Based on data set out in UN projections of world population
Around 8000 BC, the world population was approximately 5 million people. Over the 8000 year period before 1 AD. it grew to 200 million people (some estimates say 300 million or even 600 million), with a growth rate of 0.05% per year. A huge change in population occurred with the advent of the Industrial Revolution:
In 1970 the population was half what it is now. Due to declining population growth rates, it will take more than 200 years for the population to double from today's levels.
Pop% | World population | % increase compared to previous year | Absolute annual increase number of people | Average age of the population | Population density: number of people per 1 sq. km. | Urbanization (urban population) as a percentage of the total population | Urban population |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2017 | 7 515 284 153 | 1,11% | 82 620 878 | 29,9 | 58 | 54,7% | 4 110 778 369 |
2016 | 7 432 663 275 | 1,13% | 83 191 176 | 29,9 | 57 | 54,3% | 4 034 193 153 |
2015 | 7 349 472 099 | 1,18% | 83 949 411 | 30 | 57 | 53,8% | 3 957 285 013 |
2010 | 6 929 725 043 | 1,23% | 82 017 839 | 29 | 53 | 51,5% | 3 571 272 167 |
2005 | 6 519 635 850 | 1,25% | 78 602 746 | 27 | 50 | 49,1% | 3 199 013 076 |
2000 | 6 126 622 121 | 1,33% | 78 299 807 | 26 | 47 | 46,6% | 2 856 131 072 |
1995 | 5 735 123 084 | 1,55% | 85 091 077 | 25 | 44 | 44,8% | 2 568 062 984 |
1990 | 5 309 667 699 | 1,82% | 91 425 426 | 24 | 41 | 43% | 2 285 030 904 |
1985 | 4 852 540 569 | 1,79% | 82 581 621 | 23 | 37 | 41,3% | 2 003 049 795 |
1980 | 4 439 632 465 | 1,8% | 75 646 647 | 23 | 34 | 39,4% | 1 749 539 272 |
1975 | 4 061 399 228 | 1,98% | 75 782 307 | 22 | 31 | 37,8% | 1 534 721 238 |
1970 | 3 682 487 691 | 2,08% | 71 998 514 | 22 | 28 | 36,7% | 1 350 280 789 |
1965 | 3 322 495 121 | 1,94% | 60 830 259 | 23 | 21 | No data | No data |
1960 | 3 018 343 828 | 1,82% | 52 005 861 | 23 | 23 | 33,8% | 1 019 494 911 |
1955 | 2 758 314 525 | 1,78% | 46 633 043 | 23 | 21 | No data | No data |
The world population is currently (2017) growing at a rate of about 1.11% per year (up from 1.13% in 2016).
Currently, the average annual population growth is estimated at approximately 80 million people. The annual growth rate peaked in the late 1960s, when it was 2% or higher. The population growth rate peaked at 2.19 percent per year in 1963.
Annual growth rates are currently declining and are projected to continue declining in the coming years. Population growth is projected to be less than 1% per year by 2020 and less than 0.5% per year by 2050. This means that the world population will continue to grow in the 21st century, but at a slower rate compared to the recent past.
The world population doubled (100% increase) in the 40 years from 1959 (3 billion) to 1999 (6 billion). The world's population is currently projected to increase by another 50% in 39 years, to 9 billion by 2038.
date | Population | Number growth % in 1 year | Absolute increase over 1 year in the number of people | Average age of the world's population | Population density: number of people per 1 sq. km. | Urbanization percentage | Total urban population |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2020 | 7 758 156 792 | 1,09% | 81 736 939 | 31 | 60 | 55,9% | 4 338 014 924 |
2025 | 8 141 661 007 | 0,97% | 76 700 843 | 32 | 63 | 57,8% | 4 705 773 576 |
2030 | 8 500 766 052 | 0,87% | 71 821 009 | 33 | 65 | 59,5% | 5 058 158 460 |
2035 | 8 838 907 877 | 0,78% | 67 628 365 | 34 | 68 | 61% | 5 394 234 712 |
2040 | 9 157 233 976 | 0,71% | 63 665 220 | 35 | 70 | 62,4% | 5 715 413 029 |
2045 | 9 453 891 780 | 0,64% | 59 331 561 | 35 | 73 | 63,8% | 6 030 924 065 |
2050 | 9 725 147 994 | 0,57% | 54 251 243 | 36 | 75 | 65,2% | 6 338 611 492 |
The United Nations projects a world population of 10 billion by 2056.
