A developed country is a country that has achieved (currently or historically) a high degree of industrialization, and which enjoys the higher standards of living which wealth and technology make possible. In most cases, countries with high per capita GDP are "developed countries"; sometimes high GDP can be achieved (usually temporarily) through natural resource exploitation (e.g. Saudi Arabia, oil; Nauru, phosphate) without the country becoming developed.
Observers often see strong correlations between countries with high economic development and their possessing robust democratic institutions or free market economies, though in neither case is the correlation absolute or uncontroversial.
Synonyms include industrialised countries, more economically developed countries (MEDC) and the First World.
The underdevelopment of the third world is marked by a number of common traits; distorted and highly dependent economies devoted to producing primary products for the developedworld and to provide markets for their finished goods; traditional, rural social structures; high population growth; and widespread poverty.
Even after decolonization (in the 1950's, 1960's, and 1970's, the economies of the third worlddeveloped slowly, or not at all, owing largely to the deterioration of the "terms of trade"-the relation between the cost of the goods a nation must import from abroad and its income from the exports it sends to foreign countries.
In 1980, the earth's population was estimated at 4.4 billion, 72 percent of it in the third world, and it seemed likely to reach 6.2 billion, 80 percent of it in the third world, at the close of the century.
A developedcountry is a nation that enjoys a relatively high standard of living through a strong high-technology diversified economy.
In international trade statistics, the Southern African Customs Union is also treated as a developed region and Israel as a developedcountry; and countries of eastern Europe and the former U.S.S.R. countries in Europe are not included under either developed or developing regions.
Taiwan, Hong Kong and Macau are considered developed by some organizations; however, the People's Republic of China, a developingcountry, claims the land of the first, and exercises sovereignty over the latter two.