UNITED NATIONS, May 16 (Xinhua) -- Today, 55 percent of the world's population live in urban areas, a proportion that is expected to increase to 68 percent by 2050, the United Nations said on Wednesday. Projections show that urbanization, the gradual shift in residence of the human populat...
World Population Projections Show by 10 years 5 years 1 year main data all data YearTotalMaleFemaleGrowth rate Life expectancy Median Age Density, people/km2 20268218M4140M4075M1.15%73.7731.2063.34 20308504M4282M4220M1.02%74.3531.9765.55 20409148M4598M4547M0.74%75.6333.5870.51 ...
World Population Projections Show by 10 years 5 years 1 year main data all data YearTotalMaleFemaleGrowth rate Life expectancy Median Age Density, people/km2 20268218M4140M4075M1.15%73.7731.2063.34 20308504M4282M4220M1.02%74.3531.9765.55 20409148M4598M4547M0.74%75.6333.5870.51 ...
Projections are based on a “medium fertility scenario”, which assumes countries will converge at a birth rate of 1.85 children per woman, by 2045-2050. China’s Projected Population Decline China’s population boom has officially come to an end, with the country reporting two consecutive years...
World Populationdoi:10.1142/9789813141001_0012Felix F. MuozJulio A. GonzaloGonzalo JA, Alfonseca M, Munoz FF. Falling birth rates and world population projections: A quantitative discussion (1950-2050). In: World Population: Past, Present, & Future. Singapore: World Scientific Publishing Co; 2016...
This report contains 1993 estiiiates of world population by country and region from 1950 to 1990 and projections to 2050 The projections show that world population will expand from 5.3 billion in 1990 to 6.2 billion in the year 2000 and to about 10.7 billion by the year 2050. The aggregate...
The world population will reach 9.9 billion in 2050, up 33 percent from an estimated 7.4 billion now, according to projections included in the latest World Population Data Sheet from the Population Reference Bureau (PRB).
The new population projections indicate that nine countries will be responsible for more than half the projected population growth between now and 2050. In descending order of the expected increase, they are: India, Nigeria, Pakistan, Congo, Ethiopia, Tanzania, Indonesia, Egypt and the United State...
According to the United Nations, most of the world's population growth is in poor countries. The 47 least developed countries are expected to see their collective population nearly double from roughly one billion to 1.9 billion by 2050. That's thanks to a fertility rate of 4.3 per wo...
The United Nations 2002 Revision of the world population projections has radically reviewed the results of the preceding revision. The results obtained show that it is reasonalbe revision. The results obtained show that it is reasonable to dispel the fear of an excessive and perhaps uncontrolled ...