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Demographics of Nepal

The current population of Nepal is 29,164,578 as per the 2021 census. The population growth rate is 0.92% per year. [2][3]

Demographics of Nepal
Population pyramid of Nepal in 2020
Population29,164,578 (2021)[1]
Growth rate0.92%
Birth rate17.53 births/1,000 population
Death rate5.58 deaths/1,000 population
Life expectancy72.4 years
 • male71.66 years
 • female73.17 years
Fertility rate1.9 children
Infant mortality rate25.13 deaths/1,000 live births
Net migration rate-4.21 migrant(s)/1,000 population
Age structure
0–14 years28.41%
15–64 years65.69%
65 and over5.90%
Sex ratio
Total0.96 male(s)/female (2022 est.)
At birth1.06 male(s)/female
Nationality
NationalityNepali
Language
OfficialNepali
Historical population of Nepal
Magar girls of Nepal
Nepali Gorkhas
Population of Nepali (1960–2010 Nepal Census)
Hill brahmin girls in traditional attire
Magar Men playing their traditional instrument "Khaijadi

In the 2011 census, Nepal's population was approximately 26 million people with a population growth rate of 1.35% and a median age of 21.6 years.[4]

In 2016, the female median age was approximately 25 years old and the male median age was approximately 22 years old.[5] Only 4.4% of the population is estimated to be more than 65 years old, comprising 681,252 females and 597,628 males. 61% of the population is between 15 and 64 years old, and 34.6% is younger than 14 years.

In 2011, the birth rate is estimated to be 22.17 births per 1,000 people with an infant mortality rate of 46 deaths per 1,000 live births. Compared to the infant mortality rate in 2006 of 48 deaths per 1000 live births, the 2011 IMR is a slight decrease within that 5-year period. Infant mortality rate in Nepal is higher in rural regions at 44 deaths per 1000 live births, whereas in urban regions the IMR is lower at 40 deaths per 1000 live births. This difference is due to a lack of delivery assistance services in rural communities compared to their urban counterparts who have better access to hospitals and neonatal clinics.[6]

Life expectancy at birth is estimated to be 67.44 years for females and 64.94 years for males. The mortality rate is estimated to be 681 deaths per 100,000 people.

Net migration rate is estimated to be 61 migrants per 100,000 people.

According to the 2011 census, 65.9% of the total population is literate.[7]

Population growth Edit

Historical population
YearPop.±%
0 1,000,000—    
10001,500,000+50.0%
15002,000,000+33.3%
16002,500,000+25.0%
17003,000,000+20.0%
18004,000,000+33.3%
19115,638,749+41.0%
19205,573,788−1.2%
19305,532,574−0.7%
19416,283,649+13.6%
19548,256,625+31.4%
19619,412,996+14.0%
197111,555,983+22.8%
198115,022,839+30.0%
199118,491,097+23.1%
200123,151,423+25.2%
201126,494,504+14.4%
202129,164,578+10.1%
Source:

The population of Nepal has been steadily rising in recent decades. In the June 2001 census, there was a population of about 23 million in Nepal.[8] The population increased by 5 million from the preceding 1991 census; the growth rate is 2.3%.[8] The current population is roughly 30 million which contributes to an increase of about 3 million people every 5 years.

Sixty caste and linguistic subgroups have formed throughout time with the waves of migration from Tibet and India.[9] There was a moderate amount of immigration early in Nepal's history, then the population essentially remained the same without any significant fluctuations for over one hundred years.[9] Natural disasters and the following government resettlement programs in the 1950s led to a spike in internal migration from the hills to the Terai region.[9] In the 1980s the Western Chitwan Valley became a major transportation hub for all of Nepal. Along with this major change came a dramatic increase in government services, business expansion, and growing employment, especially in the agricultural industry. The valley's population grew rapidly through both in-migration and natural increase.[9]

Vital statistics Edit

UN estimates Edit

Period Live births per year Deaths per year Natural change per year CBR[i] CDR[i] NC[i] TFR[i] IMR[i] Life expectancy (years)
1950   395,000   218,000   177,000 47.1 26.0 21.1 6.00 226.7 37.68
1951   404,000   222,000   181,000 47.0 25.9 21.1 6.02 226.0 37.75
1952   411,000   226,000   185,000 46.9 25.8 21.1 6.03 225.4 37.84
1953   418,000   231,000   187,000 46.7 25.8 20.9 6.04 225.0 37.87
1954   424,000   235,000   189,000 46.4 25.7 20.7 6.04 224.6 37.90
1955   428,000   238,000   190,000 46.1 25.6 20.5 6.03 224.0 37.98
1956   433,000   241,000   192,000 45.8 25.5 20.3 6.02 223.2 38.05
1957   438,000   244,000   194,000 45.4 25.3 20.1 6.01 222.2 38.14
1958   444,000   248,000   196,000 45.2 25.2 20.0 6.00 221.1 38.19
1959   449,000   250,000   199,000 44.9 25.0 19.9 5.99 219.4 38.41
1960   458,000   253,000   206,000 45.1 24.9 20.2 6.03 217.1 38.56
1961   468,000   255,000   213,000 45.1 24.6 20.5 6.06 214.4 38.86
1962   476,000   258,000   218,000 45.0 24.4 20.6 6.08 211.2 39.15
1963   483,000   260,000   223,000 44.8 24.1 20.7 6.07 207.5 39.45
1964   492,000   260,000   231,000 44.7 23.7 21.0 6.07 203.1 39.99
1965   498,000   261,000   237,000 44.3 23.3 21.1 6.03 198.7 40.45
1966   505,000   262,000   243,000 44.0 22.9 21.2 6.00 194.2 40.87
1967   513,000   263,000   251,000 43.8 22.4 21.4 5.98 189.7 41.40
1968   523,000   264,000   259,000 43.7 22.1 21.6 5.97 185.5 41.80
1969   529,000   264,000   265,000 43.3 21.6 21.7 5.91 181.1 42.33
1970   537,000   265,000   272,000 43.0 21.2 21.8 5.88 177.1 42.83
1971   546,000   265,000   280,000 42.7 20.8 21.9 5.84 172.9 43.31
1972   551,000   267,000   284,000 42.2 20.4 21.8 5.78 169.1 43.69
1973   554,000   268,000   287,000 41.6 20.1 21.5 5.69 165.5 44.04
1974   568,000   269,000   299,000 41.7 19.7 22.0 5.74 161.9 44.46
1975   579,000   269,000   310,000 41.6 19.3 22.3 5.75 158.2 45.04
1976   592,000   270,000   322,000 41.6 19.0 22.6 5.75 154.6 45.54
1977   601,000   271,000   330,000 41.3 18.6 22.7 5.73 150.9 46.01
1978   614,000   270,000   344,000 41.2 18.1 23.1 5.72 147.0 46.68
1979   625,000   270,000   355,000 41.0 17.7 23.3 5.69 142.9 47.27
1980   632,000   269,000   363,000 40.5 17.2 23.3 5.64 139.0 47.89
1981   645,000   269,000   375,000 40.4 16.9 23.5 5.60 135.4 48.39
1982   658,000   269,000   388,000 40.2 16.5 23.7 5.58 130.9 48.94
1983   672,000   270,000   401,000 40.1 16.1 24.0 5.56 126.8 49.43
1984   686,000   268,000   418,000 40.0 15.6 24.4 5.54 122.7 50.23
1985   695,000   266,000   429,000 39.6 15.2 24.4 5.47 118.6 50.88
1986   706,000   264,000   441,000 39.3 14.7 24.6 5.42 114.3 51.54
1987   717,000   259,000   457,000 39.0 14.1 24.9 5.36 110.2 52.48
1988   726,000   258,000   469,000 38.7 13.7 25.0 5.31 105.7 53.07
1989   735,000   251,000   484,000 38.3 13.1 25.3 5.25 101.0 54.13
1990   748,000   248,000   499,000 38.1 12.7 25.5 5.21 96.5 54.83
1991   757,000   244,000   513,000 37.6 12.1 25.5 5.14 92.1 55.71
1992   768,000   239,000   529,000 37.1 11.6 25.6 5.04 87.6 56.71
1993   791,000   236,000   555,000 37.1 11.1 26.1 5.00 83.8 57.62
1994   795,000   230,000   565,000 36.4 10.5 25.9 4.91 79.4 58.55
1995   797,000   226,000   571,000 35.6 10.1 25.5 4.79 75.6 59.32
1996   787,000   222,000   565,000 34.5 9.7 24.7 4.60 72.1 59.98
1997   773,000   216,000   557,000 33.2 9.3 23.9 4.39 68.3 60.77
1998   768,000   210,000   558,000 32.3 8.8 23.5 4.24 65.2 61.55
1999   760,000   207,000   553,000 31.4 8.5 22.8 4.08 61.8 62.11
2000   754,000   204,000   550,000 30.6 8.3 22.3 3.94 58.7 62.61
2001   739,000   199,000   540,000 29.5 7.9 21.6 3.76 55.8 63.34
2002   724,000   202,000   522,000 28.5 8.0 20.5 3.59 53.2 63.26
2003   719,000   196,000   523,000 27.9 7.6 20.3 3.46 50.5 64.20
2004   707,000   192,000   515,000 27.1 7.4 19.7 3.31 48.1 64.82
2005   687,000   188,000   499,000 26.0 7.1 18.9 3.14 46.0 65.46
2006   666,000   187,000   479,000 25.0 7.0 18.0 2.97 44.1 65.87
2007   650,000   185,000   465,000 24.2 6.9 17.3 2.84 42.2 66.33
2008   637,000   188,000   449,000 23.6 6.9 16.6 2.72 40.1 66.42
2009   625,000   187,000   438,000 23.0 6.9 16.1 2.60 38.3 66.76
2010   617,000   191,000   426,000 22.6 7.0 15.6 2.51 36.7 66.81
2011   614,000   189,000   425,000 22.4 6.9 15.5 2.44 35.1 67.31
2012   615,000   192,000   423,000 22.3 7.0 15.4 2.39 33.7 67.47
2013   613,000   190,000   423,000 22.2 6.9 15.4 2.33 32.2 67.97
2014   614,000   193,000   421,000 22.2 7.0 15.2 2.29 30.6 68.09
2015   611,000   204,000   407,000 22.1 7.4 14.7 2.25 29.6 67.46
2016   607,000   193,000   414,000 21.8 6.9 14.8 2.20 27.7 68.78
2017   603,000   197,000   407,000 21.4 7.0 14.4 2.15 26.6 68.91
2018   600,000   201,000   399,000 21.0 7.0 14.0 2.10 25.5 68.98
2019   602,000   198,000   404,000 20.9 6.9 14.0 2.08 24.5 69.56
2020   603,000   210,000   392,000 20.6 7.2 13.4 2.06 23.8 69.25
2021   610,000   232,000   377,000 20.4 7.8 12.6 2.03 22.8 68.45
  1. ^ a b c d e CBR = crude birth rate (per 1000); CDR = crude death rate (per 1000); NC = natural change (per 1000); TFR = total fertility rate (number of children per woman); IMR = infant mortality rate per 1000 births