The world population is expected to reach 8 billion in 2023 according to the United Nations (and in 2026 according to the US Census Bureau).
The current world population is 7.5 billion as of January 2017, according to United Nations estimates.
According to the United Nations, the world's population reached 7 billion on October 31, 2011. The US Census Bureau made a lower estimate - 7 billion was reached on March 12, 2012.
According to the United Nations, on October 12, 1999, the world population was 6 billion. According to the US Census Bureau, this value was reached on July 22, 1999, at approximately 3:49 a.m. GMT.
Planet Earth is home to many living beings, the main one of which is man.
The world population today is almost seven and a half billion people. The peak value of its growth was noted in 1963. Currently, the governments of some countries are pursuing a restrictive demographic policy, while others are trying to stimulate population growth within their borders. However, the overall population of the Earth is aging. Young people do not strive to reproduce. The population of planet Earth today has an unnatural bias towards the elderly. This feature will complicate the financial support of pensioners.
According to scientists, by the end of the twenty-first century the world's population will reach the eleventh billion.
In 2009, an alarm bell rang. The world's population living in cities has become equal in size to the number of people living in villages and rural areas. The reasons for this movement of labor are simple. The world's population strives for convenience and wealth. Salaries in cities are higher, and life is simpler. This will all change as the world's urban populations become more food insecure. Many will be forced to move again to the provinces, closer to the land.
The world population table is as follows: Fifteen countries are home to nearly five billion people. In total, there are more than two hundred states on our planet.
The world population can be presented in the form of a table. The most populous countries will be indicated.
Population |
||
Indonesia | ||
Brazil | ||
Pakistan | ||
Bangladesh | ||
Russian Federation | ||
Philippines | ||
The world population map today already has three cities whose population exceeded twenty million people. Shanghai is one of the largest cities in China, which stands on the Yangtze River. Karachi is a port city in Pakistan. The Chinese capital, Beijing, closes the top three.
In terms of population density, the palm is held by the main city of the Philippines - Manila. The world population map reports that in some areas this figure reaches seventy thousand people per square kilometer! The infrastructure does not cope well with such an influx of residents. For example: in Moscow this figure does not exceed five thousand people per square kilometer.
Also on the list of cities with a very high population density are Indian Mumbai (this locality was previously called Bombay), the capital of France - Paris, the Chinese autonomy of Macau, the dwarf state of Monaco, the heart of Catalonia - Barcelona, as well as Dhaka (Bangladesh), the city-state of Singapore , Tokyo (Japan), and the previously mentioned Shanghai.
Despite the fact that humanity appeared more than three hundred years ago, for a long time its development was extremely slow. The short life expectancy and extremely difficult conditions took their toll.
Humanity exchanged its first billion only at the beginning of the nineteenth century, in 1820. A little more than a hundred years passed, and in 1927, newspapermen trumpeted the joyful news of the second billion earthlings. Just 33 years later, in 1960, they spoke about the third.
From this period, scientists began to seriously worry about a boom in the world's population growth. But this did not stop the four billionth inhabitant of the planet from joyfully announcing its appearance in 1974. In 1987, the account reached five billion. The six billionth earthling was born closer to the millennium, at the end of 1999. Less than twelve years have passed since there are a billion more of us. At the current birth rate, no later than the end of the first quarter of this century, the name of the eight billionth person will appear in newspapers.
Such impressive successes have been achieved primarily due to a significant reduction in bloody wars that claim millions of lives. Many dangerous diseases were defeated, medicine learned to significantly prolong people's lives.
Until the nineteenth century, people had little interest in the population of the world. The term “demography” was introduced into use only in 1855.
At the moment, the problem is becoming more and more threatening.
In the seventeenth century, it was believed that four billion people could live comfortably on our planet. As real life shows, this figure is significantly underestimated. The current seven and a half billion feel relatively comfortable with a reasonable distribution of resources.
Potential settlement opportunities are possible in Australia, Canada, and desert areas. This will require some efforts for improvement, but theoretically it is possible.
If we take into account exclusively territorial possibilities, then up to one and a half quadrillion people can be settled on the planet! This is a huge number that contains fifteen zeros!
