Turkiye

With population of 83.4M, Turkey ranks 19th in world by population size

New TurkStat report shows fertility rate in Turkey remains below population’s replacement level of 2.10

With a population of 83.4 million people, Turkey ranks 19th among 235 countries by population size, making up 1.1% of the world’s total population, said new statistics released on Tuesday.

The Turkish Statistical Institute (TurkStat) report issued to mark July 11, World Population Day, to raise awareness of global population issues said the nation’s fertility rate remained below the population’s replacement level of 2.10.

“While the total fertility rate in 2001 was 2.38 children, in 2020 it was 1.76 children,” said TurkStat.

The total fertility rate is the average number of children that a woman could have during her reproductive years, age 15-49.

According to UN population predictions, the world population for 2020 is projected to be 7.8 billion people, with China taking the lead with 1.4 billion people, followed by India with 1.3 billion people and the US with 331.2 million.

These three countries represent over 40% of the world’s total population.

In 1989, the UN Development Program (UNDP) recommended that July 11 be observed worldwide as World Population Day to focus attention on the urgency of population issues in the context of overall development plans in order to find solutions for overpopulation issues.

On this special day, the UN Population Fund (UNFPA) selects a theme which addresses important issues of the population and works to raise awareness on this theme every year.

This year, amid the continued pandemic, it pointed out that COVID-19 endangers the health of all people in the world, especially the groups defined as the “vulnerable population,” and exacerbates gender inequalities.

The UNFPA emphasized in the theme of World Population Day 2021 that “the solution to changing fertility rates will be achieved by giving priority to reproductive health and all human rights.”

It drew attention to women and girls who lack access to reproductive health services and family planning methods, and who are also subjected to domestic violence in countries where healthcare systems are inadequate during the pandemic.

Source
AA

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