Source: UN DESA, World Population Prospects, 2022[10]

Structure of the population Edit

Structure of the population (22.06.2011) (Census):[11]
Age group Male Female Total %
Total 12 849 041 13 645 463 26 494 504 100
0–4 1 314 957 1 253 006 2 567 963 9.69
5–9 1 635 176 1 569 683 3 204 859 12.10
10–14 1 764 630 1 710 794 3 475 424 13.12
15–19 1 443 191 1 488 789 2 931 980 11.07
20–24 1 043 981 1 314 090 2 358 071 8.90
25–29 917 243 1 162 111 2 079 354 7.85
30–34 770 577 964 728 1 735 305 6.55
35–39 740 200 864 119 1 604 319 6.06
40–44 660 290 725 831 1 386 121 5.23
45–49 575 101 597 858 1 172 959 4.43
50–54 505 864 499 612 1 005 476 3.80
55–59 412 892 405 371 818 263 3.09
60–64 368 451 388 376 756 827 2.86
65–69 277 782 276 667 554 449 2.09
70–74 199 610 195 543 395 153 1.49
75–79 117 358 117 777 235 135 0.89
80–84 62 787 65 990 128 777 0.49
85–89 25 810 26 716 52 526 0.20
90–94 8 940 11 395 20 335 0.08
95+ 4 201 7 007 11 208 0.04
Age group Male Female Total Percent
0–14 4 714 763 4 533 483 9 248 246 34.91
15–64 7 437 790 8 410 885 15 848 675 59.82
65+ 696 488 701 095 1 397 583 5.27
Population Estimates by Sex and Age Group (01.VII.2016) (Based on the results of the 2011 Population Census.):[12]
Age Group Male Female Total %
Total 13 784 009 14 647 486 28 431 494 100
0–4 1 525 630 1 424 537 2 950 167 10.38
5–9 1 368 495 1 305 783 2 674 278 9.41
10–14 1 564 080 1 498 784 3 062 865 10.77
15–19 1 680 525 1 636 790 3 317 315 11.67
20–24 1 476 611 1 545 309 3 021 919 10.63
25–29 1 033 222 1 307 709 2 340 931 8.23
30–34 860 512 1 138 303 1 998 816 7.03
35–39 771 970 968 815 1 740 784 6.12
40–44 691 192 830 797 1 521 989 5.35
45–49 632 128 701 958 1 334 086 4.69
50–54 552 834 587 346 1 140 179 4.01
55–59 462 675 468 275 930 950 3.27
60–64 382 738 387 360 770 098 2.71
65–69 303 255 324 567 627 821 2.21
70–74 231 131 251 818 482 949 1.70
75–79 162 123 177 791 339 914 1.20
80+ 84 889 91 543 176 432 0.62
Age group Male Female Total Percent
0–14 4 458 205 4 229 104 8 687 309 30.56
15–64 8 544 406 9 572 663 18 117 069 63.72
65+ 781 398 845 719 1 627 117 5.72
Population Estimates by Sex and Age Group (01.VII.2021) (Based on the results of the 2011 Population Census.):[13]
Age Group Male Female Total %
Total 14 734 201 15 643 853 30 378 055 100
0–4 1 575 174 1 459 441 3 034 615 9.99
5–9 1 515 051 1 414 346 2 929 396 9.64
10–14 1 364 270 1 301 906 2 666 176 8.78
15–19 1 549 116 1 493 723 3 042 838 10.02
20–24 1 646 148 1 627 247 3 273 395 10.78
25–29 1 437 092 1 531 252 2 968 344 9.77
30–34 1 002 200 1 293 007 2 295 206 7.56
35–39 835 668 1 124 125 1 959 793 6.45
40–44 749 759 954 458 1 704 217 5.61
45–49 668 244 814 481 1 482 726 4.88
50–54 604 753 682 332 1 287 085 4.24
55–59 518 686 563 320 1 082 006 3.56
60–64 420 366 439 121 859 487 2.83
65-69 330 597 348 942 679 539 2.24
70-74 241 518 272 499 514 018 1.69
75-79 160 174 186 318 346 493 1.14
80+ 115 385 137 335 252 721 0.83
Age group Male Female Total Percent
0–14 4 454 495 4 175 693 8 630 188 28.41
15–64 9 432 032 10 523 066 19 955 098 65.69
65+ 847 674 945 094 1 792 768 5.90

Life expectancy Edit

 
Historical development of life expectancy in Nepal
Period Life expectancy in
years
Period Life expectancy in
years
1950–1955 34.0 1985–1990 52.1
1955–1960 34.6 1990–1995 56.4
1960–1965 36.2 1995–2000 60.5
1965–1970 39.1 2000–2005 64.0
1970–1975 42.0 2005–2010 66.7
1975–1980 44.9 2010–2015 68.9
1980–1985 48.3

Source: UN World Population Prospects[14]

.

Nepal Demographic and Health Survey Edit

Total fertility rate (TFR) (wanted fertility rate) and crude birth rate (CBR):[15]

Year CBR (total) TFR (total) CBR (urban) TFR (urban) CBR (rural) TFR (rural)
1996 37 4.64 (2.9) 27 2.85 (1.9) 38 4.83 (3.1)
2001 33.5 4.1 (2.5) 20.6 2.1 (1.4) 34.9 4.4 (2.6)
2006 28.4 3.1 (2.0) 21.9 2.1 (1.4) 29.5 3.3 (2.1)
2011 24.3 2.6 (1.8) 16.6 1.6 (1.2) 25.5 2.8 (1.8)
2016 22.4 2.3 (1.7) 19.9 2.0 (1.5) 26.3 2.9 (2.1)
2022 20.0 2.1 (1.7) 19.3 2.0 (1.6) 21.4 2.4 (1.8)

The following demographic statistics are from the 2011 Nepal Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS).[16]

Median birth intervals (median number of months since preceding birth)

Total: 36.2
Rural: 35.9
Urban: 40.3 (2011)

Median age at first birth

Median age: 20.1 (2011)

Fertility rate – past trend and present

Total fertility rate: 4.6 children born/woman (1996)
Total fertility rate: 4.1 children born/woman (2001)
Total fertility rate: 3.1 children born/woman (2006)
Total fertility rate: 2.6 children born/woman
Rural fertility rate: 2.8 children born/woman
Urban fertility rate: 1.6 children born/woman (2011)

Ideal family size – mean ideal number of children

Overall (female/male): 2.1 / 2.3
Currently married (female/male): 2.2 / 2.3
Urban (female/male): 1.9 / 2.0
Rural (female/male): 2.2 / 2.3 (2011)

Ideal family size by gender and age group

Below is a table of the ideal family size by gender and age for 2011.
Age Women Men
15–19 1.9 2.2
20–24 1.9 2.1
25–29 2.1 2.1
30–34 2.2 2.3
35–39 2.3 2.4
40–44 2.5 2.4
45–49 2.6 2.6

CIA World Factbook Edit

The following demographic statistics are from the CIA World Factbook, unless otherwise indicated.