But the use of resources and the rapid heating of the atmosphere will very quickly change the climate so much that the planet will become lifeless.
The maximum number of inhabitants on Earth (with moderate demands) should not exceed twelve billion. This figure is taken from food supply calculations. As the population grows, it is necessary to obtain more resources. To do this, it is necessary to use more areas for sowing, increase the number of livestock, and save water resources.
But if food problems can be solved relatively quickly, thanks to genetic technologies, then organizing the consumption of clean drinking water is a much more complex and costly undertaking.
In addition, humanity must move to the use of renewable energy sources - wind, sun, earth and water energy.
Chinese authorities have been trying to solve the problem of overpopulation for decades. For a long time, there was a program that allowed no more than one child per family. In addition, a powerful information campaign was carried out among the population.
Today we can say that the Chinese have succeeded. Population growth has stabilized and is projected to decline. The growth factor in the well-being of Chinese residents played an important role here.
Regarding the poor in India, Indonesia, and Nigeria, the prospects are far from rosy. In just thirty years, China may lose the “palm” in the demographic issue. India's population may exceed one and a half billion people by 2050!
Population growth will only worsen the economic problems of poor countries.
For a long time, people were forced to have a large number of children. Running a household required enormous strength, and it was impossible to cope alone.
A guaranteed pension could help solve the problem of overpopulation.
Also possible ways to solve the demographic issue are thoughtful social policy and reasonable family planning, as well as increasing the economic and social status of the fair half of humanity, and increasing the level of education in general.
It is very important to love yourself and your loved ones. But we should not forget that the planet on which we live is our common home, which must be treated with respect.
Today it is worth moderating your needs and thinking about planning so that our descendants can live as comfortably on the planet as we do ourselves.
The world population is the total number of people living on Earth and continuously renewing their numbers through the process of reproduction. Today the planet is inhabited by more than seven billion people.
According to calculations by a statistician from the Netherlands (Center for Informatics and Mathematics), Peter Grunwald, over the course of the entire history of human development, equal to more than 162 thousand years, more than one hundred and seven and a half billion people were born on Earth. Based on his calculations, it can be assumed that approximately 6% of all people living on the planet before our time are equal to 6.7 billion people living today (2008 data). Grunwald also admits that one cannot be completely sure of the 107.5 billion people born throughout time on Earth, since practically nothing is known about the size of the population and the percentage of birth rates in ancient times. At the same time, the researcher considers it incorrect that some scientists claim that there are currently more people living on Earth than during the entire period of formation of human history.
Based on estimates of the earth's agro-natural potential, the planet is able to feed more than 80 billion people, and within the framework of history, the population could not exceed 100 million people. Before the Neolithic Revolution occurred, the Earth could not support more than 3 million people. The UN has set an approximate population limit of 8 billion, at which point the population of each country will begin to promote the maximum possible birth control, as well as fertility equal to two births per healthy woman.
The most accurate forecast regarding the population size was made by D. Huxley, a biologist from England. Based on his calculations, in 1964 he made a conclusion that the planet's population would reach 6 billion by the year 2000. The UN Foundation announced that by 1999 the number of people living on Earth had reached 6 billion, and in 2011 - seven billion. The UN predicts a significant population decline from 2015 to 2050 for the following countries: Russia, Germany, China, Poland, Romania, Thailand, Ukraine, Serbia, Japan, as well as for the countries of Western, Southeast and East Asia.
The works of many scientists (H. Förster, A.V. Korotaev, S.P. Kapitsa, M. Kremer) say that the increase in the earth's population over the past six thousand years followed the law of hyperbole, that is, the entire increase in human numbers was equal proportional to its square. But, judging by the historical chronicle, the population of the planet throughout its history not only increased sharply, but also became smaller, which was facilitated by destructive wars, long-term conflicts, the latest developments in technology and their development. For example, the population of the Middle East has grown at a slow pace over the past 4,000 years (ten times slower than the rest of the planet).
By the beginning of the 60s, the main rate of increase in human numbers began to gradually slow down, and in its place another type of population increase, logistical, appeared. The rate of natural increase in the number of people populating the world has begun to decline since 1989, which is a consequence of a sharp jump in demographics.
