chemical factory have been leaking into a river.
use too much water for irrigation.
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Chapter 6: Public Health
themes
Chapter 6 looks at general health at an individual level, and at factors which affect it. It
defines and examines the idea of public health and looks at some of the major public
health challenges that face developing countries. Finally it looks at ways of addressing
public health issues through public health programmes and policies.
learning goals
Knowledge Skills
By the end of this chapter you will increase your By the end of this chapter you will develop your
understanding of: ability to:
• the definition of health; • identify causes and effects of diseases;
• causes of disease; • assess the importance of public health issues;
• causes, treatment and prevention of malaria, • interpret information about diseases, symptoms,
cholera, HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis; treatments and prevention;
• social determinants of health; • design informative posters about diseases;
• public health indicators; • identify and interpret social determinants of
• public health programmes; health;
• public health policies. • evaluate the effectiveness of public health
programmes;
• design public health policy.
glossary
addiction (n) - pGJvrf;jcif; microorganism (n) - tEkZD0½kyf
antibody (n) - (a&m*gumuG,faom) y#dypönf; monitor (v) - BuD;MuyfapmifhMunfhonf
(cE¨mudk,faoG;wGif jzpfay:onf/) nausea (n) - ysdKUwufjcif;
bacteria (n) - AufwD;&D;,m; needle (n) - aq;xdk;tyf
condom (n) - uGef'Hk; parasite (n) - uyfyg;ykd;? uyfyg;
contaminated (adj) - tqdyftawmufjzpfaponf? processed (adj) - pDrHjyKjyifxm;aom
npfnrf;aponf protein (n) - y½dkwdef; (tom;"mwf)
depression (n) - pdwf"mwfusjcif;? pdwfusa&m*g
resistance (n) - ckcHtm;
determinant (n) - tqHk;tjzwfay;Ekdifaomt&m
respiratory (adj) - touf&SLvrf;aMumif;ESifh
diabetes (n) - qD;csdKa&m*g qdkifaom
diarrhoea (n) - 0rf;avQmjcif; sewer (n) - a&qdk;ydkuf? rdv’mydkuf
feces (n) - rpif? usifBuD; stagnant (adj) - a&aojzpfaeaom
gene (n) - ADZrsdK;aph stigma (n) - cGJjcm;qufqHrI
immune (adj) - udk,fcHpGrf;tm; (a&m*gudk trauma (n) - pdwf'Pf&m
wkHYjyefEdkifaompepf) vaccination (n) - umuG,faq;
infect (v) - ul;pufonf
virus (n) - Adkif;&yfpfydk;
inhale (v) - ½SLoGif;onf
vomit (v) - atmhtefonf
inject (v) - xdk;oGif;onf (aq;)
Air pollution over the Great Pyramid and Cairo, Egypt.
Social Science and the Humanities
Causes of Diseases
Microorganisms
Bacteria and viruses are all around us. We can't see them because
they are microscopic. All animals and humans naturally have
microorganisms (microbes) living in or on them. However, when
some microorganisms get inside us they cause diseases. Diseases
cause our bodies to stop working properly or create toxins that harm
us. Influenza, tuberculosis and malaria are examples of diseases
caused by microorganisms.
Environment
If we live somewhere with polluted air, food or water, we may get
sick. We might also get sick if we live in places or buildings that are
too hot, cold or damp. Smoking, drinking too much alcohol or eating
too much unhealthy food also affect our health. All these things come
from the environment around us. Heart disease and some forms of
cancer are examples of diseases with environmental causes.
Genes
Some diseases – or the higher risk of them – are passed from
generation to generation in a family. Some forms of cancer or
diabetes are examples of diseases that have a higher risk of being
passed down genetically through families. However, environmental
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Chapter 6: Public Health
factors like diet and exercise (or not) also influence the onset of
these diseases. Some diseases are entirely genetic, for example, sickle
cell anaemia. Other diseases, like breast or colon cancer, may have
genetic influences where some people are more likely to develop
them, but those diseases are also influenced by environmental factors
like diet or lifestyle.
a. b.
d.
c. e.
g.
f. h.
i. j.
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Treatments
Treatments are medicines (like antibiotics) or actions (like surgery),
that help us get better from diseases. Some treatments or medicines,
(like painkillers), do not cure diseases but they reduce the symptoms.
Prevention
Prevention of diseases can include medical interventions like
vaccination. We are injected with a tiny quantity of a weakened
disease. Our body begins to fight it and produces antibodies to protect
us from the disease.
Other preventions for diseases can include basic hygiene like washing
hands, and access to clean water and toilets.