Nationality

Noun: Nepali
Adjective: Nepali

Religions

Hindu 81.34%, Buddhist 9.04%, Muslim 4.38%, Kirant 3.04%, other 2.2% (2011 census).

Literacy

Definition: age 15 and over can read and write
Total population: 67.9%
Male: 78.6%
Female: 59.7% (2018)

Population

29,033,914 (2021 census.)

Age structure

0–14 years: 30.93% (male 4,646,048/female 4,333,105)
15–24 years: 21.86% (male 3,176,158/female 3,169,721)
25–54 years: 35.99% (male 4,707,264/female 5,740,985)
55–64 years: 6.22% (male 877,288/female 927,202)
65 years and over: 5.02% (male 723,523/female 732,620) (2016 est.)

Median age

total: 23.6 years
male: 22.4 years
female: 24.8 years (2016 est.)

Population growth rate

1.24% (2016 est.)

Birth rate

19.9 births/1,000 population (2016 est.)

Death rate

5.7 deaths/1,000 population (2016 est.)

Net migration rate

1.9 migrants/1,000 population (2016 est.)

Total fertility rate

2.18 children born/woman (2016 est.)

Urbanization

urban population: 18.6% of total population (2015)
rate of urbanization: 3.18% annual rate of change (2010–15 est.)

Sex ratio

at birth: 1.04 males/female
0–14 years: 1.07 males/female
15–24 years: 1 males/female
25–54 years: 0.82 males/female
55–64 years: 0.95 males/female
65 years and over: 0.86 males/female
total population: 0.99 males/female (2016 est.)
CIA World Factbook statistics
Total dependency ratio 61.4
Youth dependency ratio 52.5
Elderly dependency ratio 8.8
Infant mortality rate (IMR) 27.9 deaths/ 1,000 live births
Male IMR 29.2 deaths/ 1,000 live births
Female IMR 26.6 deaths/ 1,000 live births
Life expectancy at birth (total pop.) 71 years
Life expectancy at birth (male) 70.4 years
Life expectancy at birth (female) 71.6 years

Languages Edit

  Nepali (44.64%)
  Maithili (11.67%)
  Bhojpuri (5.98%)
  Tharu (5.77%)
  Tamang (5.11%)
  Newar (3.20%)
  Bajjika (2.99%)
  Magar (2.98%)
  Doteli (2.97%)
  Urdu (2.61%)
  Awadhi (1.89%)
  Limbu (1.30%)
  Gurung (1.23%)
  Baitadeli (1.03%)
  Others (6.63%)

Nepal's diverse linguistic heritage evolved from three major language groups: Indo-Aryan, Tibeto-Burman languages, and various indigenous language isolates. According to the 2001 national census, 92 different living languages are spoken in Nepal (a 93rd category was "unspecified"). Based upon the 2011 census, the major languages spoken in Nepal[17] (percentage spoken out of the mother tongue language) includes

Nepali (derived from Khas bhasa) is an Indo-Aryan language and is written in Devanagari script. Nepali was the language of the house of Gorkhas in the late 18th century and became the official, national language that serves as the lingua franca among Nepali of different ethnolinguistic groups. Maithili, Bhojpuri, Bajjika and Awadhi languages are spoken in the southern Terai. There has been a surge in the number and percentage of people who understand English. Majority of the urban and a significant number of the rural schools are English-medium schools. Higher education in technical, medical, scientific and engineering fields are entirely in English. Nepal Bhasa, the mother-tongue of the Newars, is widely used and spoken in and around Kathmandu Valley and in major Newar trade towns across Nepal.

Other languages, particularly in the Inner Terai hill and mountain regions, are remnants of the country's pre-unification history of dozens of political entities isolated by mountains and gorges. These languages typically are limited to an area spanning about one day's walk. Beyond that distance, dialects and languages lose mutual intelligibility. However, there are some major languages spoken by indigenous peoples in the region: Magar and Gurung in the west-central hills, Tamang in the east-centre and Limbu in the east. In the high Himalayas are spoken various Tibetan languages, including Bhotia.

Since Nepal's unification, various indigenous languages have come under threat of extinction as the government of Nepal has marginalized their use through strict policies[citation needed][18] designed to promote Nepali as the official language. Indigenous languages which have gone extinct or are critically threatened include Byangsi, Chonkha, and Longaba. Since democracy was restored in 1990, however, the government has worked to improve the marginalization of these languages. Tribhuvan University began surveying and recording threatened languages in 2010 and the government intends to use this information to include more languages on the next Nepali census.[19]

Religion Edit

Religion in Nepal (2021 census)[20]

  Hinduism (81.19%)
  Buddhism (8.21%)
  Islam (5.09%)
  Kirat Mundhum (3.17%)
  Christianity (1.76%)
  Other (0.9%)

As of the 2021 census, 81.19% of the Nepali population was Hindu, 8.21% Buddhist, 5.09% Muslim, 3.17% Kiratist/Yumaist, 1.76% Christian, and 0.9% followed other or no religion.[21]

 
Nepali Hindu bride and groom

Nepal defines itself as a secular nation according to Constitution of Nepal[22] It is common for many Hindus in the country to also worship Buddhist deities simultaneously with Hindu traditions. The notion of religion in Nepal is more fluid than other countries, particularly Western countries.[23] The Nepali people build their social networks through their religious celebrations, which are a central part to the whole of communities within the country.[22]

There is a general idea held by the Nepali people that there is an omnipotent, transcendental "moral order" that is sacred to Hinduism. This idea exists along with the constant presence of chaos and disorder in the material world.[23] In the northwestern region of the country, this all-encompassing state of disorder in the world is synonymous with human affliction, which the religious shamans are believed to alleviate.[23]

Kathmandu Valley is home to the Newars, a major ethnic group in Nepal. The city Bhaktapur is located inside of Kathmandu Valley. Bhaktapur was once an independent Hindu Kingdom.[23] Individual homes typically have at least one shrine devoted to personal deities, with an altar displaying flowers, fruit, and oil among other offerings to the Gods.[22] The perimeter of Kathmandu Valley is lined with shrines devoted to Hindu goddesses, whose purpose is to protect the city from chaotic events. At least one shrine can be found on the vast majority of streets in Kathmandu.[22] The people of Nepal do not feel the need to segregate or compete based upon religion, so Hindu and Buddhist shrines are often coexisting in the same areas.[22] The areas outside of the city are perceived to always possess some form of wild or disordered nature, so the Nepali people inside of the city lines regularly worship the Hindu gods through public ceremonies.[23]

The Hindu god Vishnu is believed to symbolise moral order in the Newar society. The natural human shortcomings in maintaining this moral order is believed to be represented by the Hindu god Shiva.[23] The destruction of Shiva is neutralised by the preserver Vishnu, who tips the scales to restore order.[23] In recent times, there has been a rise in political violence, specifically Maoist violence.[22] This increased violence, along with the widespread poverty, has caused the Nepali to seek stability and peace in religion.

Nepal's constitution continues long-standing legal provisions prohibiting discrimination against other religions (but also proselytization). The king was deified as the earthly manifestation of the Hindu god Vishnu. On May 19, 2006, the government faced a constitutional crisis, the House of Representatives which had been just reformed, having been previously dissolved, declared Nepal a "secular state". However, the 2001 census identified 80.6% of the population as Hindu and 10.7% as Buddhist (although many people labeled Hindu or Buddhist often practice a syncretic blend of Hinduism, Buddhism, or animist traditions), 4.2% of the population was Muslim, 3.6% of the population followed the indigenous Kirat Mundhum religion and Christianity was practiced by 0.45% of the population.[24]

Buddhist and Hindu shrines and festivals are respected and celebrated by most Nepali. Certain animist practises of old indigenous religions continue to survive to the modern era.

