- Demographics of Wales
-
Total population
(As of 2001)2,903,085 Life expectancy at birth Density 143persons / km2. Place of Birth
population by Place of Birth:75.3%% were born in Wales
20.32% were born in England
0.84% were born in Scotland
0.44% were born in the Republic of Ireland
0.27% were born in Northern IrelandAnnual growth Religions Christians 71.9% No Religion 18.53% Muslims 0.75% Education Universities 11 University students Languages English - 79%
Welsh- 21.7%Health: Hospitals 110 Doctors Infant Mortality The changing population structure of Wales - from a classic pyramidal shape in 1971, reflecting higher birth and death rates, to a more rectangular shape, with fewer children and more older people in 2005[1] reflects the later stages of the demographic transition. In 2005, the Welsh population stood at 2.96 million compared to 2.74 million in 1971. However, in the early 1980s the population fell due to net out-migration. Since then, net migration has generally been positive, and has contributed more to population growth than natural change, which has fluctuated around zero since the early 1970s.[1]
Wales accounted for 4.9% of the UK population in 2005, down from 5% in the period from the mid 1970s to the late 1990s.[1] Of the four countries of the United Kingdom, Wales had the highest percentage of births outside marriage (52.4%), and it was the only one where the majority of births were outside marriage in 2005. Wales (along with Scotland) also had the highest death rate in the same year (10.9 per thousand).[1]
Demographics of Wales as at the 2001 UK Census:
- Population: 2,903,085, Male: 1,403,782 Female: 1,499,303
- Percentage of the population born in:
- Wales: 75.39%
- England: 20.32%
- Scotland: 0.84%
- Northern Ireland: 0.27%
- Republic of Ireland: 0.44%
- Fertility Rate: 1.90 (2007)[2]
- Age distribution (2007 mid-year estimates)[3]
- Aged 0 to 4: 5%
- Aged 5 to 14: 12%
- Aged 15 to 29: 19%
- Aged 30 to 44: 19%
- Aged 45 to 59: 20%
- Aged 60 to 64: 6%
- Aged 65 to 74: 9%
- Aged 75 and over: 9%
- Population density (2006): 143 people per square kilometre[4]
- Ethnic groups:
- White: British: 95.99%
- White: Irish: 0.61%
- White: other: 1.28%
- Mixed: white and black: 0.29%
- Mixed: white and Asian: 0.17%
- Mixed: other: 0.15%
- Asian:
- Indian/British Indian: 0.28%
- Pakistani/British Pakistani: 0.29%
- Bangladeshi/British Bangladeshi: 0.19%
- Other Asian: 0.12%
- Black: 0.25%
- Chinese: 0.40%
- No tick box given for an ethnicity of Welsh. Percentage of people writing "Welsh" on form: 14%[5]
- Percentage of the Welsh population self-identifying as Welsh: 74%
(Identifying as Welsh only: 67%; Welsh and another national identity: a further 7%)[6]
- Religion:
- Christian: 71.9%
- Buddhist: 0.19%
- Hindu: 0.19%
- Jewish: 0.08%
- Muslim: 0.75%
- Sikh: 0.07%
- Other religion: 0.24%
- No religion: 18.53%
- Not disclosed: 8.07%
- The largest single denomination of Wales is Calvinist Methodism (Presbyterian Church of Wales), followed by the (Anglican) Church in Wales with 30% of the population, the Roman Catholic Church with 3% and the Congregationalist Union of Welsh Independents with 1% of the population.
- Age structure of the population:
- 0–4: 167,903
- 5–9: 185,325
- 10–14: 195,976
- 15–19: 184,704
- 20–24: 169,493
- 25–29: 166,348
- 30–44: 605,962
- 45–59: 569,676
- 60–64: 152,924
- 65–74: 264,191
- 75–84: 182,202
- 85–89: 38,977
- 90+: 19,404
- Knowledge of the Welsh language:
- Percentage of the population aged 3 or more knowing spoken Welsh only: 4.93%
- Percentage of the population aged 3 or more speaking Welsh but not reading or writing it: 2.83%
- Percentage of the population aged 3 or more speaking and reading Welsh but not writing it: 1.37%
- Percentage of the population aged 3 or more speaking, reading, and writing Welsh: 16.32%
- Percentage of the population aged 3 or more with some other skills combination: 2.98%
- Percentage of the population aged 3 or more with no knowledge of Welsh: 71.57%[dubious ]
- In Gwynedd, Anglesey, Ceredigion and Carmarthenshire, Welsh speakers are in the majority.
- Gwynedd has the highest proportion of Welsh speakers, but Carmarthenshire has the highest number of them in any one principal area.
Nationality
- noun: Welsh
- adjective: Welsh
Notes
- ^ a b c d Wales's Population: A Demographic Overview 1971-2005
- ^ Live births by local authority 2007
- ^ Stats Wales
- ^ Stats Wales
- ^ "Focus on Wales: Its People". Office for National Statistics. 8 January 2004. http://www.statistics.gov.uk/pdfdir/fow0104.pdf. Retrieved 11 May 2010.
- ^ "Focus on Wales: Its People". Office for National Statistics. 8 January 2004. http://www.statistics.gov.uk/pdfdir/fow0104.pdf. Retrieved 11 May 2010.
See also
- Demographics of the United Kingdom
- Lists of U.K. locations with large ethnic populations
Demographics of Europe Sovereign
states- Albania
- Andorra
- Armenia
- Austria
- Azerbaijan
- Belarus
- Belgium
- Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Bulgaria
- Croatia
- Cyprus
- Czech Republic
- Denmark
- Estonia
- Finland
- France
- Georgia
- Germany
- Greece
- Hungary
- Iceland
- Ireland
- Italy
- Kazakhstan
- Latvia
- Liechtenstein
- Lithuania
- Luxembourg
- Macedonia
- Malta
- Moldova
- Monaco
- Montenegro
- Netherlands
- Norway
- Poland
- Portugal
- Romania
- Russia
- San Marino
- Serbia
- Slovakia
- Slovenia
- Spain
- Sweden
- Switzerland
- Turkey
- Ukraine
- United Kingdom
- (England
- Northern Ireland
- Scotland
- Wales)
- Vatican City
States with limited
recognition- Abkhazia
- Kosovo
- Nagorno-Karabakh
- Northern Cyprus
- South Ossetia
- Transnistria
Dependencies
and other territories- Åland
- Faroe Islands
- Gibraltar
- Guernsey
- Jan Mayen
- Jersey
- Isle of Man
- Svalbard
Other entities - European Union
Categories:
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.