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1. What sorts of things have you, your family or friends done in the
past to avoid getting sick? discussion
2. Were they effective? Why or why not?
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i. Malaria
Cause
Malaria is caused by a microorganism that lives as a parasite. It
lives part of its life in mosquitoes and part in the blood of people or
animals. It is passed to humans by mosquitoes. They bite an infected
human and drink blood that contains the malaria parasite. The
mosquito then bites another person and it passes on a little of the
blood that contains the malaria parasite. The malaria parasite lives in
the person's blood and liver.
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ii. Cholera
Cause
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iii. HIV/AIDS
Cause
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome (AIDS) happens
when a microorganism, the Human Immunodeficiency Virus (HIV)
slowly destroys people's immune systems. People then get sick or
eventually die from other microorganisms that their immune system
can no longer defend against. HIV/AIDS became widespread during
the 1980s.
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iv. Tuberculosis
Cause
Tuberculosis (TB) is a microorganism. People inhale it into
their lungs through tiny drops of moisture in the air. Those drops
come from the coughs or sneezes of people who are carrying the TB
microorganism in their lungs. For some people, the TB remains in
their lungs but does not make them sick. For others, if their immune
system is not as strong, the TB starts to reproduce quickly and make
them sick.
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Case Study 1
U Aung Win, 62, lives in a small village in
a damp, mouldy house. He has had a bad
cough for six months and has smoked at
least 20 cigarettes a day since he was a
young man. His wife died five years ago from
influenza. She was not able to visit a doctor
or get medicine before she died. He has
two sons and one daughter. They have their
own houses and families. They work as farm
labourers and just make enough money to
support themselves and their children. They
do not have enough time or money to take
U Aung Win to the hospital in the city. The
cost of transport and the hospital fees are
more than they can afford. U Aung Win's
neighbours help him by bringing him fresh
fruit, vegetables and fresh water.
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Case Study 2
Ma Cho Cho, 23, lives in an air-conditioned
apartment building near the centre of a large
city. She has a well-paid job as secretary in
a legal firm. She recently went to the doctor
because she has been vomiting. She has
had unprotected sex with her boyfriend. The
doctor says that she is pregnant and will have
a baby. Ma Cho Cho's family are wealthy
and own several businesses. They pay for
the apartment she lives in. When she has the
baby, her family will also help raise the child.
They will pay for a nanny to help Ma Cho Cho
look after the baby when she returns to her
job at the legal firm.
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Chapter 6: Public Health
Case Study 3
Kyaw Kyaw, 15, lives in a small crowded house
with his large family. He attends school but
his parents want him to start working to help
support the family. The monsoon rains have
flooded all the low-lying areas around Kyaw
Kyaw's home. Mosquitoes are breeding in the
flood waters and people are starting to get
sick from malaria. A group of people from the
town have worked together to provide people
with mosquito nets, mosquito repellent and
public workshops on ways to avoid mosquito
bites. There is a small medical centre in the
village. When people get sick, the centre can
quickly take blood tests to identify the type of
malaria that people have. They can then give
them the correct medicine for it.
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Chapter 6: Public Health
137
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138
Chapter 6: Public Health
a. b. c.
d. e. f.
139
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140
Chapter 6: Public Health
ii. Vaccination
Vaccination is when a tiny they are protected from the and hepatitis B (a virus that
bit of a disease – a vaccine diseases for the rest of their can cause liver disease and
– is injected into our bodies lives. sometimes liver cancer).
to produce antibodies. The In recent years, Myanmar The WHO, UNICEF,
antibodies then protect us from has undertaken vaccination public-private businesses and
actually getting that disease. programmes focused on NGOs have all been part of
People cannot be vaccinated protecting children from the vaccination programmes.
against all diseases, but some diseases including measles However, not every child has
very serious diseases can be (a virus-causing fever, rash been vaccinated. This might
prevented by vaccination. and pneumonia that can be be because they live in remote
Some diseases like smallpox fatal), rubella (a virus that can locations without roads and
have now been completely cause serious harm or death to are hard to reach, or in areas
eradicated through vaccination unborn babies), polio (which affected by armed conflict. Also,
programmes. Others, like polio, can cause muscle weakness people who move a lot to seek
have been reduced so that only and permanent paralysis in better work often miss being
a few new cases still occur. limbs), tuberculosis (a disease vaccinated, or do not receive all
Children can be vaccinated so of the lungs that can be fatal) their follow-up injections.
141
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142
Chapter 6: Public Health
143
Social Science and the Humanities
a. b.
c. d.
e. f.
g. h.