Ethnic and regional equity Edit

Ethnic groups of Nepal (2011)[20]

  Chhetri (16.6%)
  Bahun (12.18%)
  Magar (7.12%)
  Tharu (6.56%)
  Tamang (5.81%)
  Newar (4.99%)
  Kami (4.75%)
  Muslim (4.39%)
  Yadav (4.3%)
  Rai (2.34%)
  Others (31.28%)

Nepali was the national language and Sanskrit became a required school subject.[25] Children who spoke Nepali natively and who were exposed to Sanskrit had much better chances[citation needed] of passing the national examinations at the end of high school, which meant they had better employment prospects and could continue into higher education. Children who natively spoke local languages of the Madhesh and Hills, or Tibetan dialects prevailing in the high mountains were at a considerable disadvantage. This history of exclusion coupled with poor prospects for improvement created grievances that encouraged many in ethnic communities such as Madhesi and Tharu in the Tharuhat and Madhesh and Kham Magar in the mid-western hills to support the Unified Communist Party of Nepal (Maoist) and various other armed Maoist opposition groups such as the JTMM during and after the Nepali Civil War. The negotiated end to this war forced King Gyanendra to abdicate in 2008. Issues of ethnic and regional equity have tended to dominate the agenda of the new republican government and continue to be divisive. Today, even after the end of a 10-year-old Maoist conflict, the upper caste dominates every field in Nepal. Although Newars are low in numbers, their urban living habitat gives them a competitive advantage. Kayastha of Madhesh are the toppers in Human Development Index.[26] From a gender perspective, Newari women are the most literate and lead in every sector. Brahmin and Chhetri women have experienced less social and economic mobility compared to Newari women. Specifically, Brahmin women experience less equality due to their predominately rural living conditions which deprives them of access to certain educational and healthcare advantages.[27][28][29][30][31]

Nepali diaspora Edit

 
Gurkhas of Nepal.

Nepali in the U.K. Edit

In the 2001 census, approximately 6,000 Nepali were living in the UK.[32] According to latest figure from Office for National Statistics estimates that 51,000 Nepal-born people are currently resident in the UK.[33] There has been increasing interest in the opportunities offered in the UK by the Nepali, especially education. Between the years of 2001 to 2006, there were 7,500 applications for student visas.[32]

Nepali in Hong Kong Edit

The Nepali people residing in Hong Kong are primarily made up of children of ex-Gurkhas; born in Hong Kong during their parents' service with the British Army's Brigade of Gurkhas, which was based in Hong Kong from the 1970s until the handover. Large groups of Nepali people can be found in Shek Kong and Yuen Long District off of the main bases of the British army. Many ex-Gurkhas remained in Hong Kong after the end of their service under the sponsorship of their Hong Kong-born children, who held right of abode.

Nepali of middle age or older generations in Hong Kong are predominantly found in security, while those of younger generations are predominantly found in the business industry.

Mostly the people from Kirati ethnic groups such as Rai and Limbu are the ones residing in Hong Kong and other neighbouring nations such as Singapore and Japan.

Nepali overseas Edit

Nepali migrants abroad have suffered tremendous hardships, including some 7,500 deaths in the Middle East and Malaysia alone since the year 2000, some 3,500 in Saudi Arabia.[34]

Overseas Nepalis population
Country Article Population
India Nepalis in India 8 million [35]
United Arab Emirates Nepalis in the United Arab Emirates 400,000
Saudi Arabia Nepalis in Saudi Arabia 250,000
Australia Nepalis in Australia 218,870 [36]
Qatar Nepalis in Qatar 200,000[37]
Japan Nepalis in Japan 139,393[38]
United Kingdom[33] Nepalis in the United Kingdom 62,000
Iraq[39] 30,000
China Nepalis in China 21,000
Hong Kong Nepalis in Hong Kong 16,000
Malaysia Nepalis in Malaysia 6,175
South Korea Nepalis in South Korea 22,015
Canada Nepali in Canada 14,385[40]
Singapore Nepalis in Singapore 4000
Total overseas Nepali population ~9,616,709

Foreign population in Nepal Edit

According to the 2001 census, there were 116,571 foreign born citizens in Nepal; 90% of them were of Indian origin followed by Bhutan, Pakistan and China(Bhote).[41] This number does not include the refugees from Bhutan and Tibet.

 
Foreign population in Nepal as per census of 2001

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Nepal's population is now 29,164,578".
  2. ^ Republica. "Nepal's population is now 29,164,578". My Republica. Retrieved 24 March 2023.
  3. ^ "Nepal makes public final data of 12th national census". kathmandupost.com. Retrieved 24 March 2023.
  4. ^ (PDF). Central Bureau of Statistics (Nepal). Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 April 2013. Retrieved 26 November 2012.
  5. ^ . www.cia.gov. Archived from the original on 13 June 2007. Retrieved 4 April 2017.
  6. ^ Lamichhane, Reeta; Zhao, Yun; Paudel, Susan; Adewuyi, Emmanuel O. (1 January 2017). "Factors associated with infant mortality in Nepal: a comparative analysis of Nepal demographic and health surveys (NDHS) 2006 and 2011". BMC Public Health. 17 (1): 53. doi:10.1186/s12889-016-3922-z. ISSN 1471-2458. PMC 5223552. PMID 28068969.
  7. ^ "Nepalese peoples and nationality law". The World Factbook. CIA. Retrieved 3 September 2016.
  8. ^ a b "Population Growth Continues to Hinder Nepal's Economic Progress". www.prb.org. Retrieved 28 March 2017.
  9. ^ a b c d Massey, Douglas S.; Axinn, William G. (August 2010). "Environmental change and out-migration: evidence from Nepal". Population and Environment. 32 (2–3): 109–136. doi:10.1007/s11111-010-0119-8. PMC 3042700. PMID 21350676.
  10. ^ United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division (2022). "World Population Prospects 2022 Demographic indicators by region, subregion and country, annually for 1950-2100" (XLS (91MB)). United Nations Population Division. 27 (Online ed.). New York: United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Population Division. rows 7870:7941, cols X,AE,S,AH,S,AA,AV,AI. from the original on 9 August 2022.
  11. ^ . Archived from the original on 21 September 2004.
  12. ^ "UNSD — Demographic and Social Statistics".
  13. ^ Statistics United Nations
  14. ^ "World Population Prospects – Population Division – United Nations". Retrieved 15 July 2017.
  15. ^ "MEASURE DHS: Demographic and Health Surveys". worldbank.org.
  16. ^ "Nepal Demographic and Health Survey 2011" (PDF). Retrieved 7 May 2011.
  17. ^ (PDF). Central Bureau of Statistics, Nepal. 2011. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 December 2012.
  18. ^ Toba, Sueyosh (First Quarter 2005). "Diversity and Endangerment of Languages in Nepal". UNESCO Kathmandu series of monographs and working papers. 1 (1): 23–24 – via UNESCO.
  19. ^ Tumbahang, Govinda Bahadur (2010). "Marginalization of indigenous languages of Nepal". Contributions to Nepalese Studies. 37: 69 – via Expanded Academic.
  20. ^ a b "South Asia ::NEPAL". CIA The World Factbook. 10 May 2022.
  21. ^ (PDF). cbs.gov.np. p. 16. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 April 2013.
  22. ^ a b c d e f Ostrowski, Ally (2006). "The Framing of Religion". South Asian Popular Culture. 4 (1): 3–18. doi:10.1080/14746680600555410. S2CID 142489523.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g Stone, Linda (2000). "Order, identity, and religion in Nepal". Reviews in Anthropology. 29 (1): 71–82. doi:10.1080/00988157.2000.9978248. S2CID 161737605.
  24. ^ (PDF). www.cbs.gov.np. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 April 2008.
  25. ^ "Government decision to introduce Sanskrit in school education draws controversy".
  26. ^ "Include whom? – Nepali Times".
  27. ^ (PDF). Issue 12. OCHA. April 2007. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 November 2009. Retrieved 7 May 2011. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  28. ^ "OCHA Nepal – Situation Overview" (PDF). Issue 16. OCHA. July–August 2007. Retrieved 7 May 2011. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  29. ^ (PDF). Issue 30. OCHA. June–July 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 February 2010. Retrieved 7 May 2011. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  30. ^ Sharma, Hari (18 November 2010). . Gulmi: The Himalayan Times online. Archived from the original on 25 May 2012. Retrieved 7 May 2011.
  31. ^ Hatlebakk, Magnus (2007). "Economic and social structures that may explain the recent conflicts in the Terai of Nepal" (PDF). Kathmandu: Norwegian Embassy. Retrieved 8 May 2011.
  32. ^ a b Jessica, Sims (2008). Soldiers, Migrants, and Citizens – Nepalese in Britain. Runnymede. p. 1. ISBN 978-1-906732-09-7.
  33. ^ a b "Population by Country of birth and nationality Jan10-Dec10". Office for National Statistics. September 2011. Retrieved 17 September 2010.
  34. ^ Sedhai, Roshan (7 January 2014). . ekantipur.com. Archived from the original on 26 June 2015.
  35. ^ "About India Nepal Relations".
  36. ^ "Australian Bureau of Statistics". Australian Bureau of Statistics. Australian Bureau of Statistics. Retrieved 28 April 2020.
  37. ^ . bq Magazine. Archived from the original on 23 April 2015.
  38. ^ 令和4年末現在における在留外国人数について
  39. ^ "Nepal government lifts Iraq working ban". BBC News. 28 July 2010.
  40. ^ Statistics Canada. "Data tables, 2016 Census". Retrieved 10 March 2019.
  41. ^ Subedi, Bhim Prasad (2007). "The Issue of Foreign Born Population in Nepal: A Short Essay in Honor of Dr. Harka Gurung". The Himalayan Review. 38: 23–34.

