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In January 2010 the population of the EU27 was 501.m; Highest birth rates in Ireland, UK and France - - lowest in Germany and Austria
By Finfacts Team
Jul 27, 2010 - 4:20:59 PM
On January 1, 2010, the
population of the EU27 was estimated at 501.1m, compared with 499.7m on 1 January 2009. The population of the EU27
grew by 1.4m in 2009, an annual rate of 2.7 per 1000 inhabitants, due to
a natural increase of 0.5m (+1.0%) and net migration of 0.9m
(+1.7%). The highest birth rates were
in Ireland, UK and France and the lowest were in Germany and Austria.
Compared with 2008, the demographic
situation in 2009 in the EU27
is characterised by a slight decrease
in the crude birth rate and a constant crude death rate, while net migration
fell more significantly. The population of the Eurozone (EA16) was estimated at 329.5m on January 1,
2010, compared with 328.6m on 1 January 2009. The population of the
Eurozone grew by 0.9m in 2009, an annual rate of
+2.7%, due to a natural increase of 0.3m (+1.0%) and net migration of 0.6m (+1.8%). These figures come from Eurostat, the statistics office of the European
Union.
Highest birth rates in Ireland, United Kingdom and France,
lowest in Germany and Austria: In
2009, 5.4m children were born in the EU27.
The crude birth rate was 10.7 per 1000 inhabitants, slightly down compared with
2008 (10.9%). The highest birth rates were recorded in Ireland (16.8%), the
United Kingdom (12.8%), France
(12.7%), Cyprus (12.2%) and
Sweden (12.0%), and the lowest
rates in Germany (7.9%),
Austria (9.1%), Portugal (9.4%),
Italy (9.5%), Latvia
and Hungary (both 9.6%).
Ireland and the UK had the
higest levels of inward migration during the boom.
There were 4.8m deaths registered
in the EU27 in 2009. The crude death rate was 9.7 per 1000
inhabitants, the same as in 2008. The highest death rates were observed in
Bulgaria (14.2%),
Latvia (13.3%), Hungary (13.0%) and
Lithuania (12.6%), and the lowest
rates in Ireland (6.6%),
Cyprus (6.7%), Luxembourg (7.3%) and
Malta (7.8%).
Consequently, the highest natural growth
of the population was registered in Ireland (+10.2%), well ahead of Cyprus
(+5.5%), France (+4.3%),
Luxembourg (+4.0%) and the United Kingdom (+3.7%). Ten Member States had a negative natural
growth, with the largest declines in
Bulgaria and Latvia
(both -3.6%), Hungary (-3.4%) and
Germany (-2.3%).
EU27 population growth in 2009: between -6.2% in Lithuania and
+17.2% in Luxembourg: In 2009, just
over 60% of the increase in the EU27
population came from migration. In
relative terms, Luxembourg (+13.2%),
Sweden (+6.7%), Slovenia (+5.8%),
Italy (+5.3%) and Belgium (+5.1%) had the largest net inflows, while Ireland (-9.0%) and
Lithuania (-4.6%) recorded
the highest net outflows.
In conclusion, the population increased in
nineteen Member States and decreased in eight, with considerable variations
between Member States. The largest relative increases were observed in
Luxembourg (+17.2%),
Sweden (+9.1%), Slovenia (+7.2%),
Belgium (+7.1%) and the United Kingdom (+6.7%), and the largest decreases in Lithuania (-6.2%),
Latvia (-5.7%), Bulgaria (-5.6%) and
Germany (-2.5%).
The figures on January 1, 2010 population represent provisional data as
reported by the countries, and they are slightly different from those published
in
Data in Focus 47/2009, which gave Eurostat's first demographic estimates for
2009.