144
Chapter 6: Public Health
Map Key
145
Social Science and the Humanities
7. Which two states or regions have the most incidents of this type
Nay Pyi Taw September 2017
of accident?
8. Why would this be the case?
Source: Myanmar Ministry of Health and 9. What are possible reasons for why this accident would cause the
146
Chapter 6: Public Health
a. 'Beer stations are bad for young people. There are too many beer
stations and they are open too long. They are a waste of time and
money. When I was a 20-year-old, I only ever went to tea shops.
Now I see so many young people sitting around at beer stations.'
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Social Science and the Humanities
FOCUS ON … MYANMAR
ROAD DEATHS IN MYANMAR
YANGON — According to a new report from the World Health Organisation (WHO), the number of people
dying on Myanmar's roads is increasing. The country ranks second in deaths per capita in Southeast Asia.
In the WHO's 2006 to 2011 survey, Myanmar had a rate of 15 roads deaths per 100,000 people. In 2015, it
had risen to 20.3 deaths per 100,000 people. Motorcycle crashes are very frequent – and deadly.
The WHO says the increase in the number of cars on Myanmar's roads since 2011 is one reason for the
high road death rate. It has also been due to a lack of enforcement of driving licenses and the quality of
cars. Myanmar has recently banned the import of right-hand-drive cars.
The government, the Myanmar Red Cross and WHO have discussed how to improve road safety on
the Yangon-Mandalay highway. Authorities are planning to improve road safety education. It will provide
education for car drivers, motorbike riders, and pedestrians. The WHO data shows that more than a quarter
of road user deaths are pedestrians.
U Thit Lwin is a member of Myanmar Traffic Rules Enforcement Advisory Committee. He says, 'We are
planning a media campaign to educate people more about road safety. That includes going into schools
that are close to the Yangon-Mandalay highway and educating the children there about road safety.'
Sources: https://frontiermyanmar.net/en/myanmar-ranked-second-in-sea-road-deaths-who;
http://www.searo.who.int/myanmar/areas/roadsafety_datacollection/en/
http://www.nationmultimedia.com/detail/business/30304560
1. How much has the per 100,000 road deaths rate increased from 2011 to 2015?
2. What are possible reasons for why motorcycle accidents are frequently deadly?
3. What factors are identified as contributing to the increase in road deaths?
4. Why has the government banned importing right-hand-drive vehicles?
5. What three categories of people using roads will be the focus of road safety education?
6. What things about roads in Myanmar may contribute to pedestrian deaths?
7. What are reasons for children at schools being a focus of road safety education?
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Chapter 6: Public Health
FOCUS ON … MYANMAR
CHOOSE HANDWASHING, CHOOSE HEALTH
15/10/14 — A programme has been
established to promote handwashing
in schools across Myanmar society. It
promotes handwashing at critical times,
such as before eating and after using the
toilet.
The Ministry of Health, Ministry of Education
and UNICEF launched the Myanmar
Handwashing Communication Initiative in
2014. It aims to improve hygiene behaviour,
especially amongst children in schools.
Through them, it plans to reach family
and community members to encourage
handwashing. Children are encouraged to
spread WASH and health messages to their
parents and families.
Zin Zin Myo Tun is a Grade 8 student at a Basic Education High School. 'At school, I've learned about the
importance of handwashing since I was in Grade 3. I've learned that regular handwashing can help prevent
many diseases. It's good for me, my friends and my family.'
Promoting WASH programmes in schools – handwashing, use of latrines and drinking safe water – creates
benefits for the school and the wider community. According to the Central Health Education Bureau,
'Provision of adequate facilities, soap, water and a place to wash will help fully implement the campaign.'
The health focus at schools is generally on diarrhoea, worm infections and respiratory infections. These
diseases affect school-age children most. It has been estimated that 88% of diarrhoeal diseases are caused
by unsafe water supplies, inadequate sanitation and inappropriate hygiene.
Source: http://unicefmyanmar.blogspot.com/2014/10/choose-handwashing-choose-health.html
Which subjects from this book (society, ethics and law, environment,
economics, or development) most affect public health? Why?
discussion
149
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150
Chapter 6: Public Health
b. ___ Doctors and health experts warn the Ministry of Health that
obesity and heart disease have increased. They say that they are
caused by processed foods with a lot of fat and sugar.
e. ___ Processed foods are now regularly tested for fat and sugar
content. Labels are monitored to ensure that they tell consumers
how much fat and sugar is in the food product. Children learn
about healthy foods at school. Statistics on new cases of heart
disease are recorded every six months.
h. ___ The government rewrites its 'healthy foods' policy. The policy
now includes education in schools promoting healthy foods,
regulations to limit how much fat and sugar can go in processed
foods and labels that show amounts in all processed food
products.
