News
The world's population is expected to peak at 10.3 billion in 2084 and then decline to 10.2 billion through the end of the ...
Charts can seem dull. But not to data scientist Tariq Khokhar at the World Bank. When he looked through a year's worth of charts, graphs, maps and more, he was excited by the numbers. For example ...
But the world’s demographic sweet spots are changing, and fast. Japan had the first major shift: By 2013, a quarter of the population was 65 and older, making Japan the oldest large country ever.
When you read on your computer screen that world population has surpassed 7 billion, as it did in 2011, it’s hard to put that number in context.It’s big a world. Where is everyone? 7 Billion ...
Sarah Newey Data Journalists 18 September 2018 8:32am ... We’ve put together 13 charts that show how the world’s population is changing and how governments can influence those changes for good. 1.
Aging. This One Chart About Global Aging Changes Everything "For the first time ever there are now more people in the world older than 65 than younger than 5." ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results