Question 1: How does child mortality compare to total fertility?
Insights
There is a high concentration of low child mortality and low child fertility based on the histogram and has a stark decline after approaching a certain value. Additionally, there is a high concentration
among the regions of low child mortality and low child fertility. Lastly, there is a dense concentration seen in the density contour map of where there is a correlation between the two metrics.
Question 2: How does healthy life expectancy differ throughout the world?
Insights
Countries with higher life expectancy typically border eachother, concuring with the previous question. However, there does not appear to be a high correlation between health and life expectancy as
some countries have the similar health but different life expectancy. Countries with higher healthy life expectancy often form regional clusters, with neighboring nations exhibiting similar outcomes, and the reverse is also observed in regions with lower health metrics.
Question 3: How does inflation affect life expectancy?
Insights
There does not appear to be a correlation between inflation and life expectancy. Addtionally, there does not appear to be a correlation within regions on either metric. Asia has a variety of life expectancies depending on countries.
Europe however only has a life expectancy of 65 and above. However, in Africa, the life expectancy barely goes over 65 years old. This correlates with our previous visualizations on GDP and other economic factors.