In progress at UNHQ

DEV/2274-POP/785

NEW UNITED NATIONS DEMOGRAPHIC YEARBOOK PUBLISHED Statistics for 1998 Compiled and Compared

16/01/2001
Press Release
DEV/2274
POP/785


                                                      POP/785

                                          16 January 2001

NEW UNITED NATIONS DEMOGRAPHIC YEARBOOK PUBLISHED


Statistics for 1998 Compiled and Compared

The latest edition of the annual United Nations Demographic Yearbook 1998, which contains the tables which summarize basic statistics on population trends, natality, mortality, nuptiality and divorce, has now been published.


Highlights from the 1998 Yearbook include:


-- In 18 regions, women's life expectancy now exceeds 80 years, up from

16 in 1997.


--  Life expectancy for men in 13 countries or areas around the world is now 75 years or more, up from 11 countries in 1997.


--  Infant mortality rates have fallen below 5 infant deaths per

1,000 live births in 12 countries or areas.


--  Declines in mortality were registered on every continent (measured by lower infant mortality and increased life expectancy).


--  Life expectancy in Africa now exceeds 50 years for men in 25 countries or areas and for women in 33 countries or areas.  However, life expectancy in Africa is still lower than in other parts of the world.  Only in Algeria, Cape Verde, Libyan Arab Jamahiriya, Mauritius, Réunion, and Tunisia can women have a expectation (at birth) that they will live to be 70 years or older.  Men typically live to less than 50 years in 28 African countries, and women share the same low Life expectancy in the 20 countries or areas.


The Yearbook shows that life expectancy of more than 80 years for women is increasingly common in developed countries.  According to the 1998 statistic, women can now have a life expectancy at birth of at least 80 years in

18 countries or areas,.  Japanese have the longest life expectancy in the world, (83.8), followed by people from Hong Kong (82.2), France and Martinique (82.0), Switzerland (81.9), Spain (81.6), Sweden (81.5), Australia, Italy and Norway (81.0), Canada and Guadalupe (80.9), Austria, Belgium, Greece and Iceland (80.6), Finland (80.5) Cyprus and Macao (80.0).


Men are expected to live more than 75 years in 13 countries or areas of the world.  Once again, Japan recorded the longest life expectancy for males (77.2), followed by Hong Kong (76.8), Sweden (76.5), Iceland (76.2), Israel


- 2 - Press Release

                                                                    DEV/2274


(76.1), Switzerland (75.7), Martinique (75.5), Norway (75.4), Greece (75.3), Australia and Singapore (75.2) and Cyprus (75.0).     


Among the 25 largest countries, the gap in life expectancy between women and men is largest in the Russian Federation (13.4 years), Ukraine (10.4 years) and France (7.8 years), and smallest in Iran (1.5 years), India (0.6 years) and Bangladesh (0.1).


The Yearbook also reports on infant mortality rates (the number of infant deaths under one year of age, per 1,000 live births).  The 12 countries or areas with the lowest infant mortality rates are Iceland (2.6), Hong Kong (3.2),Japan (3.6), Sweden (3.7), Norway (4.0), Finland and Singapore (4.2), Switzerland (4.5), Germany (4.6), Denmark (4.7), France (4.8) and Austria (4.9).


The 25 most populous countries in 1998 contain about 75 per cent of the estimated world population.  They are ranked below by size of population, together with the most recent available data on their fertility rates and life expectancies at birth.


                                                            Expectation

                                                            of life at birth

            Country           Population        TFR         Male       Female

                              (in thousands)

1.          China             1,255,698         1.8         68.7       73.0

2.          India               970,933         3.1         62.3       62.9     3.        United States       270,561         2.0         73.6       79.2

4.          Indonesia           202,907         2.6         63.3       67.0

5.          Brazil              161,790         2.3         64.7       70.9

6.          Russian Federation  146,539         1.3         58.3       71.7

7.          Pakistan            131,510         5.0         62.9       65.1

8.          Japan               126,410         1.4         77.2       84.0

9.          Bangladesh          124,774         3.1         58.1       58.2

10.         Nigeria             106,409         5.2         48.7       51.5

11.         Mexico               95,831         2.8         69.5       75.5

12.         Germany              82,024         1.4         73.3       79.7

13.         Viet Nam             77,562         2.6         64.9       69.6

14.         Phillippines         75,155         3.6         66.5       70.2

15.         Egypt                65,978         3.7         65.2       69.0

16.         Turkey               63,451         2.4         66.5       71.7

17.         Iran,                61,626         2.8         68.5       70.0

18.         Thailand             61,201         1.7         65.8       72.0

19.         Ethiopia             59,882         6.3         42.4       44.3

20.         France               58,847         1.7         74.2       82.0

21.         United Kingdom       58,649         1.7         74.7       79.6

22.         Italy                57,369         1.2         74.6       81.0

23.         Ukraine              50,500         1.4         62.8       73.2

24.         Demo.Rep.of Congo   49,139         6.4         49.2       52.3

25.         Korea Rep. of        46,430         1.7         68.8       76.0


                                    - 3 -             Press Release POP/785

                                                                    DEV/2274

                                                      16 January 2001


Information in the Yearbook is compiled from data provided by national statistics offices around the world, and prepared by the Statistics Division of the United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs.


The Demographic Yearbook 1998 (Sales No. E/F.00.XIII.1) may be ordered from the Sales Section, United Nations, New York or Geneva, or through major booksellers throughout the world.  A reference copy may be consulted by accredited correspondents at the press documents counter at Headquarters. 


The United Nations Statistics Division home page is www.un.org/depts/unsd.


* *** *

For information media. Not an official record.