  This article incorporates public domain material from The World Factbook (2023 ed.). CIA. (Archived 2003 edition)

External links Edit

  • Nepal Encyclopedia Ethnicity Page
  • Population of Nepal 2078
  • Nepal information Site
  • Current Situation of Population In Nepal Census 2068
  • People of Nepal

demographics, nepal, current, population, nepal, 2021, census, population, growth, rate, year, population, pyramid, nepal, 2020population29, 2021, growth, rate0, birth, rate17, births, populationdeath, rate5, deaths, populationlife, expectancy72, years, male71. The current population of Nepal is 29 164 578 as per the 2021 census The population growth rate is 0 92 per year 2 3 Demographics of NepalPopulation pyramid of Nepal in 2020Population29 164 578 2021 1 Growth rate0 92 Birth rate17 53 births 1 000 populationDeath rate5 58 deaths 1 000 populationLife expectancy72 4 years male71 66 years female73 17 yearsFertility rate1 9 childrenInfant mortality rate25 13 deaths 1 000 live birthsNet migration rate 4 21 migrant s 1 000 populationAge structure0 14 years28 41 15 64 years65 69 65 and over5 90 Sex ratioTotal0 96 male s female 2022 est At birth1 06 male s femaleNationalityNationalityNepaliLanguageOfficialNepaliHistorical population of NepalMagar girls of NepalNepali GorkhasPopulation of Nepali 1960 2010 Nepal Census Hill brahmin girls in traditional attireMagar Men playing their traditional instrument KhaijadiIn the 2011 census Nepal s population was approximately 26 million people with a population growth rate of 1 35 and a median age of 21 6 years 4 In 2016 the female median age was approximately 25 years old and the male median age was approximately 22 years old 5 Only 4 4 of the population is estimated to be more than 65 years old comprising 681 252 females and 597 628 males 61 of the population is between 15 and 64 years old and 34 6 is younger than 14 years In 2011 the birth rate is estimated to be 22 17 births per 1 000 people with an infant mortality rate of 46 deaths per 1 000 live births Compared to the infant mortality rate in 2006 of 48 deaths per 1000 live births the 2011 IMR is a slight decrease within that 5 year period Infant mortality rate in Nepal is higher in rural regions at 44 deaths per 1000 live births whereas in urban regions the IMR is lower at 40 deaths per 1000 live births This difference is due to a lack of delivery assistance services in rural communities compared to their urban counterparts who have better access to hospitals and neonatal clinics 6 Life expectancy at birth is estimated to be 67 44 years for females and 64 94 years for males The mortality rate is estimated to be 681 deaths per 100 000 people Net migration rate is estimated to be 61 migrants per 100 000 people According to the 2011 census 65 9 of the total population is literate 7 Contents 1 Population growth 2 Vital statistics 2 1 UN estimates 2 2 Structure of the population 2 3 Life expectancy 3 Nepal Demographic and Health Survey 3 1 CIA World Factbook 4 Languages 5 Religion 6 Ethnic and regional equity 7 Nepali diaspora 7 1 Nepali in the U K 7 2 Nepali in Hong Kong 7 3 Nepali overseas 8 Foreign population in Nepal 9 See also 10 References 11 External linksPopulation growth EditHistorical populationYearPop 01 000 000 10001 500 000 50 0 15002 000 000 33 3 16002 500 000 25 0 17003 000 000 20 0 18004 000 000 33 3 19115 638 749 41 0 19205 573 788 1 2 19305 532 574 0 7 19416 283 649 13 6 19548 256 625 31 4 19619 412 996 14 0 197111 555 983 22 8 198115 022 839 30 0 199118 491 097 23 1 200123 151 423 25 2 201126 494 504 14 4 202129 164 578 10 1 Source The population of Nepal has been steadily rising in recent decades In the June 2001 census there was a population of about 23 million in Nepal 8 The population increased by 5 million from the preceding 1991 census the growth rate is 2 3 8 The current population is roughly 30 million which contributes to an increase of about 3 million people every 5 years Sixty caste and linguistic subgroups have formed throughout time with the waves of migration from Tibet and India 9 There was a moderate amount of immigration early in Nepal s history then the population essentially remained the same without any significant fluctuations for over one hundred years 9 Natural disasters and the following government resettlement programs in the 1950s led to a spike in internal migration from the hills to the Terai region 9 In the 1980s the Western Chitwan Valley became a major transportation hub for all of Nepal Along with this major change came a dramatic increase in government services business expansion and growing employment especially in the agricultural industry The valley s population grew rapidly through both in migration and natural increase 9 Vital statistics EditUN estimates Edit Period Live births per year Deaths per year Natural change per year CBR i CDR i NC i TFR i IMR i Life expectancy years 1950 395 000 218 000 177 000 47 1 26 0 21 1 6 00 226 7 37 681951 404 000 222 000 181 000 47 0 25 9 21 1 6 02 226 0 37 751952 411 000 226 000 185 000 46 9 25 8 21 1 6 03 225 4 37 841953 418 000 231 000 187 000 46 7 25 8 20 9 6 04 225 0 37 871954 424 000 235 000 189 000 46 4 25 7 20 7 6 04 224 6 37 901955 428 000 238 000 190 000 46 1 25 6 20 5 6 03 224 0 37 981956 433 000 241 000 192 000 45 8 25 5 20 3 6 02 223 2 38 051957 438 000 244 000 194 000 45 4 25 3 20 1 6 01 222 2 38 141958 444 000 248 000 196 000 45 2 25 2 20 0 6 00 221 1 38 191959 449 000 250 000 199 000 44 9 25 0 19 9 5 99 219 4 38 411960 458 000 253 000 206 000 45 1 24 9 20 2 6 03 217 1 38 561961 468 000 255 000 213 000 45 1 24 6 20 5 6 06 214 4 38 861962 476 000 258 000 218 000 45 0 24 4 20 6 6 08 211 2 39 151963 483 000 260 000 223 000 44 8 24 1 20 7 6 07 207 5 39 451964 492 000 260 000 231 000 44 7 23 7 21 0 6 07 203 1 39 991965 498 000 261 000 237 000 44 3 23 3 21 1 6 03 198 7 40 451966 505 000 262 000 243 000 44 0 22 9 21 2 6 00 194 2 40 871967 513 000 263 000 251 000 43 8 22 4 21 4 5 98 189 7 41 401968 523 000 264 000 259 000 43 7 22 1 21 6 5 97 185 5 41 801969 529 000 264 000 265 000 43 3 21 6 21 7 5 91 181 1 42 331970 537 000 265 000 272 000 43 0 21 2 21 8 5 88 177 1 42 831971 546 000 265 000 280 000 42 7 20 8 21 9 5 84 172 9 43 311972 551 000 267 000 284 000 42 2 20 4 21 8 5 78 169 1 43 691973 554 000 268 000 287 000 41 6 20 1 21 5 5 69 165 5 44 041974 568 000 269 000 299 000 41 7 19 7 22 0 5 74 161 9 44 461975 579 000 269 000 310 000 41 6 19 3 22 3 5 75 158 2 45 041976 592 000 270 000 322 000 41 6 19 0 22 6 5 75 154 6 45 541977 601 000 271 000 330 000 41 3 18 6 22 7 5 73 150 9 46 011978 614 000 270 000 344 000 41 2 18 1 23 1 5 72 147 0 46 681979 625 000 270 000 355 000 41 0 17 7 23 3 5 69 142 9 47 271980 632 000 269 000 363 000 40 5 17 2 23 3 5 64 139 0 47 891981 645 000 269 000 375 000 40 4 16 9 23 5 5 60 135 4 48 391982 658 000 269 000 388 000 40 2 16 5 23 7 5 58 130 9 48 941983 672 000 270 000 401 000 40 1 16 1 24 0 5 56 126 8 49 431984 686 000 268 000 418 000 40 0 15 6 24 4 5 54 122 7 50 231985 695 000 266 000 429 000 39 6 15 2 24 4 5 47 118 6 50 881986 706 000 264 000 441 000 39 3 14 7 24 6 5 42 114 3 51 541987 717 000 259 000 457 000 39 0 14 1 24 9 5 36 110 2 52 481988 726 000 258 000 469 000 38 7 13 7 25 0 5 31 105 7 53 071989 735 000 251 000 484 000 38 3 13 1 25 3 5 25 101 0 54 131990 748 000 248 000 499 000 38 1 12 7 25 5 5 21 96 5 54 831991 757 000 244 000 513 000 37 6 12 1 25 5 5 14 92 1 55 711992 768 000 239 000 529 000 37 1 11 6 25 6 5 04 87 6 56 711993 791 000 236 000 555 000 37 1 11 1 26 1 5 00 83 8 57 621994 795 000 230 000 565 000 36 4 10 5 25 9 4 91 79 4 58 551995 797 000 226 000 571 000 35 6 10 1 25 5 4 79 75 6 59 321996 787 000 222 000 565 000 34 5 9 7 24 7 4 60 72 1 59 981997 773 000 216 000 557 000 33 2 9 3 23 9 4 39 68 3 60 771998 768 000 210 000 558 000 32 3 8 8 23 5 4 24 65 2 61 551999 760 000 207 000 553 000 31 4 8 5 22 8 4 08 61 8 62 112000 754 000 204 000 550 000 30 6 8 3 22 3 3 94 58 7 62 612001 739 000 199 000 540 