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Demographics of Taiwan

The population of Taiwan is approximately 23.35 million as of April 2023.[1]

Demographics of Taiwan
Population pyramid of Taiwan at the end of 2021
Population23,347,374 (April 2023)
Growth rate0.04% (2022 est.)
Birth rate5.8 births/1,000 population (2023 est.)
Death rate8.8 deaths/1,000 population (2023 est.)
Life expectancy81.16 years
 • male78.17 years
 • female84.34 years
Fertility rate0.85 children born/woman (2023 est.)
Infant mortality rate3.97 deaths/1,000 live births
Net migration rate0.85 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2022 est.)
Age structure
0–14 years12.22%
15–64 years69.72%
65 and over18.07%
Sex ratio
Total0.97 male(s)/female (2022 est.)
At birth1.06 male(s)/female
Under 151.06 male(s)/female
65 and over0.73 male(s)/female
Nationality
NationalityTaiwanese
Major ethnicHan Chinese
Language
OfficialMandarin
Residents per square kilometre by village

Immigration of Han Chinese to the Penghu Islands started as early as the 13th century. The main island was inhabited by a diversity of Taiwanese indigenous peoples speaking Austronesian languages until Han settlement began in the early 17th century, around the time of the Ming–Qing transition, when workers were imported from Fujian to the colony of Dutch Formosa in the southwest of Taiwan. According to governmental statistics, in the early 21st century, 95% to 97% of Taiwan's population are Han Chinese, while about 2.3% are Taiwanese of Austronesian ethnicity.[2][3] Half the population are followers of one or a mixture of 25 recognized religions.

During the 20th century, the population of Taiwan rose more than sevenfold, from about 3 million in 1905 to more than 22 million by 2001. This high growth was caused by a combination of factors, such as very high fertility rates up to the 1960s, and low mortality rates.[4] In addition, there was a surge in population as the Chinese Civil War ended and the Kuomintang (KMT) forces retreated, bringing an influx of 1.2 million soldiers and civilians to Taiwan in 1948–1949, representing less than 15% of the population at the time (who constitute approximately 10% of the population in 2004[5]).[6][3][7] Consequently, the population growth rate after that was very rapid, especially in the late 1940s and 1950s, with an effective annual growth rate as high as 3.68% during 1951–1956.

Fertility rates decreased gradually thereafter; in 1984 the rate reached the replacement level (2.1 children per woman, which is needed to replace the existing population). Fertility rates have continued to decline. In 2010, Taiwan had a population growth of less than 0.2% and a fertility rate of only 0.9, the lowest rate ever recorded in that country. The population of Taiwan peaked at 23.6 million in 2019 and has been continuously decreasing ever since.

Most Taiwanese speak Mandarin. Around 70% of the people also speak Taiwanese Hokkien and 10% speak Hakka. Japanese speakers are becoming rare as the elderly generation who lived under Japanese colonization are dying out. The Formosan languages are endangered as the indigenous peoples have become acculturated under Chinese culture.

Population edit

According to February 2022 statistics from the Ministry of the Interior, the population of Taiwan was 23,319,776, 99.6% of whom live on the island of Taiwan. The remaining 0.4% live on offshore islands (Penghu, Lanyu, Green, Kinmen, and Matsu).

Taiwan is ranked the 57th most populous nation in the world.

Historical edit

The number of Chinese people living on the island in 1624, prior to Dutch colonial rule, was about 25,000.[8] During Dutch Formosa rule, between 1624 and 1662, the Dutch began to encourage large-scale Han immigration to the island for labour, mainly from the south of Fujian.

It is estimated that prior to the Kingdom of Tungning (1661), the population of Taiwan was no greater than 100,000 people, and the initial Zheng army with families and retainers that settled in Taiwan is estimated to be 30,000 at minimum.[9] During Qing rule (1683–1895), the population of Han Chinese in Taiwan grew rapidly from 100,000 to ≈2.5 million, while the aboriginal population was estimated to be at least 200,000 by 1895.[10] (The plains aboriginal population is estimated to have decreased by 90% over the hundred years from 1800 to 1900.)[11]

The Japanese Colonial Government performed detailed censuses every five years starting in 1905. Statistics showed a population growth rate of about 1% to 3% per year throughout Japanese rule. In 1905, the population of Taiwan was roughly 3 million; by 1940, the population had grown to 5.87 million, and after the Second World War in 1946 it numbered 6.09 million.[12]

Population census edit

Historical Populations
YearPop.±%
1905 3,123,302—    
1910 3,299,493+5.6%
1920 3,757,838+13.9%
1930 4,679,066+24.5%
1940 6,077,478+29.9%
1950 7,554,399+24.3%
1960 10,792,202+42.9%
1970 14,753,911+36.7%
1980 17,866,008+21.1%
1990 20,401,305+14.2%
2000 22,276,672+9.2%
2010 23,162,123+4.0%
2020 23,561,236+1.7%
Source: https://www.census.gov/popclock/world/tw
Year Males (thousands) Females (thousands) Total population (thousands) Average annual growth rate (%)
1905 1,611 1,429 3,040
1915 1,813 1,669 3,480 1.4
1920 1,894 1,762 3,655 1.0
1925 2,053 1,941 3,993 1.8
1930 2,459 2,239 4,593 2.8
1935 2,660 2,553 5,212 2.6
1940 2,971 2,901 5,872 2.4
1956 4,772 4,596 9,368 3.0
1966 7,153 6,352 13,505 3.7
1970 (sampling) 7,723 7,047 14,770 2.3
1975 (sampling) 8,439 7,840 16,279 2.0
1980 9,405 8,624 18,030 2.1
1990 10,618 9,775 20,394 1.2
2000 11,386 10,915 22,301 0.9
2010 23,052 0.4
Population of Taiwan (1981–2018)[13][14]
Year 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990
Population 18,193,955 18,515,754 18,790,538 19,069,194 19,313,825 19,509,082 19,725,010 19,954,397 20,156,587 20,401,305
±% + 1.768% + 1.484% + 1.483% + 1.283% + 1.011% + 1.107% + 1.163% + 1.013% + 1.214%
Year 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000
Population 20,605,831 20,802,622 20,995,416 21,177,874 21,357,431 21,525,433 21,742,815 21,928,591 22,092,387 22,276,672
±% + 1.003% + 0.955% + 0.927% + 0.869% + 0.848% + 0.787% + 1.010% + 0.854% + 0.747% + 0.834%
Year 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Population 22,405,568 22,520,776 22,604,550 22,689,122 22,770,383 22,876,527 22,958,360 23,037,031 23,119,772 23,162,123
±% + 0.579% + 0.514% + 0.372% + 0.374% + 0.358% + 0.466% + 0.358% + 0.343% + 0.359% + 0.183%
Year 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
Population 23,224,912 23,315,822 23,373,517 23,433,753 23,492,074 23,539,816 23,571,227 23,588,932 23,600,903 23,539,588
±% + 0.271% + 0.391% + 0.247% + 0.258% + 0.249% + 0.203% + 0.133% + 0.075% + 0.051% – 0.260%[14]

