Demographics of Norway - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Demographics of Norway

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search

This article is about the demographic features of the population of Norway, including population density, ethnicity, education level, health of the populous, economic status, religious affiliations and other aspects of the population.

Contents

[edit] Ethnicity

Ethnically, the residents of Norway are predominantly ethnic Norwegians who are of North Germanic / Nordic descent, although there are communities of the Scandanivian native people Sami who settled the area around 8,000 years ago, probably from continental Europe through the Norwegian coast and through Finland along the inland glaciers. The national minorities of Norway include Scandinavian Romani, Roma (“Gypsy”), Jews, and Kvener, as well as a small Finnish community.

In recent years, Norway has become home to increasing numbers of immigrants, foreign workers, and asylum-seekers from various parts of the world (mostly from Europe and Asia). Norway had a steady influx of immigrants from Pakistan, East Asia (mainly the Chinese and Filipinos), Eastern Europe (i.e. Russians from Russia), Southern Europe (Greeks, Albanians from Kosovo, and former Yugoslavians), and Middle East countries (Arabs, especially Iraqis and Palestinians) as well as Turks and Moroccans. After ten Eastern European countries joined the EU in 2004, there has also been an influx of workers from Poland, Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.

[edit] Religion

Main article: Religion in Norway

The Lutheran Church of Norway is the state church and the vast majority remain at least nominal members. Other religions do, however, enjoy religious freedom and have prospered with immigration in recent years, particularly Islam and Roman Catholicism. Saint Olaf is the patron saint of Norway. He is regarded by some as the eternal king and has a reputation and place in history unchallenged by any other Norwegian King for the last 1000 years.

Official statistics (2003): Lutheran 86% (state church), other Christian 4.5% (mainly Protestant [3.5%] and Roman Catholic) [1%]), Islam 2%, other religions (Buddhism, Sikhism, Hinduism and Judaism) 1%, Human Ethical 1.5%, none and unknown 5%. The Eurometer poll on religious belief in Norway finds 9-10% of Norwegians in the poll survey are atheist or have no religion.

[edit] Age and sex distribution

[edit] Age structure

(2005 est.)
0–14 years: 19.7% (male 466,243; female 443,075)
15–64 years: 65.6% (male 1,234,384; female 1,486,887)
65 years and over: 14.7% (male 285,389; female 392,331)

[edit] Sex ratio

(2004 est.)
at birth: 1.05 male(s)/female
under 15 years: 1.05 male(s)/female
15–64 years: 1.03 male(s)/female
65 years and over: 0.72 male(s)/female
total population: 0.98 male(s)/female

[edit] Population growth

Demographics of Norway, 1900-2000: Total population, fertility, mortality, and migration. Source: Norwegian Bureau of Statistics

[edit] Population

4,681,100 (January 1, 2007)

[edit] Population growth rate

0.88% (in 2006)

[edit] Births and deaths

Births Deaths Birth rate Death rate
1900 66,229 35,345 29.7 15.8
1950 62,410 29,699 19.1 9.1
1970 64,551 38,723 16.6 10.0
1990 60,939 46,021 14.4 10.9
2000 59,229 44,225 13.2 9.8
2006 58,500 41,200 12.6 8.8

[edit] Total fertility rate

1.90 children born/woman (2006)

TFR for Norwegian residents by country of birth in 2004: Norway (1.8), Somalia (4.4), Iraq (4.3), Morocco (3.6), Pakistan (3.2), Turkey (2.3), Iran (1.6), Vietnam (2.0), Sri Lanka (2.7), India (1.8), and Bosnia and Herzegovina (1.7). [1]

[edit] Infant mortality rate

(2005)
total: 3.1 deaths/1,000 live births
male: 3.3 deaths/1,000 live births
female: 2.9 deaths/1,000 live births

[edit] Life expectancy at birth

(2005)
total population: 79.25 years
male: 77.7 years
female: 82.5 years

[edit] Migration

[edit] Net migration rate

1.74 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2004 est.)

[edit] Language

Main article: Norwegian language

[edit] Official languages

Norwegian (the written standards Bokmål and Nynorsk).
Five Finno-Ugric languages - Finnish, South Sami, Lule Sami, North Sami and the Kven language, are additional official languages of some municipalities.

[edit] Literacy

definition: age 15 and over can read and write
total population: 100%
male: NA%
female: NA%

[edit] See also

Personal tools
Wikipedia wpisuje się w nurt tworzenia wolnych i otwartych treści, zainspirowany działaniami informatyków tworzących oprogramowanie wolne i o otwartym kodzie źródłowym (FLOSS). Jak w wypadku wielu tego typu projektów, otwartość internetowej encyklopedii zaowocowała szybkim wzrostem. W ciągu pięciu lat Wikipedia przyciągnęła dziesiątki tysięcy autorów i redaktorów, którzy stworzyli ponad trzy miliony haseł w 100 językach. Nieproporcjonalnie duża część pracy jest wykonywana przez stosunkowo niewielką grupę 4500 osób, z których 1850 pracuje nad wersją angielską. Wersja ta jest już kilkakrotnie większa od dowolnej tradycyjnej encyklopedii (zarówno pod względem objętości, jak i liczby haseł), a 13 największych wersji językowych, w tym polska, zawiera ponad 50 tysięcy haseł. Chomiki # Motyw anioa # Motyw szatana # nauka jazdy Szczecin # Atom sprowadzenie samochodu pogotowie komputerowe Q2624A Województwo wielkopolskie praca Gorzów Wielkopolski zus rehabilitacja warszawa tlumaczenia hiszpanski