000 29 5 7 9 21 6 3 76 55 8 63 342002 724 000 202 000 522 000 28 5 8 0 20 5 3 59 53 2 63 262003 719 000 196 000 523 000 27 9 7 6 20 3 3 46 50 5 64 202004 707 000 192 000 515 000 27 1 7 4 19 7 3 31 48 1 64 822005 687 000 188 000 499 000 26 0 7 1 18 9 3 14 46 0 65 462006 666 000 187 000 479 000 25 0 7 0 18 0 2 97 44 1 65 872007 650 000 185 000 465 000 24 2 6 9 17 3 2 84 42 2 66 332008 637 000 188 000 449 000 23 6 6 9 16 6 2 72 40 1 66 422009 625 000 187 000 438 000 23 0 6 9 16 1 2 60 38 3 66 762010 617 000 191 000 426 000 22 6 7 0 15 6 2 51 36 7 66 812011 614 000 189 000 425 000 22 4 6 9 15 5 2 44 35 1 67 312012 615 000 192 000 423 000 22 3 7 0 15 4 2 39 33 7 67 472013 613 000 190 000 423 000 22 2 6 9 15 4 2 33 32 2 67 972014 614 000 193 000 421 000 22 2 7 0 15 2 2 29 30 6 68 092015 611 000 204 000 407 000 22 1 7 4 14 7 2 25 29 6 67 462016 607 000 193 000 414 000 21 8 6 9 14 8 2 20 27 7 68 782017 603 000 197 000 407 000 21 4 7 0 14 4 2 15 26 6 68 912018 600 000 201 000 399 000 21 0 7 0 14 0 2 10 25 5 68 982019 602 000 198 000 404 000 20 9 6 9 14 0 2 08 24 5 69 562020 603 000 210 000 392 000 20 6 7 2 13 4 2 06 23 8 69 252021 610 000 232 000 377 000 20 4 7 8 12 6 2 03 22 8 68 45 a b c d e CBR crude birth rate per 1000 CDR crude death rate per 1000 NC natural change per 1000 TFR total fertility rate number of children per woman IMR infant mortality rate per 1000 birthsSource UN DESA World Population Prospects 2022 10 Structure of the population Edit Structure of the population 22 06 2011 Census 11 Age group Male Female Total Total 12 849 041 13 645 463 26 494 504 1000 4 1 314 957 1 253 006 2 567 963 9 695 9 1 635 176 1 569 683 3 204 859 12 1010 14 1 764 630 1 710 794 3 475 424 13 1215 19 1 443 191 1 488 789 2 931 980 11 0720 24 1 043 981 1 314 090 2 358 071 8 9025 29 917 243 1 162 111 2 079 354 7 8530 34 770 577 964 728 1 735 305 6 5535 39 740 200 864 119 1 604 319 6 0640 44 660 290 725 831 1 386 121 5 2345 49 575 101 597 858 1 172 959 4 4350 54 505 864 499 612 1 005 476 3 8055 59 412 892 405 371 818 263 3 0960 64 368 451 388 376 756 827 2 8665 69 277 782 276 667 554 449 2 0970 74 199 610 195 543 395 153 1 4975 79 117 358 117 777 235 135 0 8980 84 62 787 65 990 128 777 0 4985 89 25 810 26 716 52 526 0 2090 94 8 940 11 395 20 335 0 0895 4 201 7 007 11 208 0 04Age group Male Female Total Percent0 14 4 714 763 4 533 483 9 248 246 34 9115 64 7 437 790 8 410 885 15 848 675 59 8265 696 488 701 095 1 397 583 5 27 Population Estimates by Sex and Age Group 01 VII 2016 Based on the results of the 2011 Population Census 12 Age Group Male Female Total Total 13 784 009 14 647 486 28 431 494 1000 4 1 525 630 1 424 537 2 950 167 10 385 9 1 368 495 1 305 783 2 674 278 9 4110 14 1 564 080 1 498 784 3 062 865 10 7715 19 1 680 525 1 636 790 3 317 315 11 6720 24 1 476 611 1 545 309 3 021 919 10 6325 29 1 033 222 1 307 709 2 340 931 8 2330 34 860 512 1 138 303 1 998 816 7 0335 39 771 970 968 815 1 740 784 6 1240 44 691 192 830 797 1 521 989 5 3545 49 632 128 701 958 1 334 086 4 6950 54 552 834 587 346 1 140 179 4 0155 59 462 675 468 275 930 950 3 2760 64 382 738 387 360 770 098 2 7165 69 303 255 324 567 627 821 2 2170 74 231 131 251 818 482 949 1 7075 79 162 123 177 791 339 914 1 2080 84 889 91 543 176 432 0 62Age group Male Female Total Percent0 14 4 458 205 4 229 104 8 687 309 30 5615 64 8 544 406 9 572 663 18 117 069 63 7265 781 398 845 719 1 627 117 5 72 Population Estimates by Sex and Age Group 01 VII 2021 Based on the results of the 2011 Population Census 13 Age Group Male Female Total Total 14 734 201 15 643 853 30 378 055 1000 4 1 575 174 1 459 441 3 034 615 9 995 9 1 515 051 1 414 346 2 929 396 9 6410 14 1 364 270 1 301 906 2 666 176 8 7815 19 1 549 116 1 493 723 3 042 838 10 0220 24 1 646 148 1 627 247 3 273 395 10 7825 29 1 437 092 1 531 252 2 968 344 9 7730 34 1 002 200 1 293 007 2 295 206 7 5635 39 835 668 1 124 125 1 959 793 6 4540 44 749 759 954 458 1 704 217 5 6145 49 668 244 814 481 1 482 726 4 8850 54 604 753 682 332 1 287 085 4 2455 59 518 686 563 320 1 082 006 3 5660 64 420 366 439 121 859 487 2 8365 69 330 597 348 942 679 539 2 2470 74 241 518 272 499 514 018 1 6975 79 160 174 186 318 346 493 1 1480 115 385 137 335 252 721 0 83Age group Male Female Total Percent0 14 4 454 495 4 175 693 8 630 188 28 4115 64 9 432 032 10 523 066 19 955 098 65 6965 847 674 945 094 1 792 768 5 90 Life expectancy Edit nbsp Historical development of life expectancy in NepalPeriod Life expectancy inyears Period Life expectancy inyears1950 1955 34 0 1985 1990 52 11955 1960 34 6 1990 1995 56 41960 1965 36 2 1995 2000 60 51965 1970 39 1 2000 2005 64 01970 1975 42 0 2005 2010 66 71975 1980 44 9 2010 2015 68 91980 1985 48 3Source UN World Population Prospects 14 Nepal Demographic and Health Survey EditTotal fertility rate TFR wanted fertility rate and crude birth rate CBR 15 Year CBR total TFR total CBR urban TFR urban CBR rural TFR rural 1996 37 4 64 2 9 27 2 85 1 9 38 4 83 3 1 2001 33 5 4 1 2 5 20 6 2 1 1 4 34 9 4 4 2 6 2006 28 4 3 1 2 0 21 9 2 1 1 4 29 5 3 3 2 1 2011 24 3 2 6 1 8 16 6 1 6 1 2 25 5 2 8 1 8 2016 22 4 2 3 1 7 19 9 2 0 1 5 26 3 2 9 2 1 2022 20 0 2 1 1 7 19 3 2 0 1 6 21 4 2 4 1 8 The following demographic statistics are from the 2011 Nepal Demographic and Health Survey NDHS 16 Median birth intervals median number of months since preceding birth Total 36 2 Rural 35 9 Urban 40 3 2011 Median age at first birth Median age 20 1 2011 Fertility rate past trend and present Total fertility rate 4 6 children born woman 1996 Total fertility rate 4 1 children born woman 2001 Total fertility rate 3 1 children born woman 2006 Total fertility rate 2 6 children born woman Rural fertility rate 2 8 children born woman Urban fertility rate 1 6 children born woman 2011 Ideal family size mean ideal number of children Overall female male 2 1 2 3 Currently married female male 2 2 2 3 Urban female male 1 9 2 0 Rural female male 2 2 2 3 2011 Ideal family size by gender and age group Below is a table of the ideal family size by gender and age for 2011 Age Women Men15 19 1 9 2 220 24 1 9 2 125 29 2 1 2 130 34 2 2 2 335 39 2 3 2 440 44 2 5 2 445 49 2 6 2 6CIA World Factbook Edit The following demographic statistics are from the CIA World Factbook unless otherwise indicated Nationality Noun Nepali Adjective NepaliReligions Hindu 81 34 Buddhist 9 04 Muslim 4 38 Kirant 3 04 other 2 2 2011 census Literacy Definition age 15 and over can read and write Total population 67 9 Male 78 6 Female 59 7 2018 Population 29 033 914 2021 census Age structure 0 14 years 30 93 male 4 646 048 female 4 333 105 15 24 years 21 86 male 3 176 158 female 3 169 721 25 54 years 35 99 male 4 707 264 female 5 740 985 55 64 years 6 22 male 877 288 female 927 202 65 years and over 5 02 male 723 523 female 732 620 2016 est Median age total 23 6 years male 22 4 years female 24 8 years 2016 est Population growth rate 1 24 2016 est Birth rate 19 9 births 1 000 population 2016 est Death rate 5 7 deaths 1 000 population 2016 est Net migration rate 1 9 migrants 1 000 population 2016 est Total fertility rate 2 18 children born woman 2016 est Urbanization urban population 18 6 of total population 2015 rate of urbanization 3 18 annual rate of change 2010 15 est Sex ratio at birth 1 04 males female 0 14 years 1 07 males female 15 24 years 1 males female 25 54 years 0 82 males female 55 64 years 0 95 males female 65 years and over 0 86 males female total population 0 99 males female 2016 est CIA World Factbook statisticsTotal dependency ratio 61 4Youth dependency ratio 52 5Elderly dependency ratio 8 8Infant mortality rate IMR 27 9 deaths 1 000 live birthsMale IMR 29 2 deaths 1 000 live birthsFemale IMR 26 6 deaths 1 000 live birthsLife expectancy at birth total pop 71 yearsLife expectancy at birth male 70 4 yearsLife expectancy at birth female 71 6 yearsLanguages EditMain article Languages of Nepal Nepali 44 64 Maithili 11 67 Bhojpuri 5 98 Tharu 5 77 Tamang 5 11 Newar 3 20 Bajjika 2 99 Magar 2 98 Doteli 2 97 Urdu 2 61 Awadhi 