At the beginning of our era, there were already 300 million people living on the planet, by the end of the first millennium - 400 million, 500 million - 1500, one billion - 1820, 1.6 billion - 1900, three billion - 1960, 5.65 billion - 1993 . At the end of October 1999, the number of people inhabiting the globe reached 6 billion people, 6.3 in 2003, 6.5 in 2006, 6.8 in 2010, at the beginning of November 2011 - 7 billion. In 2015, the world population should be more than 7 billion people.
According to the UN forecast, the planet's population will be 8.1 billion people by 2025, 9 billion by 2050, and 10 billion by 2100.
Until the seventies, the number of people inhabiting the Earth grew, according to the law of hyperbole; today the growth rate has noticeably decreased. According to demographic studies, the population is still growing rapidly, despite the fact that its growth has already become half as much as in 1963 (at which time the peak growth rate was reached).
Over the past 11 years (from 1994 to 2015), the number of elderly people has doubled, and throughout the world there are significantly more of them than children under 5 years of age (according to the latest data provided by the UN).
For the first time, during the formation of all human history, the number of people living within the city was equal to the number living in villages and villages, which amounted to 3.4 billion. It is also predicted that the largest part of the population living on the globe will be city dwellers, which is confirmed, judging by the latest data.
By 2050, more of the world's population will live in Asia, ¼ in Africa, 8.2% in Latin America, 7.4% in Europe, 4.7% in North America.
The largest country in terms of population is China, but, based on UN forecasts, India will also reach overpopulation by 2025. Until the beginning of 1991, the USSR occupied third place in terms of population; after it collapsed, this place was taken by the USA (at the end of 2006, the population was equal to 300 million people), Indonesia occupied fourth place, Brazil occupied fifth place, and Brazil occupied sixth place. Pakistan, seventh - Bangladesh, eighth - Nigeria, ninth - Russia.
According to CIA estimates, in mid-summer 2013 the number of people inhabiting the planet was 7,095,217,980.
At the beginning of 2014, the UN commission made a statement saying that the world's population had reached 7.2 billion people, and in 2015 the world's population is planned to be about 7.3 - 7.4 billion people.
№ | A country | Number | % of total population |
1 | China | 1 369 723 215 | 19,013% |
2 | India | 1 263 419 215 | 17,537% |
3 | USA | 319 078 215 | 4,429% |
4 | Indonesia | 253 276 460 | 3,516% |
5 | Brazil | 203 724 463 | 2,828% |
6 | Pakistan | 188 546 242 | 2,617% |
7 | Nigeria | 178 981 119 | 2,484% |
8 | Bangladesh | 157 967 552 | 2,193% |
9 | Russia | 146 497 215 | 2,033% |
10 | Japan | 127 304 215 | 1,767% |
11 | Mexico | 119 977 418 | 1,665% |
12 | Philippines | 100 481 263 | 1,395% |
13 | Vietnam | 89 973 115 | 1,249% |
14 | Ethiopia | 88 217 206 | 1,225% |
15 | Egypt | 87 528 932 | 1,215% |
16 | Germany | 81 044 215 | 1,125% |