Details edit

  • Date:2019/07-08
County
City
Area
(km2)
Population Margin Density
(people/km2)
Sort
New Taipei 2052.5667 4,010,657 +2843 1,954 1(8)
Taichung 2214.8968 2,811,729 +581 1,270 2(8)
Kaohsiung 2951.8524 2,773,786 +195 939 3(8)
Taipei 271.7997 2,650,154 -3854 9,765 4(8)
Taoyuan 1220.9540 2,240,328 +2385 1,833 5(8)
Tainan 2191.6531 1,881,730 -66 859 6(8)
Changhua County 1074.3960 1,273,613 -661 1,186 7(8)
Pingtung 2775.6003 820,798 -398 296 8(8)
Yunlin 1290.8326 682,577 -335 529 9(8)
Hsinchu County 1427.5369 561,766 +1047 393 10(8)
Miaoli 1820.3149 546,461 -37 300 11
Chiayi 1903.6367 504,750 -347 265 12(8)
Nantou 4106.4360 495,084 -22 121 13
Yilan 2143.6251 454,636 -57 212 14
Hsinchu City 104.1526 447,781 +297 4296 15(8)
Keelung 132.7589 369,305 -55 2782 16
Hualien 4628.5714 326,780 -33 69 17(8)
Chiayi City 60.0256 268,068 -163 4469 18
Taitung County 3515.2526 217,540 -296 62 19
Kinmen County 151.6560 139,319 -46 918 20
Penghu County 126.8641 104,711 +3 825 21
Lienchiang County 28.8000 13,073 +11 455 22(8)
Free area of the Republic of China 36,197.0669 23,593,794 +1196 651 -(8)
  • Source: Ministry of Internal Affairs, Taiwan 2020-04-30 at the Wayback Machine

Net migration rate edit

During 2004 – 2010, Taiwan's migration rate was positive. On average, the annual net migration amounted to 22,000 people during that period, which is equivalent to a rate of 1.0 per 1,000 inhabitants per year.

Age structure edit

Age range 1980 1990 2000 2010 2015 2020
0–14 years 32.1% 26.9% 21.2% 15.65% 13.6% 12.6%
15–64 years 63.6% 67.0% 70.2% 73.61% 73.9% 71.4%
65 years and over 4.3% 6.1% 8.6% 10.74% 12.5% 16.0%

Sex ratio edit

under 15 years: 1.06 male(s)/female
15–24 years: 1.05 male(s)/female
25–54 years: 1.00 male(s)/female
55–64 years: 0.96 male(s)/female
65 years and over: 0.84 male(s)/female
total population: 0.98 male(s)/female (2018 est)

Population growth and age structure edit

Demographic transition models (DTM) show how population pyramids change and go through specific stages. By looking at Taiwan's population pyramid, the country is in stage 4 of the DTM and its shape contracts but it will soon enter stage 5.[15] In stage 5 of the DTM, death rate gradually exceeds fertility rate and a country starts to experience overall population loss.[16] Access to good medical care increases the lifespan of a population. Knowledge of and access to contraception, along with an increase in women's participation in the workforce, cause a sharp decline in the fertility rate.[16]

National statistics of Taiwan in 2018 indicate that there are approximately 140,000 more females than males. The birth rate (8.3 births/1,000 population) is slightly higher than the death rate (7.4 deaths/1,000 population).[17] The total dependency ratio in Taiwan is 35.2%, which is relatively low.[18] The low dependency ratio indicates that the dependent part of the population is less than half of the working part. Experts estimate the dependency ratio will rise to 92.9% by 2060.[19] A rising dependency ratio and longer life expectancy will most likely require the government to support part of the elderly population as the working-age population is shrinking and thus less able to support the elderly directly.

Demographic transition and population aging edit

The process of population aging is primarily determined by fertility and mortality rate.[20] The proportions of elderly people are different across countries. For example, developing countries with limited access to healthcare and contraceptives, where populations have a high fertility rate, tend to have a lower proportion of older people.[21] Medical advancements, industrial developments, and better knowledge of sanitation, which started in the 18th century in many developed countries, have caused a decline in mortality rates and an increase in fertility rates, factors which raise the number of older people worldwide.[22] According to the United Nations, many developed countries are in more advanced stages (4 or 5) of the demographic transition model and their number of elderly will remain high compared to less developed countries.[23] This phenomenon is known as population aging.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), since 1993, Taiwan has reached the threshold of an aging society. It was estimated the percentage of people over 65 was 8%.[24] The CEPD estimated that the percentage of people 65 years or older will be over 20% in 2025, which means Taiwan will soon become a "super aged society".[25] The critical factors that accelerate the speed of aging in Taiwan are high life expectancy and low fertility rate. The average life expectancy in 2014 was 80 years. The total fertility rate in 2014 was 1.1 (per 1,000 women) and dropped to 0.87 in 2022.[26]

Ethnicity edit

The ROC government reports that 95 to 97 percent of Taiwan's population is of the Han Chinese ethnicity, which includes Hoklo, Hakka, and other ethnic groups originating from mainland China.[27][28] Over 2% of the population consists of indigenous Taiwanese.[3] 21,000 Westerners live in Taiwan, accounting for 0.1% of its total population.[29]