1 89 Limbu 1 30 Gurung 1 23 Baitadeli 1 03 Others 6 63 Nepal s diverse linguistic heritage evolved from three major language groups Indo Aryan Tibeto Burman languages and various indigenous language isolates According to the 2001 national census 92 different living languages are spoken in Nepal a 93rd category was unspecified Based upon the 2011 census the major languages spoken in Nepal 17 percentage spoken out of the mother tongue language includesNepali derived from Khas bhasa is an Indo Aryan language and is written in Devanagari script Nepali was the language of the house of Gorkhas in the late 18th century and became the official national language that serves as the lingua franca among Nepali of different ethnolinguistic groups Maithili Bhojpuri Bajjika and Awadhi languages are spoken in the southern Terai There has been a surge in the number and percentage of people who understand English Majority of the urban and a significant number of the rural schools are English medium schools Higher education in technical medical scientific and engineering fields are entirely in English Nepal Bhasa the mother tongue of the Newars is widely used and spoken in and around Kathmandu Valley and in major Newar trade towns across Nepal Other languages particularly in the Inner Terai hill and mountain regions are remnants of the country s pre unification history of dozens of political entities isolated by mountains and gorges These languages typically are limited to an area spanning about one day s walk Beyond that distance dialects and languages lose mutual intelligibility However there are some major languages spoken by indigenous peoples in the region Magar and Gurung in the west central hills Tamang in the east centre and Limbu in the east In the high Himalayas are spoken various Tibetan languages including Bhotia Since Nepal s unification various indigenous languages have come under threat of extinction as the government of Nepal has marginalized their use through strict policies citation needed 18 designed to promote Nepali as the official language Indigenous languages which have gone extinct or are critically threatened include Byangsi Chonkha and Longaba Since democracy was restored in 1990 however the government has worked to improve the marginalization of these languages Tribhuvan University began surveying and recording threatened languages in 2010 and the government intends to use this information to include more languages on the next Nepali census 19 Religion EditReligion in Nepal 2021 census 20 Hinduism 81 19 Buddhism 8 21 Islam 5 09 Kirat Mundhum 3 17 Christianity 1 76 Other 0 9 As of the 2021 census 81 19 of the Nepali population was Hindu 8 21 Buddhist 5 09 Muslim 3 17 Kiratist Yumaist 1 76 Christian and 0 9 followed other or no religion 21 nbsp Nepali Hindu bride and groomNepal defines itself as a secular nation according to Constitution of Nepal 22 It is common for many Hindus in the country to also worship Buddhist deities simultaneously with Hindu traditions The notion of religion in Nepal is more fluid than other countries particularly Western countries 23 The Nepali people build their social networks through their religious celebrations which are a central part to the whole of communities within the country 22 There is a general idea held by the Nepali people that there is an omnipotent transcendental moral order that is sacred to Hinduism This idea exists along with the constant presence of chaos and disorder in the material world 23 In the northwestern region of the country this all encompassing state of disorder in the world is synonymous with human affliction which the religious shamans are believed to alleviate 23 Kathmandu Valley is home to the Newars a major ethnic group in Nepal The city Bhaktapur is located inside of Kathmandu Valley Bhaktapur was once an independent Hindu Kingdom 23 Individual homes typically have at least one shrine devoted to personal deities with an altar displaying flowers fruit and oil among other offerings to the Gods 22 The perimeter of Kathmandu Valley is lined with shrines devoted to Hindu goddesses whose purpose is to protect the city from chaotic events At least one shrine can be found on the vast majority of streets in Kathmandu 22 The people of Nepal do not feel the need to segregate or compete based upon religion so Hindu and Buddhist shrines are often coexisting in the same areas 22 The areas outside of the city are perceived to always possess some form of wild or disordered nature so the Nepali people inside of the city lines regularly worship the Hindu gods through public ceremonies 23 The Hindu god Vishnu is believed to symbolise moral order in the Newar society The natural human shortcomings in maintaining this moral order is believed to be represented by the Hindu god Shiva 23 The destruction of Shiva is neutralised by the preserver Vishnu who tips the scales to restore order 23 In recent times there has been a rise in political violence specifically Maoist violence 22 This increased violence along with the widespread poverty has caused the Nepali to seek stability and peace in religion Nepal s constitution continues long standing legal provisions prohibiting discrimination against other religions but also proselytization The king was deified as the earthly manifestation of the Hindu god Vishnu On May 19 2006 the government faced a constitutional crisis the House of Representatives which had been just reformed having been previously dissolved declared Nepal a secular state However the 2001 census identified 80 6 of the population as Hindu and 10 7 as Buddhist although many people labeled Hindu or Buddhist often practice a syncretic blend of Hinduism Buddhism or animist traditions 4 2 of the population was Muslim 3 6 of the population followed the indigenous Kirat Mundhum religion and Christianity was practiced by 0 45 of the population 24 Buddhist and Hindu shrines and festivals are respected and celebrated by most Nepali Certain animist practises of old indigenous religions continue to survive to the modern era Ethnic and regional equity EditEthnic groups of Nepal 2011 20 Chhetri 16 6 Bahun 12 18 Magar 7 12 Tharu 6 56 Tamang 5 81 Newar 4 99 Kami 4 75 Muslim 4 39 Yadav 4 3 Rai 2 34 Others 31 28 Nepali was the national language and Sanskrit became a required school subject 25 Children who spoke Nepali natively and who were exposed to Sanskrit had much better chances citation needed of passing the national examinations at the end of high school which meant they had better employment prospects and could continue into higher education Children who natively spoke local languages of the Madhesh and Hills or Tibetan dialects prevailing in the high mountains were at a considerable disadvantage This history of exclusion coupled with poor prospects for improvement created grievances that encouraged many in ethnic communities such as Madhesi and Tharu in the Tharuhat and Madhesh and Kham Magar in the mid western hills to support the Unified Communist Party of Nepal Maoist and various other armed Maoist opposition groups such as the JTMM during and after the Nepali Civil War The negotiated end to this war forced King Gyanendra to abdicate in 2008 Issues of ethnic and regional equity have tended to dominate the agenda of the new republican government and continue to be divisive Today even after the end of a 10 year old Maoist conflict the upper caste dominates every field in Nepal Although Newars are low in numbers their urban living habitat gives them a competitive advantage Kayastha of Madhesh are the toppers in Human Development Index 26 From a gender perspective Newari women are the most literate and lead in every sector Brahmin and Chhetri women have experienced less social and economic mobility compared to Newari women Specifically Brahmin women experience less equality due to their predominately rural living conditions which deprives them of access to certain educational and