17 | Iran | 77 813 220 | 1,080% |
18 | Türkiye | 76 932 079 | 1,068% |
19 | DR Congo | 69 624 333 | 0,966% |
20 | Thailand | 65 135 215 | 0,904% |
21 | Great Britain | 64 572 476 | 0,896% |
22 | France | 64 192 823 | 0,891% |
23 | Italy | 61 046 883 | 0,847% |
24 | South Africa | 54 266 215 | 0,753% |
25 | Myanmar | 53 983 173 | 0,749% |
26 | The Republic of Korea | 50 268 656 | 0,698% |
27 | Colombia | 48 104 215 | 0,668% |
28 | Tanzania | 47 686 001 | 0,662% |
29 | Spain | 46 771 975 | 0,649% |
30 | Kenya | 45 810 195 | 0,636% |
31 | Ukraine | 43 068 274 | 0,598% |
32 | Argentina | 42 933 715 | 0,596% |
33 | Algeria | 40 193 162 | 0,558% |
34 | Uganda | 39 108 839 | 0,543% |
35 | Sudan | 39 028 305 | 0,542% |
36 | Poland | 38 759 874 | 0,538% |
37 | Iraq | 35 032 976 | 0,486% |
38 | Canada | 34 525 215 | 0,479% |
39 | Morocco | 33 674 215 | 0,467% |
40 | Afghanistan | 31 544 733 | 0,438% |
41 | Uzbekistan | 30 752 815 | 0,427% |
42 | Peru | 30 739 359 | 0,427% |
43 | Venezuela | 30 591 215 | 0,425% |
44 | Malaysia | 29 841 390 | 0,414% |
45 | Saudi Arabia | 29 633 643 | 0,411% |
46 | Nepal | 28 384 955 | 0,394% |
47 | Mozambique | 26 737 192 | 0,371% |
48 | Ghana | 26 706 393 | 0,371% |
49 | DPRK | 25 290 803 | 0,351% |
50 | Yemen | 25 232 723 | 0,350% |
51 | Australia | 24 525 215 | 0,340% |
52 | Madagascar | 23 836 177 | 0,331% |
53 | Republic of China | 23 674 495 | 0,329% |
54 | Cameroon | 22 982 847 | 0,319% |
55 | Angola | 22 301 476 | 0,310% |
56 | Syria | 22 150 830 | 0,307% |
57 | Sri Lanka | 21 609 990 | 0,300% |
58 | Ivory Coast | 20 968 989 | 0,291% |
59 | Romania | 20 106 857 | 0,279% |
60 | Niger | 18 699 017 | 0,260% |
61 | Chile | 17 987 215 | 0,250% |
62 | Burkina Faso | 17 583 830 | 0,244% |
63 | Kazakhstan | 17 494 709 | 0,243% |
64 | Netherlands | 17 076 890 | 0,237% |
65 | Malawi | 16 993 359 | 0,236% |
66 | Guatemala | 16 023 929 | 0,222% |
67 | Mali | 15 932 442 | 0,221% |
68 | Cambodia | 15 572 485 | 0,216% |
69 | Ecuador | 15 245 215 | 0,212% |
70 | Zambia | 15 185 217 | 0,211% |
71 | Zimbabwe | 14 763 540 | 0,205% |
72 | Senegal | 14 712 386 | 0,2042% |
73 | Chad | 13 375 361 | 0,1857% |
74 | Guinea | 12 208 113 | 0,1695% |
75 | South Sudan | 11 902 933 | 0,1652% |
76 | Cuba | 11 422 812 | 0,1586% |
77 | Belgium | 11 368 207 | 0,1578% |
78 | Greece | 11 156 804 | 0,1549% |
79 | Tunisia | 11 050 715 | 0,1534% |
80 | Bolivia | 11 011 879 | 0,1529% |
81 | Somalia | 10 969 866 | 0,1523% |
82 | Benin | 10 763 725 | 0,1494% |
83 | Rwanda | 10 701 437 | 0,1485% |
84 | Dominican Republic | 10 693 169 | 0,1484% |
85 | Czech | 10 676 634 | 0,1482% |
86 | Burundi | 10 586 967 | 0,1470% |
87 | Haiti | 10 565 624 | 0,1467% |
88 | Portugal | 10 531 516 | 0,1462% |
89 | Hungary | 9 983 215 | 0,1386% |
90 | Sweden | 9 749 079 | 0,1353% |
91 | Azerbaijan | 9 581 315 | 0,1330% |
92 | Belarus | 9 579 315 | 0,1330% |
93 | Serbia | 9 572 593 | 0,1329% |
94 | Austria | 8 612 001 | 0,1195% |
95 | Tajikistan | 8 309 615 | 0,1153% |
96 | Switzerland | 8 240 904 | 0,1144% |
97 | Israel | 8 236 215 | 0,1143% |
98 | Papua New Guinea | 7 580 323 | 0,1052% |
