Demographics of Iraq
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This article is about the demographic features of the population of Iraq, including population density, ethnicity, education level, health of the populace, economic status, religious affiliations and other aspects of the population.
The population is estimated to be 32,585,692 as of July 2014, with most of them being Arabs (75-80%), followed by Kurds (15-20%) and others (5%). 99% are Muslims, 0.8% Christians and the rest belong to other minorities.
Background
Iraq is the region known outside the Islamic world as Mesopotamia. The population estimate in 1920 was 3 million. The ruins of Ur, Babylon and other ancient cities are situated in Iraq, as is the legendary location of the Garden of Eden. Almost 75% of Iraq's population lives in the flat, alluvial plain stretching southeast from Tikrit to the Persian Gulf. The Tigris and the Euphrates carry about 70 million cubic meters of silt annually from this plain down to the delta. The water from these two great rivers, and the fertility of the soil in the alluvial plain and the delta, allowed early agriculture to sustain a stable population as far back as the 7th millennium BC.
Population
5 - 6 4 - 5 3 - 4 2 - 3 |
Vital statistics
UN estimates[4]
Period | Live births per year | Deaths per year | Natural change per year | CBR1 | CDR1 | NC1 | TFR1 | IMR1 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1950-1955 | 327 000 | 158 000 | 169 000 | 53.2 | 25.8 | 27.5 | 7.30 | 197.6 |
1955-1960 | 297 000 | 133 000 | 164 000 | 42.6 | 19.1 | 23.5 | 6.20 | 152.9 |
1960-1965 | 343 000 | 122 000 | 221 000 | 43.3 | 15.4 | 27.9 | 6.60 | 120.7 |
1965-1970 | 430 000 | 121 000 | 309 000 | 46.5 | 13.1 | 33.4 | 7.40 | 96.0 |
1970-1975 | 475 000 | 121 000 | 354 000 | 43.6 | 11.1 | 32.5 | 7.15 | 76.4 |
1975-1980 | 526 000 | 124 000 | 402 000 | 41.2 | 9.8 | 31.5 | 6.80 | 60.4 |
1980-1985 | 571 000 | 185 000 | 387 000 | 39.1 | 12.6 | 26.5 | 6.35 | 48.9 |
1985-1990 | 638 000 | 132 000 | 505 000 | 38.8 | 8.0 | 30.8 | 6.15 | 41.8 |
1990-1995 | 719 000 | 105 000 | 614 000 | 38.2 | 5.6 | 32.6 | 5.80 | 43.4 |
1995-2000 | 836 000 | 119 000 | 717 000 | 37.9 | 5.4 | 32.5 | 5.40 | 38.1 |
2000-2005 | 960 000 | 144 000 | 816 000 | 37.5 | 5.6 | 31.9 | 5.12 | 35.9 |
2005-2010 | 1 079 000 | 187 000 | 892 000 | 36.6 | 6.3 | 30.2 | 4.86 | 34.6 |
1 CBR = crude birth rate (per 1000); CDR = crude death rate (per 1000); NC = natural change (per 1000); TFR = total fertility rate (number of children per woman); IMR = infant mortality rate per 1000 births |
Births and deaths [5]
Year | Population (x1000) | Live births | Deaths | Natural increase | Crude birth rate | Crude death rate | Rate of natural increase | TFR |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2013 | 1 077 645 | 189 118 | 888 527 | |||||
2014 | 36 004 552 |
Fertility ages average in 1997-2006[6]
Age groups | 1997 | 2006 |
---|---|---|
15-19 | 56,2 | 68 |
20-24 | 210 | 187 |
25-29 | 276,2 | 221 |
30-34 | 257,9 | 188 |
35-39 | 196,5 | 136 |
40-44 | 101,4 | 56 |
45-49 | 31 | 9 |
Total | 1128,2 | 865 |
Structure of the population [5]
Structure of the population (01.07.2013) (Estimates) :
Age Group | Male | Female | Total | % |
---|---|---|---|---|
Total | 17 710 750 | 17 083 444 | 34 794 194 | 100 |
0-4 | 2 495 131 | 2 405 862 | 4 900 993 | 14,09 |
5-9 | 2 374 908 | 2 191 807 | 4 566 714 | 13,12 |
10-14 | 2 232 712 | 2 048 891 | 4 281 603 | 12,31 |
15-19 | 1 937 714 | 1 825 963 | 3 763 677 | 10,82 |
20-24 | 1 701 884 | 1 593 679 | 3 295 563 | 9,47 |
25-29 | 1 424 739 | 1 316 462 | 2 741 201 | 7,88 |
30-34 | 1 176 433 | 1 134 882 | 2 311 316 | 6,64 |
35-39 | 983 570 | 1 044 325 | 2 027 895 | 5,83 |
40-44 | 933 785 | 897 936 | 1 831 722 | 5,26 |
45-49 | 746 884 | 763 311 | 1 510 195 | 4,34 |
50-54 | 508 498 | 562 274 | 1 070 772 | 3,08 |
55-59 | 356 581 | 393 511 | 750 093 | 2,16 |
60-64 | 345 830 | 378 456 | 724 285 | 2,08 |
65-69 | 187 626 | 218 991 | 406 617 | 1,17 |
70-74 | 133 277 | 138 375 | 271 651 | 0,78 |
75-79 | 81 742 | 90 630 | 172 373 | 0,50 |
80+ | 89 436 | 78 087 | 167 523 | 0,48 |
Age group | Male | Female | Total | Percent |
---|---|---|---|---|
0-14 | 7 102 751 | 6 646 560 | 13 749 311 | 39,52 |
15-64 | 10 115 318 | 9 910 801 | 20 026 119 | 57,56 |
65+ | 492 081 | 526 083 | 1 018 164 | 2,93 |
Ethnic and religious groups
Iraq's dominant ethnic group are the Iraqi or Mesopotamian Arabs, who account for around three-quarters of the population. They are a fusion of old Mesopotamian, Arabian, Iranian, and other populations, who now speak Mesopotamian Arabic.
