Demographic facts for the world population
This page presents demographic facts on the world population.
The designation “developed countries” and “developing countries” follows the geographical definition of the United Nations Statistics Division (accessed May 2011). These definitions are intended for statistical convenience and do not necessarily express a judgment about the stage reached by a particular country or area in the development process.
Developed regions of the world comprise Europe, Northern America, Japan, Australia & New Zealand (which form part of Oceania). Oceania is a diverse group of countries (mainly islands) in the Pacific Ocean and its vicinity. There are four sub-regions: Australasia (including Australia and New Zealand), Melanesia, Micronesia and Polynesia. The latter three sub-regions comprise thousands of small islands in the Central, Southern and Western Pacific Ocean.
Developing regions comprise all of Africa, Asia (excluding Japan), Latin America & the Caribbean plus Melanesia, Micronesia and Polynesia in Oceania.
section reviewed 19/09/11
section updated 19/09/11
The estimated population of the world in 2008 was 6.75 billion people (Table 11.1), increasing by around 79 million people each year.1 The world population is forecast to reach 7 billion people by late 2011, and 9.1 billion by 2050. Around four-fifths of the world’s population live in the less developed regions of the world, and the vast majority of the world’s population growth is expected to occur in these areas. By 2050, some 87% of the world’s population are expected to reside in the developing countries.1
Table 11.1: Population Measures and Cancer Incidence and Mortality, Regions of the World, Estimates Between 2005 and 2010
| Population | Life Expectancy | Number of New Cancer Cases* | Number of Cancer Deaths* | |||||
| 2008 Estimates [Total] 2010 Estimates [by Age] |
2005-2010 estimates | 2008 estimates | 2008 estimates | |||||
| Total (1000's) | % Under 15 | % Over 60 | Years | Total | % of World Total | Total | % of World Total | |
| Africa | 987,092 | 40% | 5% | 54 | 715,571 | 6 | 541,779 | 7 |
| Eastern Africa | 310,570 | 44% | 5% | 53 | 221,076 | 2 | 173,676 | 2 |
| Middle Africa | 122,501 | 45% | 5% | 48 | 66,895 | 1 | 53,229 | 1 |
| Northern Africa | 205,814 | 31% | 7% | 68 | 164,350 | 1 | 120,801 | 2 |
| Southern Africa | 56,936 | 31% | 7% | 52 | 79,179 | 1 | 54,818 | 1 |
| Western Africa | 291,270 | 43% | 5% | 51 | 184,071 | 1 | 139,255 | 2 |
| Asia | 4,075,309 | 26% | 10% | 69 | 6,092,359 | 48 | 4,072,332 | 54 |
| Eastern Asia | 1,546,825 | 19% | 14% | 74 | 3,720,658 | 29 | 2,440,351 | 32 |
| South-Central Asia | 1,728,752 | 31% | 7% | 64 | 1,423,213 | 11 | 979,914 | 13 |
| South-Eastern Asia | 575,626 | 27% | 9% | 70 | 725,446 | 6 | 501,046 | 7 |
| Western Asia | 224,106 | 32% | 7% | 71 | 223,042 | 2 | 151,021 | 2 |
| Europe | 731,568 | 15% | 22% | 75 | 3,208,882 | 25 | 1,715,240 | 23 |
| Central and Eastern Europe | 293,488 | 15% | 19% | 69 | 983,408 | 8 | 626,007 | 8 |
| Northern Europe | 97,918 | 17% | 23% | 79 | 482,080 | 4 | 242,422 | 3 |
| Southern Europe | 152,316 | 15% | 24% | 80 | 713,401 | 6 | 382,773 | 5 |
| Western Europe | 187,846 | 16% | 24% | 80 | 1,029,993 | 8 | 464,038 | 6 |
| Latin American and Caribbean | 576,102 | 28% | 10% | 73 | 906,008 | 7 | 542,051 | 7 |
| Caribbean | 41,629 | 27% | 12% | 72 | 79,347 | 1 | 47,842 | 1 |
| Central America | 149,580 | 30% | 9% | 75 | 176,564 | 1 | 108,328 | 1 |
| South America | 384,892 | 27% | 10% | 73 | 650,097 | 5 | 385,881 | 5 |
| Northern America | 345,053 | 20% | 18% | 79 | 1,603,870 | 13 | 638,328 | 8 |
| Oceania | 34,937 | 24% | 15% | 76 | 135,864 | 1 | 55,072 | 1 |
| More Developed Regions | 1,229,219 | 17% | 22% | 77 | 5,555,281 | 44 | 2,744,840 | 36 |
| Less Developed Regions | 5,520,843 | 29% | 9% | 66 | 7,107,273 | 56 | 4,819,962 | 64 |
| World | 6,750,062 | 27% | 11% | 68 | 12,662,554 | 100 | 7,564,802 | 100 |
* All cancers excluding non-melanoma skin cancer. Kaposi sarcoma is included for Sub-Saharan Africa countries only.
China and India are by far the most populated countries in the world, accounting for 20% and 18% of the world’s total population in 2008, respectively.1 Between 2003 and 2008, approximately a third (32%) of the world’s population growth of around 400 million people occurred in India and China, and India is expected to overtake China to become the world’s most populated country by 2030. The UK accounted for less than 1% of the world’s total population in 2008.1
section reviewed 19/09/11
section updated 19/09/11
The world population is ageing.1 Between 1970 and 2010, the world median age increased from 22 years to 29 years, and it is projected to reach 38 years by 2050. The number of people in the world aged 60 and over is expected to almost triple to 2 billion by 2050.1 Since cancer is predominantly a disease of the elderly, increases in the number of older people will inevitably lead to more cases of cancer, even if current incidence rates remain the same.
There are large differences in the distribution of age groups between the different regions of the world (Table 11.1).1 More than a fifth (22%) of the population living in the more developed regions of the world was aged 60 and over in 2010 and this is expected to rise to 33% by 2050. In contrast, just 9% of the population in the less developed regions of the world was aged 60 and over in 2010, rising to an expected 20% by 2050. The median age for individual countries ranges from around 45 years (for example, in Japan and Germany) to less than 16 years (for example, in Uganda and Niger).1
The world life expectancy at birth was predicted to be almost 68 years in 2005-2010 (Table 11.1), having increased considerably from almost 47 years in the early 1950s.1 By 2050, the world life expectancy is expected to exceed 76 years. There are large differences in life expectancy between men and women (65 and 70 years, respectively), and between the more and less developed regions of the world (77 and 66 years, respectively). Life expectancy for individual countries ranges from more than 80 years (for example, in Japan and parts of China) to less than 45 years (for example in Afghanistan and Zimbabwe).1
section reviewed 19/09/11
section updated 19/09/11






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