99 | Honduras | 7 522 215 | 0,1044% |
100 | Bulgaria | 7 301 892 | 0,1014% |
101 | Hong Kong (PRC) | 7 192 515 | 0,0998% |
102 | Paraguay | 6 728 846 | 0,0934% |
103 | Jordan | 6 699 315 | 0,0930% |
104 | Eritrea | 6 592 391 | 0,0915% |
105 | Salvador | 6 439 967 | 0,0894% |
106 | Laos | 6 405 015 | 0,0889% |
107 | Libya | 6 309 667 | 0,0876% |
108 | Sierra Leone | 6 261 597 | 0,0869% |
109 | Togo | 6 247 370 | 0,0867% |
110 | Nicaragua | 6 127 260 | 0,0850% |
111 | Kyrgyzstan | 5 919 315 | 0,0822% |
112 | Denmark | 5 683 450 | 0,0789% |
113 | Finland | 5 528 715 | 0,0767% |
114 | Slovakia | 5 468 223 | 0,0759% |
115 | Singapore | 5 368 615 | 0,0745% |
116 | Turkmenistan | 5 363 386 | 0,0744% |
117 | Norway | 5 222 115 | 0,0725% |
118 | Lebanon | 5 022 129 | 0,0697% |
119 | UAE | 4 856 465 | 0,0674% |
120 | CAR | 4 765 418 | 0,0661% |
121 | Ireland | 4 660 244 | 0,0647% |
122 | Republic of the Congo | 4 581 809 | 0,0636% |
123 | New Zealand | 4 562 615 | 0,0633% |
124 | Georgia | 4 513 715 | 0,0627% |
125 | State of Palestine | 4 443 764 | 0,0617% |
126 | Costa Rica | 4 324 927 | 0,0600% |
127 | Croatia | 4 269 915 | 0,0593% |
128 | Liberia | 4 213 215 | 0,0585% |
129 | Mauritania | 3 913 215 | 0,0543% |
130 | Bosnia and Herzegovina | 3 859 592 | 0,0536% |
131 | Puerto Rico (USA) | 3 749 004 | 0,0520% |
132 | Moldova | 3 580 815 | 0,0497% |
133 | Kuwait | 3 502 586 | 0,0486% |
134 | Panama | 3 429 028 | 0,0476% |
135 | Uruguay | 3 227 007 | 0,0448% |
136 | Armenia | 3 128 764 | 0,0434% |
137 | Lithuania | 2 954 075 | 0,0410% |
138 | Albania | 2 854 956 | 0,0396% |
139 | Oman | 2 796 694 | 0,0388% |
140 | Mongolia | 2 760 015 | 0,0383% |
141 | Jamaica | 2 729 015 | 0,0379% |
142 | Namibia | 2 371 203 | 0,0329% |
143 | Lesotho | 2 120 726 | 0,0294% |
144 | Slovenia | 2 098 085 | 0,0291% |
145 | Macedonia | 2 088 984 | 0,0290% |
146 | Botswana | 2 061 802 | 0,0286% |
147 | Latvia | 2 013 515 | 0,0279% |
148 | Gambia | 1 932 169 | 0,0268% |
149 | Guinea-Bissau | 1 769 013 | 0,0246% |
150 | Gabon | 1 720 509 | 0,0239% |
151 | Qatar | 1 708 650 | 0,0237% |
152 | Trinidad and Tobago | 1 326 929 | 0,01842% |
153 | Estonia | 1 318 034 | 0,01830% |
154 | Mauritius | 1 298 004 | 0,01802% |
155 | Swaziland | 1 269 919 | 0,01763% |
156 | Bahrain | 1 236 786 | 0,01717% |
157 | East Timor | 1 068 624 | 0,01483% |
158 | Fiji | 889 242 | 0,01234% |
159 | Djibouti | 888 528 | 0,01233% |
160 | Cyprus | 860 215 | 0,01194% |
161 | Reunion (France) | 830 796 | 0,01153% |
162 | Equatorial Guinea | 780 276 | 0,01083% |
163 | Butane | 767 767 | 0,01066% |
164 | Comoros | 753 653 | 0,01046% |
165 | Guyana | 736 769 | 0,01023% |
166 | Montenegro | 625 550 | 0,008683% |
167 | Macau (PRC) | 608 715 | 0,008449% |
168 | SADR | 586 861 | 0,008146% |
169 | Solomon islands | 574 080 | 0,007969% |
170 | Luxembourg | 550 895 | 0,007647% |
171 | Suriname | 545 140 | 0,007567% |
172 | Cape Verde | 504 852 | 0,007008% |
173 | Malta | 426 599 | 0,005921% |
174 | Brunei | 424 420 | 0,005891% |
175 | Guadeloupe (France) | 405 850 | 0,005633% |
176 | Martinique (France) | 393 506 | 0,005462% |
177 | Bahamas | 383 786 | 0,005327% |