Indigenous Taiwanese edit

 
Original geographic distributions of Taiwanese aboriginal peoples

The total population of recognized indigenous people in Taiwan is approximately 569,000, or approximately 2.38% of Taiwan's population.[30] These groups primarily inhabit the eastern half of Taiwan, which consists mostly of mountainous terrain. Their population growth rate (1.2%) and population pyramid are considerably more youthful than the overall population.[31] Including migrant workers, the Austronesian population of Taiwan is approaching 1 million.[32]

Place Population Pct
Male Female Total
Living in the Eastern plains 111,372 109,141 220,513 47.1%
Living in the mountains 122,016 126,073 248,089 52.9%
Total 233,388 235,214 468,602 100%
Note: Source data obtained from the Ministry of the Interior website (Spreadsheet data: m1-04.xls 2017-06-20 at the Wayback Machine)

The Taiwanese government officially recognizes sixteen ethnic groups of Taiwanese indigenous peoples (Chinese: 原住民; pinyin: yuánzhùmín; Pe̍h-ōe-jī: Gôan-chū-bîn).[33] In the early 1910s, research in the Japanese era recognized nine ethnic groups: Amis, Atayal, Bunun, Paiwan, Puyuma, Rukai, Saisiyat, Tsou, and Yami. After the 2000s, indigenous cultural revitalization movements forced the government to change its attitude towards the indigenous people of Taiwan. The Yami people were renamed to Tao. New ethnic groups were also recognized by the government, including Thao in 2001, Kavalan in 2002, Truku (Taroko) in 2004, Sakizaya in 2007, Seediq in 2008, Kanakanavu in 2014, and Saaroa in 2014. There are at least another dozen groups that are not officially recognized by the government.

Officially Recognized Taiwanese Indigenous Peoples
Name Formosan
native name
Chinese Population
at census 2000[34]
Population
(02/2016)[35]
Notes
Amis Pangcah, 'Amis 阿美族 148,992 203,740 Recognized since Japanese era. Amis name means "north"
Atayal Tayal, Tayan 泰雅族 91,883 87,156 Recognized since Japanese era. Atayal name means "brave person"
Bunun Bunun 布農族 41,038 56,844 Recognized since Japanese era.
Kanakanavu Kanakanavu 卡那卡那富族 267 Classified as Tsou, recognized since 2014
Kavalan Kebalan, Kbaran 噶瑪蘭族 1,416 Some Kavalan were classified as Amis, recognized since 2002
Paiwan Payuan 排灣族 70,331 97,788 Recognized since Japanese era.
Puyuma Pinuyumayan 卑南族 9,606 13,651 Recognized since Japanese era.
Rukai Drekay 魯凱族 12,084 12,996 Recognized since Japanese era.
Saaroa Hla'alua 拉阿魯哇族 294 Classified as Tsou, recognized since 2014
Saisiyat Say-Siyat 賽夏族 5,311 6,495 Recognized since Japanese era.
Sakizaya Sakizaya 撒奇萊雅族 863 Classified as Amis, recognized since 2007
Seediq Seediq 賽德克族 9,451 Classified as Atayal, recognized since 2008
Taroko Truku 太魯閣族 30,382 Classified as Atayal, recognized since 2004
Thao Thao, Ngan 邵族 768 Classified as Tsou, recognized since 2001
Tsou Cou 鄒族 6,169 6,647 Recognized since Japanese era.
Yami Tao 達悟族、雅美族 3,872 4,494 Recognized since Japanese era. Yami name means "person"
Unspecified 尚未申報 8,249 14,206
Total 397,535 547,465

Unrecognized indigenous groups may include extinct tribes (mostly Plains indigenous peoples) or communities currently classified with other groups. There are also 25,943 indigenous people who are currently not classified in any group.

Unrecognized Taiwanese indigenous Peoples
Name Formosan
native name
Chinese Notes
Arikun Arikun 阿立昆族 Sometimes classified as Hoanya
Babuza Babuza, Poavasa 貓霧拺族
Basay Basay, Basai 巴賽族、馬塞族 Sometimes classified as Ketagalan
Hoanya Hoanya 洪雅族、和安雅族 Sometimes split into Lloa and Arikun
Kaxabu Kaxabu, Kahapu 噶哈巫族 Sometimes classified as Pazeh. In revitalization.
Ketagalan Ketagalan 凱達格蘭族
Kulon Kulon 龜崙族
Lloa Lloa 羅亞族 Sometimes classified Hoanya
Luilang Luilang 雷朗族 Sometimes classified as Ketagalan
Makatao Makatao, Tao 馬卡道族 Sometimes classified as Siraya. Recognized in Pingtung. In revitalization.
Papora Papora, Vupuran 拍瀑拉族、巴布拉族
Pazeh Pazéh, Pazih 巴宰族、巴則海族 In revitalization.
Qauqaut Qauqaut 猴猴族
Siraya Siraya 西拉雅族、希萊耶族 Recognized in Tainan and Fuli. In revitalization.
Taivoan Taivoan, Taivuan 大武壠族 Sometimes classified as Siraya. Recognized in Fuli. In revitalization.
Taokas Taokas 道卡斯族 In revitalization.

Han Chinese edit

The majority of Han Chinese descend from immigrants who arrived to the island prior to Japanese rule (1895–1945) and can be classified as the Hoklo and Hakka, on the basis of language and customs.[36] As the majority of early immigrants were Hokkien speakers from Fujian[37] who arrived starting in the 17th century, the Hoklos account for about 70% of the total population today. During Qing rule, a large number of Hoklo men took indigenous brides.[38] Some of the plains aboriginals also adopted Chinese customs and language so as to be indistinguishable from the Han.[39] Thus, many who categorize themselves as Han have some degree of indigenous ancestry.