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Social Science and the Humanities
FOCUS ON … MYANMAR
MYANMAR RANKS LAST IN ASEAN TOBACCO CONTROL STUDY
17/11/16 — In a 2014 survey, the rate of tobacco use
in Myanmar was 26.1% of the population, including
43.8% of men and 8.4% of women. In 2006, Myanmar
adopted a law to reduce the number of people using
tobacco products. The law contains rules on non-
smoking areas and regulations on the sale, production
and advertising of tobacco products.
The Southeast Asia Tobacco Control Alliance
(SEATCA) says Myanmar is behind on banning
smoking in indoor public places, workspaces, bars
and restaurants. It has not regularly updated its
tobacco control policy and strategy. Despite taxation,
cigarettes are still cheap. They cost between 800 and
2,000 MMK for a pack of twenty. Myanmar is only
average in providing education or smoking cessation
programmes.
According to the report, the government does not
allow tobacco industry officials to join government
committees or groups that are deciding health policy.
However, the report claims the government does give
preferential treatment to the tobacco industry.
Regulation of tobacco advertising and sponsorship
is often not enforced. Tobacco ads are banned
in television, movies, print media, and billboards.
However, there is no enforcement of tobacco advertising bans on the internet.
The government has created new regulations that require health warnings and graphic photos of harm
from tobacco use on all brands of cigarette and other tobacco products. Anyone involved in the production,
distribution or sale of tobacco products that lack graphic warning labels could face a fine of between 10,000
and 30,000 MMK for a first offence.
Source: https://www.mmtimes.com/national-news/23722-myanmar-ranks-last-in-asean-tobacco-control-study.html
1. What are possible reasons for the difference in the levels of smoking between men and women?
2. Why would there be regulations about the advertising of tobacco products?
3. What reasons can you think of for banning smoking in public places, work spaces, bars and
restaurants?
4. Does the article suggest that there is enough tax on tobacco products?
5. What are reasons for the taxation of tobacco products?
6. Why would it be an issue if tobacco industry officials could join committees or advise on health
policy?
7. What would make laws about tobacco advertising more effective?
8. What is the intended outcome of the regulations about tobacco product labels?
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Picture Acknowledgements.
Where possible, Mote Oo Education has used Creative Commons or public domain images throughout this book, unless the images are the
property of Mote Oo Education, or they belong to a partner and are used with permission.
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necessarily reflect the views of Mote Oo Education.
The following copyrighted photographs have been used in the publication of this book.
4 Matthew Petroff Interior of the George Peabody Library in Baltimore https://zh.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:George-peabody-library.jpg CC-BY-SA 3.0
8 Yangon Time MAchine Mahabandoola Road, Yangon http://yangontimemachine.com/ (c) Yangon Time
Machine
22 Allan-Hermann Pool Includes eye, ear, tongue, nose and hand, representing https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Five_senses.jpg CC-BY-SA 4.0
the sensory organs for the five classical senses: vision,
hearing, taste, smell and touch.
25 God the Father 21 Waiting For The Word https://www.flickr.com/photos/waitingfortheword/5546445871 CC-BY 2.0
42 Reetesh Chaurasia Kudankulam Nuclear Power Plant (KKNPP) Units 1 https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Kudankulam_Nuclear_ CC-BY-SA 4.0
and 2 Power_Plant_Unit_1_and_2.jpg
42 Brad Mattson Chairman w:Brad Mattson works with company w:Husk https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Brad_Mattson_ CC-BY-SA 3.0
Power Systems to install solar panels and bring installing_solar_panels_in_an_off-grid_Indian_village,_
electricity to rural areas in India that previously did not June_2013_.png
have access to power.
