Good for the elderly
Cuba has the highest index of aging in Latin America, with a figure of 19.8 percent (6).
According to the National Institute of Statistics (ONEI), Cuba has two million individuals aged 60 and above, with that figure expected to grow to 3.3 million by 2030. As a result of this circumstance, Cuba raised the retirement age for women from 55 to 60 years old and for males from 60 to 65 years old in 2008.
It was estimated in 2002 that the country’s population was 11177 743 people, while the 2012 census reported that the country’s population was 11167 325 people. The decline in Cuba’s population between the 2002 and 2012 censuses was the first such decline since the country’s battle for independence in 1959.
If any country has a right to provide a pleasant life for its elderly, it is Cuba, where only we know how much our people have given up.
People above the age of 65 are considered to be part of the elderly population. Total elderly and youth population expressed as a percentage of the total population is used to calculate the proportion of the dependent population in a country.
Abstract. Romania has begun a phase of rapid and severe population aging, which will continue for the foreseeable future. By 2050, it is predicted that older Romanians would account for more than 30 percent of the country’s overall population.
The population of the Philippines has expanded by more than 35% in the previous two decades, with the older adult population (those aged 60 and over) predicted to surpass that of children and adolescents aged 0–14 years by 2065. (Help Age Global Network, 2017a). Males have a life expectancy of 57.4 years, while females have a life expectancy of 63.2 years at the moment.
Cuba is in the midst of the fourth stage of its demographic transformation, according to UN statistics. Regarding age distribution, the population is dominated (71.1 percent) by those between the ages of 15 and 64 years.
In the United States, according to one study, you are considered old at the age of 70 to 71 years for males and 73 to 73 years for women.
The population of Romania has been rapidly declining in recent years, falling from 21.83 million in 2002 to 19.95 million in 2014. High mortality, a low fertility rate after 1989, and a large amount of emigration are all contributing factors to the population drop.
The most recent statistics given by the National Institute of Statistics estimates that Romania’s stable population was 19 596 372 on 1 March 2015, a decrease of 32 851 from the previous estimate on 1 January 2015. The primary reasons of this phenomena are migration and a decline in the birth rate, which is occurring in tandem with a rise in the mortality rate.
Map of the Philippines’ Population Density
Year | Population | Growth Rate |
---|---|---|
2022 | 112,508,994 | 1.36% |
2021 | 111,046,913 | 1.39% |
2020 | 109,581,078 | 1.35% |
2019 | 108,116,615 | 1.37% |
MANILA, Philippines — MANILA, Philippines — An official from the United Nations Commission on Population and Development (CPD) predicted that the country’s population will be ″aging″ between 2030 and 2035, according to the official.
The population of Cuba is expected to grow to around 11.40 million people by 2022, according to our econometric models over the long run. Cuba’s population accounts just 0.16 percent of the world’s total population, which translates to around one person in every 620 persons on the planet, according to some estimates.
Youth migration out of the nation, along with low birth rates, is contributing to Cuba’s demographic reduction. Due to this, the population is becoming older, and by 2050, it will be the ninth-oldest population in the world, according to estimates.
Cuba has a population of 11.2 million people and is growing at a negative pace. Cuba’s population is the oldest in the Americas, with more than 20% of the population over the age of 60, making it the oldest country in the region. Approximately 64.1 percent of Cuba’s population is white, 26.6 percent is mulato (mixed-race), and 9.3 percent is black, according to the most recent census count.
It was estimated in 2002 that the country’s population was 11177 743 people, while the 2012 census reported that the country’s population was 11167 325 people. The decline in Cuba’s population between the 2002 and 2012 censuses was the first such decline since the country’s battle for independence in 1959.
More over three-quarters of Cuba’s population lives in urban regions, however this is dispersed throughout a number of smaller cities rather than concentrated in a few big metropolitan centers.
The most recent census was performed in September 2012, making it the most current on record. Cuba had a population of 11.2 million people at the time of the 2012 census. On a per-square-kilometer basis, the population density is 100.7 people, while the total life expectancy in Cuba is 78.0 years.