A significant minority of Han Chinese are Hakka, and they constitute about 15% of the total population. The Hakkas emigrated chiefly from eastern Guangdong, speak Hakka Chinese, and originally took up residence in the hills of the indigenous border districts.[40][38]

Waishengren form another significant mixed ethnic group in Taiwan. The term refers to migrants who moved from China to Taiwan between 1945, when the ROC took control of Taiwan from the Japanese empire, and 1949 during the relocation of the ROC from mainland China to Taiwan. Estimates vary regarding how many waishengren migrated, with most estimates ranging between 950,000 and 2 million,[41] with 1.2 million being the most commonly cited figure in Taiwan,[42] which would have constituted less than 15% of the population at the time (who constitute approximately 10% of the population in 2004[5]).[7]

Foreign residents edit

 
Foreign residents in Taiwan

There are 812,603 foreign residents in Taiwan as of April 2023, representing 3.48% of the country's population.[43][44][1]

Nationality / Origin 2019 2021 2022 % in 2019
1   Indonesia 255,770 254,403 234,329 33.1%
2   Vietnam 224,108 247,817 234,100 29.0%
3   Philippines 152,179 156,996 154,075 19.7%
4   Thailand 64,381 67,308 72,061 8.34%
5   Malaysia 20,549 22,819 23,749 2.66%
6   Japan 13,768 16,160 15,956 1.78%
7   United States 9,979 12,847 11,462 1.29%
8   South Korea 4,481 5,132 4,843 0.58%
9   India 3,748 4,695 4,671 0.49%
10   United Kingdom 2,097 2,961 2,989 0.27%
11   Myanmar 1,671 1,852 2,611 0.22%
12   Canada 2,167 2,737 2,579 0.28%
13   France 1,553 1,790 1,841 0.20%
14   Singapore 1,456 1,726 1,766 0.19%
15   South Africa 1,207 1,416 1,539 0.16%
16   Germany 965 1,224 1,271 0.12%
18   Australia 838 1,051 985 0.11%
19   Russia 578 663 680 0.07%
20   Netherlands 346 512 531 0.04%
21   Italy 489 579 523 0.06%
22   Mongolia 1,126 684 500 0.15%
23   Spain 390 473 492 0.05%
24   Eswatini 363 412 0.05%
25   Honduras 288 374 0.04%
26   Cambodia 164 359 0.02%
27   Belize 181 334 0.02%
28   Paraguay 176 328 0.02%
28   New Zealand 313 352 328 0.04%
30   Poland 217 285 311 0.03%
31   Portugal 217 312 300 0.03%
32   Pakistan 186 297 0.02%
33   Denmark 147 284 0.02%
33   Turkey 279 311 284 0.04%
35   Brazil 307 261 259 0.04%
36   Belgium 198 302 254 0.03%
37   Mexico 196 226 229 0.03%
38   Ireland 165 216 0.02%
39   Ukraine 245 230 214 0.03%
40   Guatemala 138 199 0.02%
41   Switzerland 168 219 181 0.02%
42   Saint Lucia 102 170
43   Ethiopia 181 164 0.02%
43   Nepal 159 164 0.02%
45   Iran 118 163 0.02%
46   Haiti 148 158 0.02%
47   Egypt 87 157
48   Sweden 125 152 0.02%
49   Israel 105 151
50   Nicaragua 183 141 0.02%
51   Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 104 140
52   Colombia 106 128
53   Austria 117 126 0.02%
54   Nigeria 81 116
55   Sri Lanka 95 109
56   Peru 85 104
57   Gambia 122 100 0.02%
58   Saint Kitts and Nevis 73 96
59   Jordan 80 95
60   Bangladesh 62 94
61   Czech Republic 101 92
62   El Salvador 125 90 0.02%
62   Hungary 79 86
63   Venezuela 88 81
64   Belarus 65 78
65   Palau 48 66
66   Chile 48 65
67   Tanzania 64
68   Romania 63
69   Argentina 57 61
69   Kyrgyzstan 45 61
71   Burkina Faso 65 55
72   Malawi 60 54
73   Laos 41 54
74   Marshall Islands 43 52
74   Panama 83 52
76   Slovakia 41 48
77   Uzbekistan 38 46
78   Uganda 19 43
78   Finland 37 43
80   Ecuador 42 42
81   Kenya 32 41
81   Lithuania 41
83   Croatia 31 39
84   Latvia 17 35
85   Tuvalu 30 34
86   Morocco 30 33
87   Papua New Guinea 27 32
88   Nauru 24 31
89   Ghana 28 30
90   Burundi 15 29
90   Greece 25 29
92   Norway 28 28
92   Serbia 21 28
94   Mauritius 23 27
94   Dominican Republic 43 27
96   Kazakhstan 22 25
97   Bulgaria 18 24
98   Bolivia 15 22
99   Iraq 17 19
100   Costa Rica 17 18
101   North Macedonia 14 17
101   Lebanon 9 17
103   Slovenia 23 16
103   Zimbabwe 17 16
103   Yemen 11 16
106   Solomon Islands 88 15
107   Brunei 21 14
108   Armenia 21 13
108   Turkmenistan 13 13
108   Republic of the Congo 10 13
108   Fiji 8 13
112   Uruguay 13 12
114   Tunisia 11 11
114   Palestine 6 11
116   Syria 9 10
116   Bhutan 7 10
118   Algeria 9 8
118   Zambia 6 8
118   Estonia 11 8
118   Iceland 3 8
118   Luxembourg 8
118   Jamaica 5 8
125   Lesotho 4 7
125   Cameroon 8 7
127   Georgia 9 6
127   Trinidad and Tobago 4 6
127   Namibia 7 6
127   Chad 6 6
127   Democratic Republic of the Congo 6 6
127   Senegal 4 6
132   Cyprus 2 5
132   Botswana 5 5
132   Benin 2 5
132   Tajikistan 6 5
132   Albania 2 5
137   Ivory Coast 4 4
137   Moldova 9 4
137   Kiribati 85 4
137   Sudan 7 4
137   Mozambique 6 4
137   Tonga 6 4
137   Timor-Leste 4 4
144   Sierra Leone 6 3
144   Dominica 1 3
144   Guyana 3
144   Niger 4 3
144   Togo 2 3
144   Azerbaijan 3 3
144   Maldives 2 3
144   Oman 4 3
152   Guinea-Bissau 1 2
152   Libya 4 2
152   Cuba 5 2
152   Mali 3 2
152   Rwanda 3 2
152   Bahrain 2 2
152   Saudi Arabia 3 2
152   Vanuatu 1 2
152   Malta 2 2
152   Afghanistan 1 2
152   Suriname 1 2
152   Samoa 2
164   Guinea 3 1
164   Madagascar 2 1
164   Djibouti 1
164   Gabon 1 1
164   Federated States of Micronesia 1 1
164   Seychelles 1 1
164   Grenada 1
164   Bosnia and Herzegovina 1
164   Barbados 1 1
164   Kuwait 1
164   Bahamas 1
164   United Arab Emirates 1
176   São Tomé and Príncipe 3
177   Somalia 2
178   Angola 1
179   Cape Verde 1
180   Bermuda 1
- Other (stateless) 103 102 <0.02%
Total 772,281 783,662 100.0%

