|
World Population Prospects,
the 2010 Revision |
|
Figure 14: Population of
Europe, Africa and Sub-Saharan Africa (millions) |
|
 |
|
Source: United
Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population
Division (2011): World Population Prospects: The 2010 Revision. New
York
Note: In our definition, Europe has 48 countries, including
the Russian Federation. |
|
(Updated: 19 October
2011) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Key result:
The population in Sub-Saharan Africa has outgrown that of Europe and
is projected to be more than five times larger than the population
of Europe in 2100. |
|
Figure 14 displays the total population of Europe, Africa and
Sub-Saharan Africa. |
|
In
1950, Africa's population was about 40% of the population of Europe.
In 2010 Africa's population had already outgrown the population of
Europe by almost 40%. By 2050, Africa will have
three times as many people as Europe; and by 2100 the population in
Africa is projected to be much more than 5 times the population of
Europe |
|
It
should be noted that this projected population increase in Africa is
based on the assumption that fertility will fall
significantly in Africa. In fact, we project average total
fertility to decline from 4.64 children in the 2005-2010 period to
2.89 children in the 2045-2050 period and further to 2.13 in the
2095-2100 period. Without this very
significant fertility decline, Africa's population would increase
even further. |
|
|