Iraqi Arabs (including Palestinians, Marsh Arabs, Bedouins and other Arab subgroups): Kurds, Feylis, Yazidis, Shabaks and Kaka'is: 20-22%, Turkmen: 2%, Assyrians: 2%, other: 1% (Armenians, Circassians, Persians, Mandaeans/Sabians, Bahá'ís and Afro-Iraqis and Doms).[1]
Languages
Arabic and Kurdish is the official two language of Iraq. Arabic is spoken or understood by almost all the population.
Kurdish is the largest second language and has regional language status in Iraqi Kurdistan. Aramaic, once spoken by the whole country, is now only spoken by the Assyrian minority.
Azerbaijani is spoken in pockets of northern Iraq and Persian is spoken in pockets of southern Iraq. Numerous languages of the Caucasus are also spoken by minorities across the country.
Religions
Islam 99% (Sunni 42%, Shia 51%) and 5% described themselves as "Just a Muslim",[8] Christianity 0.8%, Mandaeism, Yazidism and other less than 1%.
While there has been voluntary relocation of many Christian families to northern Iraq, recent reporting indicates that the overall Christian population may have dropped by as much as 50 percent since the fall of the Saddam Hussein regime in 2003, with many fleeing to Syria, Jordan, and Lebanon (2010 estimate).[1] The percentage of Christians has fallen from 6% in 1991 or 1.5 million to about one third of this, due to massive exodus - two-thirds of Assyrian Christians have fled to other countries in the Middle East, Europe, United States and Canada.
Demographic statistics
The following demographic statistics are from the CIA World Factbook, unless otherwise indicated.
Age structure
- 0-14 years: 37.6% (male 5,959,562/ female 5,751,970)
- 15-64 years: 59.3% (male 9,355,176/ female 9,094,953)
- 65 years and over: 3% (male 376,700; female 423,295) (2006 est.)
Median age
- total: 21.3 years
- male: 21.2 years
- female: 21.4 years (2013 est.)
Population growth rate
- 2.23% (2014 est.)
Crude birth rate
- 27.51 births/1,000 population (2013 est.)
Crude death rate
- 4.65 deaths/1,000 population (2013 est.)
Total fertility rate
- 4.12 children born/woman (2015 est.)
Net migration rate
- 0 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2013 est.)
Urbanization
- urban population: 66.5% of total population (2011)
- rate of urbanization: 3.05% annual rate of change (2010-15 est.)
Sex ratio
- at birth: 1.05 male(s)/female
- under 15 years: 1.04 male(s)/female
- 15-64 years: 1.03 male(s)/female
- 65 years and over: 0.87 male(s)/female
- total population: 1.03 male(s)/female (2011 est.)
Maternal mortality rate
- 63 deaths/100,000 live births (2010)
Infant mortality rate
- 38.86 deaths/1,000 live births (2010)
Life expectancy at birth
- total population: 68 years
- male: 69.67 years
- female: 72.67 years (2013 est.)
Contraceptive prevalence rate
- 51.2% (2011)
Health expenditures
- 8.4% of GDP (2011)
Physicians density
- 0.69 physicians/1,000 population (2009)
Hospital bed density
- 1.3 beds/1,000 population (2010)
Obesity - adult prevalence rate
- 27% (2008)
Children under the age of 5 years underweight
- 7.1% (2006)
Nationality
- noun: Iraqi(s)
- adjective: Iraqi
Literacy
- definition: age 15 and over can read and write
- total population: 78.2%
- male: 86%
- female: 70.6% (2010 est.)
See also
References
- ^ a b c "Iraq". The World Factbook. 22 June 2014.
- ^ "Iraq". International Monetary Fund. Retrieved 2009-04-27.
- ^ "Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2006 - unicef statistics" (PDF). Unicef. Retrieved 2016-03-20.
- ^ World Population Prospects: The 2010 Revision
- ^ a b http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/products/dyb/dyb2.htm
- ^ http://cosit.gov.iq/en/population-manpower-staatistics/life
- ^ "Iraq". Central Intelligence Agency. Retrieved 4 May 2011.
- ^ http://www.pewforum.org/2012/08/09/the-worlds-muslims-unity-and-diversity-1-religious-affiliation/