Languages edit

During Japanese rule (between 1895 and 1945), Japanese was the medium of instruction and could be fluently spoken by many of those educated during that period. Almost everyone in Taiwan born after the early 1950s can speak Mandarin,[48] which was the official language and has been the medium of instruction in schools ever since.

Hanyu Pinyin, the official romanization system in mainland China, has also been the standard of Taiwan since 2009. A number of romanization systems are still seen in Taiwan, including Tongyong, the official romanization in Taiwan between 2002 and 2008, Wade–Giles, often found on passports, and Postal.

Other Sinitic languages can also be seen in Taiwan. The majority speak Taiwanese Hokkien, a branch of Southern Min, which had formerly been the most commonly spoken language. On Matsu Islands, the Eastern Min Fuzhou dialect is prevalent. Although people on Kinmen (Quemoy) also speak Southern Min, it is not the case in the Wuqiu Islands, for they speak a dialect of the Pu-Xian Min. The ethnic Hakka speak various Taiwanese Hakka dialects including Sixian, Hailu, Dabu, Raoping, and Zhao'an.

The most widely spoken Formosan languages today are Amis, Atayal, Bunun, and Paiwan. The other aboriginal languages that have gained official recognition are Kanakanavu, Kavalan, Puyuma, Rukai, Hla’alua, Saisiyat, Sakizaya, Seediq (closely related to Truku), Thao, Tsou, and Yami (also known as Tao).

Languages used at home for the resident nationals aged 6 years and over (2010, per 100 resident nationals)[a][49]
Division Population Mandarin Hokkien Hakka Indigenous Others
Total 21,407,235 83.5 81.9 6.6 1.4 2
New Taipei City 3,779,575 92 82.9 2.4 0.9 2.4
Taipei 2,475,422 93.2 73.5 3.5 0.5 3.2
Keelung 358,927 87.2 91.1 0.9 1.8 1.8
Hsinchu 427,792 92 70.7 11.1 0.8 1.6
Yilan 393,109 78.2 94.9 0.6 1.8 1
Taoyuan 1,982,734 93.4 58.2 17.1 1.3 1.3
Hsinchu County 464,165 90.6 27.7 56 2 1.1
Taichung 2,521,926 87.1 89.9 3.5 0.6 1.4
Miaoli 482,329 79.4 45.8 52.4 1 0.5
Changhua 1,123,439 69.5 98.1 0.3 0.2 0.9
Nantou 426,631 75.3 92 3.2 4.3 1.2
Yunlin 573,064 60 98.2 1.6 0.1 1.4
Tainan 1,719,853 71.7 95.8 0.5 0.3 2.7
Kaohsiung 2,596,510 78.6 90.9 3 0.7 2.4
Chiayi 250,900 76.5 94.7 0.4 0.3 1
Chiayi County 458,244 61 97.5 0.8 0.8 3.6
Pingtung 750,122 66.2 82.3 12 4.7 0.5
Penghu 80,203 75 93.6 0.5 0.3 2.4
Taitung 187,763 89.9 65.9 5.4 21.3 5.5
Hualien 287,858 90.8 60.9 10.8 16.9 1.6
Kinmen 52,603 85.4 92.8 1.1 0.5 0.8
Lienchiang 14,066 96.6 44.7 3.9 1.6 24.1

Religion edit

 
Lungshan Temple of Manka, Taipei
 
Still Thoughts Hall, Hualien City
 
Holy Rosary Cathedral, Kaohsiung
 
Taipei Grand Mosque, Taipei

Article 13 of the Constitution of the Republic of China guarantees freedom of religion as a right of all its citizens. As of 2013, the Republic of China government recognizes 27 religions which are registered with the Civil Affairs Department of the Ministry of the Interior (MOI).[50]

Statistics on registered religions (2005) edit

About 81.3% of the population can be considered religious believers, most of whom identify as Buddhists (35%) or Taoists (33%). Chinese folk religion is generally practised under the aegis of Taoism, while more than 10% of the population adheres to popular movements of salvation. Confucianism also is an honored school of thought and ethical codes. Christian churches have been active in Taiwan for centuries; a majority of them are Protestant, with Presbyterians playing a particularly significant role. The Republic of China's government has diplomatic relations with the Holy See, which is the only European nation to formally recognize the Republic of China and is its longest-lasting diplomatic ally, having established relations in 1942. Islam has seen a surge in recent years as a result of foreign Muslims seeking work in Taiwan, most notably from Indonesia. There is also a small group of Shinto followers under the Tenriist sect, which was introduced in the 1970s.