healthcare advantages 27 28 29 30 31 Nepali diaspora Edit nbsp Gurkhas of Nepal Main article Non Resident Nepali Nepali in the U K Edit Main article Nepalese British In the 2001 census approximately 6 000 Nepali were living in the UK 32 According to latest figure from Office for National Statistics estimates that 51 000 Nepal born people are currently resident in the UK 33 There has been increasing interest in the opportunities offered in the UK by the Nepali especially education Between the years of 2001 to 2006 there were 7 500 applications for student visas 32 Nepali in Hong Kong Edit Main article South Asians in Hong Kong The Nepali people residing in Hong Kong are primarily made up of children of ex Gurkhas born in Hong Kong during their parents service with the British Army s Brigade of Gurkhas which was based in Hong Kong from the 1970s until the handover Large groups of Nepali people can be found in Shek Kong and Yuen Long District off of the main bases of the British army Many ex Gurkhas remained in Hong Kong after the end of their service under the sponsorship of their Hong Kong born children who held right of abode Nepali of middle age or older generations in Hong Kong are predominantly found in security while those of younger generations are predominantly found in the business industry Mostly the people from Kirati ethnic groups such as Rai and Limbu are the ones residing in Hong Kong and other neighbouring nations such as Singapore and Japan Nepali overseas Edit Nepali migrants abroad have suffered tremendous hardships including some 7 500 deaths in the Middle East and Malaysia alone since the year 2000 some 3 500 in Saudi Arabia 34 Overseas Nepalis population Country Article PopulationIndia Nepalis in India 8 million 35 United Arab Emirates Nepalis in the United Arab Emirates 400 000Saudi Arabia Nepalis in Saudi Arabia 250 000Australia Nepalis in Australia 218 870 36 Qatar Nepalis in Qatar 200 000 37 Japan Nepalis in Japan 139 393 38 United Kingdom 33 Nepalis in the United Kingdom 62 000Iraq 39 30 000China Nepalis in China 21 000Hong Kong Nepalis in Hong Kong 16 000Malaysia Nepalis in Malaysia 6 175South Korea Nepalis in South Korea 22 015Canada Nepali in Canada 14 385 40 Singapore Nepalis in Singapore 4000Total overseas Nepali population 9 616 709Foreign population in Nepal EditAccording to the 2001 census there were 116 571 foreign born citizens in Nepal 90 of them were of Indian origin followed by Bhutan Pakistan and China Bhote 41 This number does not include the refugees from Bhutan and Tibet nbsp Foreign population in Nepal as per census of 2001See also EditEthnic groups in NepalReferences Edit Nepal s population is now 29 164 578 Republica Nepal s population is now 29 164 578 My Republica Retrieved 24 March 2023 Nepal makes public final data of 12th national census kathmandupost com Retrieved 24 March 2023 National Population and Housing Census 2011 National Report PDF Central Bureau of Statistics Nepal Archived from the original PDF on 18 April 2013 Retrieved 26 November 2012 The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency www cia gov Archived from the original on 13 June 2007 Retrieved 4 April 2017 Lamichhane Reeta Zhao Yun Paudel Susan Adewuyi Emmanuel O 1 January 2017 Factors associated with infant mortality in Nepal a comparative analysis of Nepal demographic and health surveys NDHS 2006 and 2011 BMC Public Health 17 1 53 doi 10 1186 s12889 016 3922 z ISSN 1471 2458 PMC 5223552 PMID 28068969 Nepalese peoples and nationality law The World Factbook CIA Retrieved 3 September 2016 a b Population Growth Continues to Hinder Nepal s Economic Progress www prb org Retrieved 28 March 2017 a b c d Massey Douglas S Axinn William G August 2010 Environmental change and out migration evidence from Nepal Population and Environment 32 2 3 109 136 doi 10 1007 s11111 010 0119 8 PMC 3042700 PMID 21350676 United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division 2022 World Population Prospects 2022 Demographic indicators by region subregion and country annually for 1950 2100 XLS 91MB United Nations Population Division 27 Online ed New York United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division rows 7870 7941 cols X AE S AH S AA AV AI Archived from the original on 9 August 2022 United Nations Statistics Division Demographic and Social Statistics Archived from the original on 21 September 2004 UNSD Demographic and Social Statistics Statistics United Nations World Population Prospects Population Division United Nations Retrieved 15 July 2017 MEASURE DHS Demographic and Health Surveys worldbank org Nepal Demographic and Health Survey 2011 PDF Retrieved 7 May 2011 Official Summary of Census PDF Central Bureau of Statistics Nepal 2011 Archived from the original PDF on 2 December 2012 Toba Sueyosh First Quarter 2005 Diversity and Endangerment of Languages in Nepal UNESCO Kathmandu series of monographs and working papers 1 1 23 24 via UNESCO Tumbahang Govinda Bahadur 2010 Marginalization of indigenous languages of Nepal Contributions to Nepalese Studies 37 69 via Expanded Academic a b South Asia NEPAL CIA The World Factbook 10 May 2022 2011 Nepal Census Report PDF cbs gov np p 16 Archived from the original PDF on 18 April 2013 a b c d e f Ostrowski Ally 2006 The Framing of Religion South Asian Popular Culture 4 1 3 18 doi 10 1080 14746680600555410 S2CID 142489523 a b c d e f g Stone Linda 2000 Order identity and religion in Nepal Reviews in Anthropology 29 1 71 82 doi 10 1080 00988157 2000 9978248 S2CID 161737605 Nepal in Figures 2006 PDF www cbs gov np Archived from the original PDF on 9 April 2008 Government decision to introduce Sanskrit in school education draws controversy Include whom Nepali Times OCHA Nepal Situation Overview PDF Issue 12 OCHA April 2007 Archived from the original PDF on 13 November 2009 Retrieved 7 May 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help OCHA Nepal Situation Overview PDF Issue 16 OCHA July August 2007 Retrieved 7 May 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help OCHA Nepal Situation Overview PDF Issue 30 OCHA June July 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 18 February 2010 Retrieved 7 May 2011 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Sharma Hari 18 November 2010 Body of murder victim found in Gulmi Gulmi The Himalayan Times online Archived from the original on 25 May 2012 Retrieved 7 May 2011 Hatlebakk Magnus 2007 Economic and social structures that may explain the recent conflicts in the Terai of Nepal PDF Kathmandu Norwegian Embassy Retrieved 8 May 2011 a b Jessica Sims 2008 Soldiers Migrants and Citizens Nepalese in Britain Runnymede p 1 ISBN 978 1 906732 09 7 a b Population by Country of birth and nationality Jan10 Dec10 Office for National Statistics September 2011 Retrieved 17 September 2010 Sedhai Roshan 7 January 2014 Natural deaths raise doubts ekantipur com Archived from the original on 26 June 2015 About India Nepal Relations Australian Bureau of Statistics Australian Bureau of Statistics Australian Bureau of Statistics Retrieved 28 April 2020 Qatar s population by nationality bq Magazine Archived from the original on 23 April 2015 令和4年末現在における在留外国人数について Nepal government lifts Iraq working ban BBC News 28 July 2010 Statistics Canada Data tables 2016 Census Retrieved 10 March 2019 Subedi Bhim Prasad 2007 The Issue of Foreign Born Population in Nepal A Short Essay in Honor of Dr Harka Gurung The Himalayan Review 38 23 34 nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from The World Factbook 2023 ed CIA Archived 2003 edition External links EditNepal Encyclopedia Ethnicity Page Population of Nepal 2078 CIA Fact Book 2016 Nepal information Site Current Situation of Population In Nepal Census 2068 People of Nepal Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Demographics of Nepal amp oldid 1179347871, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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