178 | Maldives | 352 787 | 0,004897% |
179 | Iceland | 326 886 | 0,004537% |
180 | Belize | 323 668 | 0,004493% |
181 | Barbados | 287 281 | 0,003988% |
182 | French Polynesia (France) | 281 050 | 0,003901% |
183 | New Caledonia (France) | 261 039 | 0,003623% |
184 | Vanuatu | 259 516 | 0,003602% |
185 | Guiana (France) | 238 764 | 0,003314% |
186 | Mayotte (France) | 229 285 | 0,003183% |
187 | Sao Tome and Principe | 199 097 | 0,002764% |
188 | Samoa | 193 046 | 0,002680% |
189 | Saint Lucia | 184 813 | 0,002565% |
190 | Guam (USA) | 168 761 | 0,002343% |
191 | Curaçao (Nida) | 150 894 | 0,002094% |
192 | Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | 110 586 | 0,001535% |
193 | Virgin Islands (USA) | 108 007 | 0,001499% |
194 | Grenada | 107 518 | 0,001492% |
195 | Tonga | 106 997 | 0,001485% |
196 | Kiribati | 104 657 | 0,001453% |
197 | Micronesia | 104 618 | 0,001452% |
198 | Aruba (Nida) | 104 146 | 0,001446% |
199 | Jersey (British) | 98 572 | 0,001368% |
200 | Seychelles | 94 021 | 0,001305% |
201 | Antigua and Barbuda | 91 618 | 0,001272% |
202 | Isle of Man (British) | 87 190 | 0,001210% |
203 | Andorra | 76 813 | 0,001066% |
204 | Dominica | 73 056 | 0,001014% |
205 | Bermuda (British) | 66 176 | 0,000919% |
206 | Guernsey (British) | 63 800 | 0,000886% |
207 | Cayman Islands (British) | 59 941 | 0,000832% |
208 | Greenland (Denmark) | 57 679 | 0,000801% |
209 | American Samoa (USA) | 55 835 | 0,000775% |
210 | Saint Kitts and Nevis | 55 304 | 0,000768% |
211 | Northern Mariana Islands (USA) | 55 046 | 0,000764% |
212 | Marshall Islands | 53 287 | 0,000740% |
213 | Faroe Islands (Denmark) | 48 674 | 0,000676% |
214 | Monaco | 38 581 | 0,000536% |
215 | Sint Maarten (Nid.) | 37 944 | 0,000527% |
216 | Liechtenstein | 37 644 | 0,000523% |
217 | Saint Martin (France) | 36 801 | 0,000511% |
218 | Turks and Caicos (Brit.) | 34 251 | 0,000475% |
219 | San Marino | 32 152 | 0,000446% |
220 | Gibraltar (British) | 30 516 | 0,000424% |
221 | Virgin Islands (British) | 29 077 | 0,000404% |
222 | Åland Islands (Finland) | 28 717 | 0,000399% |
223 | Bonaire, St. Eustatius and Saba (Nid.) | 23 511 | 0,000326% |
224 | Palau | 21 312 | 0,000296% |
225 | Cook Islands (New Green) | 20 947 | 0,000291% |
226 | Anguilla (British) | 14 675 | 0,000204% |
227 | Wallis and Futuna (France) | 13 421 | 0,000186% |
228 | Nauru | 10 296 | 0,000143% |
229 | Tuvalu | 9 989 | 0,000139% |
230 | Saint Barthelemy (France) | 9 130 | 0,000127% |
231 | Saint Pierre and Miquelon (France) | 6 175 | 0,0000857% |
232 | Montserrat (British) | 5 230 | 0,0000726% |
233 | Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha Islands | 4 155 | 0,0000577% |
234 | Falkland Islands (British) | 3 087 | 0,0000428% |
235 | Svalbard (Norway) | 2 690 | 0,0000373% |
236 | Norfolk Island (Australia) | 2 337 | 0,0000324% |
237 | Christmas Island (Australia) | 2 087 | 0,0000290% |
238 | Tokelau (New Green) | 1 426 | 0,0000198% |
239 | Niue (New Green) | 1 317 | 0,0000183% |
240 | Vatican | 803 | 0,0000111% |
241 | Cocos Islands (Australia) | 560 | 0,0000078% |
242 | Pitcairn Islands (British) | 60 | 0,00000083% |