The table below shows official statistics on religion issued by the Department of Civil Affairs, Ministry of the Interior ("MOI"), in 2005. The Taiwanese government recognises 26 religions in Taiwan.[51] The statistics are reported by the various religious organisations to the MOI:[51][52]

Religion Members % of total population Temples & churches
Buddhism (佛教) (including Tantric Buddhism) 8,086,000 35.1% 4,006
Taoism (道教) 7,600,000 33.0% 18,274
Yiguandao (一貫道) 810,000 3.5% 3,260
Protestantism (基督新教) 605,000 2.6% 3,609
Roman Catholic Church (羅馬天主教) 298,000 1.3% 1,151
Lord of Universe Church—Tiandiism (天帝教) 298,000 1.3% 50
Miledadao (彌勒大道) 250,000 1.1% 2,200
Holy Church of the Heavenly Virtue—Tiandiism (天德教) 200,000 0.9% 14
Zailiism/Liism (理教) 186,000 0.8% 138
Xuanyuanism (軒轅教) 152,700 0.7% 22
Islam (伊斯蘭教) 58,000 0.3% 7
Mormonism (耶穌基督後期聖徒教會) 51,090 0.2% 54
Tenriism (天理教) 35,000 0.2% 153
Church of Maitreya the King of the Universe (宇宙彌勒皇教) 35,000 0.2% 12
Haizidao (亥子道) 30,000 0.1% 55
Church of Scientology (山達基教會) 20,000 < 0.1% 7
Bahá'í Faith (巴哈伊教) 16,000 < 0.1% 13
Jehovah's Witnesses (耶和華見證人) 9,256 < 0.1% 85
True School of the Mysterious Gate (玄門真宗) 5,000 < 0.1% 5
Holy Church of the Middle Flower (中華聖教) 3,200 < 0.1% 7
Mahikari (真光教團) 1,000 < 0.1% 9
Precosmic Salvationism (先天救教) 1,000 < 0.1% 6
Yellow Middle (黃中) 1,000 < 0.1% 1
Dayiism (大易教) 1,000 < 0.1% 1
Total religious population 18,724,823 81.3% 33,223
Total population 23,036,087 100% -

The figures for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints are not from the MOI, rather they are based on self-reported data from LDS Newsroom.[53] The figures for Jehovah's Witnesses are not from the MOI either, they are based on the Witnesses' own 2007 Service Year Report.[54] In the original report, both of them were counted as part of Protestantism.[51]

Vital statistics edit

Births and deaths edit

[55][56]