43 Wendy Harman The Mekong River by Luang Prabang, Laos. https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Mekong_River_by_ CC-BY-SA 2.0
Luang_Prabang,_Laos_-_20091020.jpg
48 Hornyák Sándor János Atmospheric carbon dioxide concentration during the https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:CO2-417k-hu.png CC-BY-SA 2.0
past 417,000 years
49 Thomas Schoch – www. Tractor on a paddy field in Mekong Delta, Vietnam https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tractor_Mekong_ CC-BY-SA 3.0
retas.de Delta_Vietnam.jpg
50 CSIRO The front cover of Adapting Agriculture to Climate https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:CSIRO_ CC-BY 3.0
Change. ScienceImage_11537_Adapting_Agriculture_to_Climate_
Change_book_cover.jpg
50 Cunningchrisw Six nepalese students holding seedlings at Eden https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Nepal_Reforestation_. CC-BY-SA 4.0
Reforestation Project's nursery site. jpg
51 Richard Allaway Marine Drive – Sea Wall, Rip-Rap and Accropodes https://www.flickr.com/photos/geographyalltheway_ CC-BY 2.0
photos/318790609
58 garycycles8 Viet Nam, Quảng Nam, Hội An – spraying pesticide https://www.flickr.com/photos/garycycles8/9789207033 CC-BY 2.0
on rice
77 Robert Scoble Workers perform final testing and QA before sending https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Seagate_Wuxi_China_ CC-BY 2.0
drives off to customers on its 2.5-inch notebook lines. Factory_Tour.jpg
77 Aigars Mahinovs A block of soviet blockhouses in the Latvian town of https://www.flickr.com/photos/aigarius/75395611 CC-BY 2.0
Liepaja.
77 Zach Vega This image displays the share of world nominal GDP by https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:World_share_of_ CC-BY-SA 4.0
major global economies. nominal_GDP_IMF_WEO_2015.svg
87 Wai Linn Kyaw/MBT The use of stamps to collect sale tax from restaurants https://www.mmbiztoday.com/articles/stamp-tax-violations-bring- (c) MBT
was initiated... k30-million-ird
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103 Особая экономическая Особая экономическая зона «Алабуга», общий вид https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Alabuga_airview_2017. CC BY-SA 4.0
зона «Алабуга» jpg
110 Erik (HASH) Hersman A urine powered generator https://www.flickr.com/photos/whiteafrican/8161674482 CC-BY 2.0
112 CDC Global Entomologists with the Yemen FETP team collect https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Looking_for_Dengue_ CC-BY 2.0
samples from a stagnant water basin during an outbreak Vector_Breeding_Sites_-_Yemen_(17054568642).jpg
investigation of dengue fever in Alhudaidah, Yemen
113 Department of Foreign A local community development worker educating the https://www.flickr.com/photos/dfataustralianaid/10662365823 CC-BY 2.0
Affairs and Trade community
113 Brett Matthews Community-based savings bank in Cambodia https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Community-based_ CC-BY-SA 3.0
savings_bank_in_Cambodia.jpg
114 Takeaway Rice straw is gathered, bound and carried from the rice https://rm.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Datoteca:Rice_farmers_Mae_ CC BY-SA 4.0
paddies to a central place after the harvest. Wang_Chiang_Mai_Province.jpg
123 National Human Genome Normal blood cells (left) and the blood cells in Sickle https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Sickle_Cell_Disease_ CC-BY 2.0
Research Institute cell disease, which do not flow through the circulatory (27249799083).jpg
(NHGRI) system smoothly.
125 F. Lamiot (talk) Air pollution from vehicles... https://fr.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fichier:Air- CC-BY-SA 3.0
PollutionEchappementTruck.JPG
125 OpenStax College Illustration from Anatomy & Physiology, Connexions https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2926_Autosomal_ CC-BY 3.0
Recessive_Inheritance-new.jpg
125 Ildar Sagdejev (Specious) Dirty water spilling out of a large glass carboy on its https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:2008-09-20_Dirty_ CC BY-SA 4.0
side. water_spilling_from_a_bottle.jpg
128 Nephron Very high magnification micrograph of maternal malaria. https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/12/Maternal_ CC-BY-SA 3.0
Placenta. H&E stain malaria_placenta_-_cropped_-_very_high_mag.jpg
141 Paulette636 We vaccinate pediatric patients with the Sabin vaccine https://es.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archivo:National_Immunization_ CC-BY-SA 3.0
(againts Polio) in San Miguel Topilejo, Mexico. Campaign_in_%22San_Miguel_Topilejo%22.JPG
142 Solomon203 Liyu Lake deep water warning sign https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Liyu_Lake_deep_ CC BY-SA 4.0
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143 Jordi Bernabeu Farrús Documenting Drug Addiction in Kabul https://www.flickr.com/photos/jordibernabeu/15331540223 CC-BY 2.0
144 Thehero A boy baths in the polluted river under a railroad bridge, https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Jakarta_slumlife14.JPG CC-BY 2.0
North Jakarta Slums Indonesia.
144 Zlerman Qurutob: eating the traditional way with one's hands https://id.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berkas:Kurutob_eating_with_ CC-BY-SA 3.0
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