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The Present

How many people die and how many are born each year?

Changes in the world population are determined by two metrics: the number of babies born, and number of people dying.
Jimmy Conover / Unsplash

The world population has grown rapidly, particularly over the past century: in 1900, there were fewer than 2 billion people on the planet. The world population is around 8045311488 in 2023.

Two metrics determine the change in the world population: the number of babies born and the number of people dying.

How many babies are born each year?

The first chart shows the annual number of births since 1950 and includes the projection made by the UN until the end of the century. You can switch this chart to any other country or world region.

There were 133.99 million births in 2022, compared to 92.08 million births in 1950.

The second chart shows the annual number of births by world region from 1950 to 2021.

a line graph showing the number of births per year.

How many people die each year?

The first chart here shows the annual number of deaths since 1950 and includes the projection made by the UN until the end of the century. Again, it is possible to switch this chart to any other country or world region.

There were 67.1 million deaths in 2022.

The world population, therefore, increased by 65.81 million in 2022(that is a net increase of 0.84%).

The second chart shows the annual number of deaths by world region from 1950 to 2021.

a graph showing the number of death by world region.

As the number of deaths approaches the number of births, global population growth will end.

How do we expect this to change in the coming decades? What does this mean for population growth?

Population projections show that the yearly number of births will remain at around 130 to 140 million per year over the coming decades. It is expected to decline slowly in the second half of the century. As the world population ages, the annual number of deaths is expected to continue to increase in the coming decades until it reaches a similar annual number as global births towards the end of the century. 

As the number of births is expected to fall slowly and the number of deaths to rise, the global population growth rate will continue to fall. This is when the world population will stop increasing in the future.

Republished under a Creative Commons BY license from Our World In Data. Read the original article.


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