Average population (x 1000) Live births Deaths Natural change CBR* CDR* NC* TFR*
1906 3,060 119,107 102,000 16,000 38.6 33.4 5.2 6.13
1907 3,090 121,756 100,000 21,000 39.1 32.4 6.7 6.16
1908 3,120 119,800 100,000 19,000 38.2 31.9 6.3 6.14
1909 3,160 127,286 98,000 29,000 40.2 31.1 9.1 6.29
1910 3,210 132,141 88,000 45,000 41.3 27.5 13.8 6.37
1911 3,270 135,658 86,000 51,000 41.8 26.2 15.6 6.42
1912 3,330 136,622 83,000 55,000 41.3 25.0 16.3 6.46
1913 3,390 136,967 85,000 53,000 40.8 25.0 15.8 6.45
1914 3,440 141,450 95,000 47,000 41.4 27.6 13.8 6.62
1915 3,480 137,669 110,000 29,000 40.0 31.5 8.5 6.45
1916 3,510 128,605 100,000 31,000 37.3 28.6 8.7
1917 3,560 142,414 96,000 50,000 40.9 27.0 13.9
1918 3,590 139,465 122,000 21,000 39.7 34.1 5.6
1919 3,630 136,707 97,000 43,000 38.5 26.8 11.7
1920 3,655 141,313 117,000 27,000 39.5 32.1 7.4 6.48
1921 3,720 155,159 90,000 69,000 42.8 24.2 18.6
1922 3,790 154,531 93,000 65,000 41.8 24.6 17.2
1923 3,860 146,984 82,000 69,000 39.1 21.3 17.8
1924 3,930 158,688 96,000 67,000 41.4 24.5 16.9
1925 3,993 159,423 95,000 68,000 40.8 23.9 16.9
1926 4,100 175,802 92,000 87,000 43.7 22.4 21.3
1927 4,210 177,422 93,000 89,000 43.2 22.1 21.1
1928 4,330 183,699 95,000 94,000 43.7 22.0 21.7
1929 4,460 190,031 96,000 100,000 44.0 21.6 22.4
1930 4,593 198,186 89,000 117,000 44.8 19.4 25.4 7.02
1931 4,710 208,137 100,000 116,000 45.8 21.3 24.5
1932 4,867 204,913 99,000 115,000 44.0 20.4 23.6
1933 4,995 211,737 98,000 123,000 44.3 19.7 24.6
1934 5,128 219,189 105,166 123,510 44.6 20.5 24.1
1935 5,255 225,980 106,905 129,040 44.9 20.3 24.6
1936 5,384 223,961 106,332 127,725 43.5 19.8 23.7
1937 5,530 237,090 109,096 138,570 44.8 19.7 25.1
1938 5,678 235,821 111,723 133,117 43.1 19.7 23.4
1939 5,821 244,707 115,044 139,119 43.7 19.8 23.9
1940 5,987 246,691 116,239 141,232 43.0 19.4 23.6 6.11
1941 6,163 241,894 99,858 153,447 41.1 16.2 24.9 5.98
1942 6,339 242,796 112,161 143,243 40.3 17.7 22.6 5.93
1943 6,507 247,427 122,001 138,662 40.0 18.8 21.2
1944
1945
1946
1947 6,294 241,071 114,000 127,000 38.3 18.1 20.2
1948 6,648 264,000 95,000 169,000 39.7 14.3 25.4 5.98
1949 7,099 300,843 93,000 208,000 42.4 13.1 29.3 6.49
1950 7,468 323,643 86,000 238,000 43.4 11.5 31.9 7.14
1951 7,695 385,383 89,000 296,000 50.0 11.6 38.5 7.59
1952 8,000 372,905 79,000 294,000 46.6 9.9 36.8 7.56
1953 8,297 374,536 78,000 297,000 45.2 9.4 35.8 7.54
1954 8,617 383,574 71,000 313,000 44.6 8.2 36.3 7.25
1955 8,924 403,683 77,000 327,000 45.3 8.6 36.6 7.32
1956 9,242 414,036 74,000 340,000 44.8 8.0 36.8 7.27
1957 9,539 394,870 81,000 314,000 41.4 8.5 32.9 6.83
1958 9,858 410,885 75,000 336,000 41.7 7.6 34.1 6.48
1959 10,227 421,458 74,000 347,000 41.2 7.2 33.9 5.98
1960 10,602 419,442 74,000 345,000 39.5 7.0 32.5 5.75
1961 10,983 420,254 74,000 346,254 38.3 6.7 31.5 5.58
1962 11,312 423,469 72,000 351,469 37.4 6.4 31.1 5.46
1963 11,680 424,250 71,000 353,250 36.3 6.1 30.2 5.35
1964 12,088 416,926 69,000 347,926 34.5 5.7 28.8 5.10
1965 12,442 406,604 67,887 338,717 32.7 5.5 27.2 4.82
1966 12,812 415,108 69,778 345,330 32.4 5.4 27.0 4.95
1967 13,147 374,282 71,861 302,421 28.5 5.5 23.0 4.22
1968 13,474 394,260 73,650 320,610 29.3 5.5 23.8 4.36
1969 13,995 390,728 70,549 320,179 27.9 5.0 22.9 4.14
1970 14,507 394,015 71,135 322,883 27.2 4.9 22.3 4.00
1971 14,837 380,424 70,954 309,470 25.6 4.8 20.9 3.70
1972 15,145 365,749 71,486 294,263 24.1 4.7 19.4 3.36
1973 15,424 366,942 73,477 293,465 23.8 4.8 19.0 3.21
1974 15,699 355,933 74,760 293,063 23.4 4.8 18.7 2.94
1975 15,999 357,653 75,061 292,586 23.0 4.7 18.3 2.76
1976 16,298 424,075 77,000 347,075 26.0 4.7 21.3 3.08
1977 16,601 393,633 79,000 316,796 23.7 4.8 19.1 2.64
1978 16,951 411,637 79,000 330,203 24.3 4.7 19.5 2.71
1979 17,337 421,720 82,000 340,518 24.3 4.7 19.6 2.67
1980 17,608 413,881 84,333 329,548 23.5 4.8 18.7 2.51
1981 17,972 414,069 87,192 326,877 23.0 4.9 18.2 2.45
1982 18,261 405,263 87,578 317,685 22.2 4.8 17.4 2.32
1983 18,538 383,439 90,951 292,488 20.7 4.9 15.8 2.17
1984 18,873 371,008 89,915 281,093 19.7 4.8 14.9 2.05
1985 19,135 346,208 92,348 253,860 18.1 4.8 13.3 1.88
1986 19,356 309,230 95,057 214,173 16.0 4.9 11.1 1.68
1987 19,564 314,024 96,319 217,705 16.1 4.9 11.1 1.70
1988 19,788 342,031 102,113 239,918 17.3 5.2 12.1 1.86
1989 20,004 315,299 103,288 212,011 15.8 5.2 10.6 1.68
1990 20,230 335,618 105,669 229,949 16.6 5.2 11.4 1.81
1991 20,455 321,932 106,284 215,648 15.7 5.2 10.5 1.72
1992 20,655 321,632 110,516 211,116 15.6 5.4 10.2 1.73
1993 20,848 325,613 110,901 214,712 15.6 5.3 10.3 1.76
1994 21,087 322,938 113,866 209,072 15.3 5.4 9.9 1.76
1995 21,268 329,581 119,112 210,469 15.5 5.6 9.9 1.78
1996 21,441 325,545 122,489 203,056 15.2 5.7 9.5 1.76
1997 21,634 326,002 121,000 205,002 15.1 5.6 9.5 1.77
1998 21,836 271,450 123,180 148,270 12.4 5.6 6.8 1.47
1999 22,011 283,661 126,113 157,548 12.9 5.7 7.2 1.56
2000 22,185 305,312 125,957 179,355 13.8 5.7 8.1 1.68
2001 22,342 260,354 127,647 132,707 11.7 5.7 5.9 1.40
2002 22,464 247,530 128,636 118,894 11.0 5.7 5.3 1.34
2003 22,554 227,070 130,801 96,269 10.1 5.8 4.3 1.24
2004 22,647 216,419 135,092 81,327 9.6 6.0 3.6 1.18
2005 22,730 205,854 139,398 66,456 9.1 6.1 2.9 1.12
2006 22,824 204,459 135,839 68,620 9.0 6.0 3.0 1.12
2007 22,918 204,414 141,111 63 303 8.9 6.2 2.8 1.10
2008 22,998 198,733 143,624 55,109 8.6 6.2 2.4 1.05
2009 23,079 191,310 143,582 47,728 8.3 6.2 2.1 1.03
2010 23,141 166,886 145,772 21,114 7.2 6.3 0.9 0.90
2011 23,194 196,627 152,915 43,712 8.5 6.6 1.9 1.07
2012 23,271 229,481 154,251 75,230 9.9 6.6 3.2 1.27
2013 23,345 199,113 155,908 43,205 8.5 6.7 1.8 1.07
2014 23,434 210,383 163,929 46,454 9.0 7.0 2.0 1.17
2015 23,472 213,598 163,858 49,740 9.1 7.0 2.1 1.18
2016 23,540 208,440 172,405 36,035 8.8 7.3 1.5 1.17
2017 23,571 193,844 171,242 22,602 8.2 7.3 0.9 1.13
2018 23,589 181,601 172,784 8,817 7.7 7.3 0.4 1.06
2019 23,603 177,767 176,296 1,471 7.5 7.5 0.0 1.05
2020[57] 23,561 165,249 173,156 -7,907 7.0 7.4 -0.4 0.99
2021 23,359 153,820 183,732 -29,912 6.6 7.9 -1.3 0.98
2022 23,264 138,986 207,230 -68,244 6.0 8.9 -2.9 0.87
2023 23,420 135,571 205,368 -69,797 5.8 8.8 -3.0 0.85(e)
* CBR=crude birth rate (per 1000); CDR=crude deathrate (per 1000); NC=natural change (per 1000); TFR=total fertility rate

Current vital statistics edit

[58]

Period Live births Deaths Natural increase
January - March 2023 33,567 56,848 -23,281
January - March 2024 31,513 54,492 -22,979
Difference   -2,054 (-6.12%)   -2,356 (-4.14%)   +382

Fertility rate edit

The fertility rate[59][60] in Taiwan is one of the lowest ever recorded in the world in historical times. It reached its lowest level in 2023: 0.85 children per female. In 1980, the rate was still well above replacement level (2.515), but it dropped to 1.88 in 1985, 1.81 in 1990, 1.78 in 1995, 1.68 in 2000, 1.12 in 2005, 0.90 in 2010.

Infant mortality rate edit

total: 6.29 deaths/1,000 live births
male: 6.97 deaths/1,000 live births
female: 5.55 deaths/1,000 live births (2006 est.)

Life expectancy at birth edit

 
Historical development of life expectancy in Taiwan

Taiwan is ranked 39th in the world for highest life expectancy at birth.

Gender Life expectancy in 2009[61]
Male 75.88 years
Female 82.46 years

Fertility trend edit

In developed countries, trends like late marriage, no marriage, and having fewer children are growing. Developed countries tend to have lower fertility rates because access to birth control and contraceptives are easier and having children could become an economic burden caused by housing, education cost, and other costs for childcare.[62] Most women in developed countries are in the workforce and tend to have higher educations and professional careers. As a result, many women tend to have children late in life or no children at all.[63]

According to the BBC, the total fertility rate in Taiwan had decreased to 0.9 children per woman in 2010.[64] This figure is much lower than the replacement level and one of the lowest in the world. This indicates the population is experiencing negative growth and population aging is happening fast.[25] According to a Central News Agency Report, total births in 2017 were below 200,000. Compared to previous decades, the total number of births since 2000 has been between 197,000 and 230,000.[65] If this trend continues, the senior population in Taiwan will be almost 5 times higher than the youth population by 2060.[66]

HIV/AIDS edit

The first reported case of HIV/AIDS occurred in December 1984 and the first local infection was recorded in February 1986. As of May 2006, there were 11,486 recorded cases of HIV, of which 2,631 were confirmed with AIDS. There were 1,425 deaths, leaving 10,029 people living with HIV/AIDS. This is less than 0.05% of the total population of Taiwan. Statistics by the Center for Disease Control show that the gender distribution of infected persons was 90% male and 10% female.

Data Population
Adult prevalence 11,486
People living with HIV/AIDS 10,029
Deaths 1,425
Source: Center for Disease Control (CDC), Republic of China – May 2006 est.() (in Chinese)

Military personnel edit

The Republic of China has a compulsory military draft for males aged 19–35 years of age with a service obligation of 4 months (2018).

Population available for draft edit

Defined as 19–49 years of age.

Gender Population
Male 5,883,828
Female 5,680,773
Total 11,564,601

Fit for military service edit

Of the available population, the following are fit for military service. Defined as 19–49 years of age.

Gender Population
Male 4,749,537
Female 4,644,607
Total 9,394,144

Education edit

Taiwan has a nine-year compulsory education program initiated by the Ministry of Education in 1968. This consists of six years in elementary education and three years in junior high education. About 94.7% of junior high graduates continue their studies in either a senior high or vocational school [citation needed]. Reflecting a strong commitment to education, in FY 2001 16% of the ROC budget was allocated for education [citation needed]. The enrollment rate was 96.77% for the 2004–2005 school year.[67] For the 2005–2006 school year, there were 5,283,855 students in both public and private schools, about a quarter of the entire population. The literacy rate is above 95%.

Since the mid-1990s, the government has introduced several education reforms in a bid to further improve education standards such as the replacement in 2002 of the 48-year-long Joint University Entrance Examination (JUEE; 大學聯考; Dàxué liánkǎo), which had been set up in 1954.

Distribution of students edit

Sector Education Years of study Typical Age range Students Distribution
Pre-school Kindergarten (2 years) 4–6 years old 224,220 4.2%
Compulsory Elementary 6 years 6–12 years old 1,831,913 34.7%
Junior High 3 years 12–15 years old 951,236 18%
Senior Secondary Senior High 3 years 15–18 years old 420,608 8%
Senior Vocation 3 years 15–18 years old 331,604 6.3%
Higher Education Junior College 2–5 years 15–20 years old 37,068 0.7%
University & College 4–7 years
(up to 13 years)
18–25 years old
(up to 31 years old)
1,259,490 23.8%
Other Special School up to 14 years 4–18 years old 6,361 0.1%
Supplementary School n/a n/a 200,573 3.8%
Open University n/a n/a 20,782 0.4%
Total 5,283,855 100%
Source: Number of students at each level (SY 2005–2006), Ministry of Education, Republic of China.

Literacy edit

The definition of literacy is those aged 15 and over who can read and write.

Gender Population
Male 99.6%
Female 96.8%
Total 98.2%

"International Comparison of Education Statistical Indicators – 2012 Edition", Ministry of Education, 2012. pp. 17. Retrieved on 2012-10-05. (Table 1-2-5. Literacy Rate for Age 15 Plus by Gender).

2.02 Population of 15 Years and Over by Educational Attainment 2013-02-17 at the Wayback Machine, Statistical Yearbook of Interior, Ministry of the Interior, Republic of China (Taiwan). 2012. Retrieved on 10-05-2012.

Data source limitations edit

The World Bank does not publish data on Taiwan in most of its online databases.[68][69]

Notes edit

  1. ^ One may use more than one language at home. This table refers to the relative frequency of languages used at home to the total of resident nationals.

References edit

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Bibliography edit

  • Brown, Melissa J. (2004). Is Taiwan Chinese? : The Impact of Culture, Power and Migration on Changing Identities. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-23182-1.
  • Davidson, James W. (1903). The Island of Formosa, Past and Present : history, people, resources, and commercial prospects : tea, camphor, sugar, gold, coal, sulphur, economical plants, and other productions. London and New York: Macmillan. OCLC 1887893. OL 6931635M.
  • The Republic of China Yearbook 2014 (PDF). Executive Yuan, R.O.C. 2014. ISBN 9789860423020. Retrieved 2016-06-11.

External links edit

  Media related to Demographics of Taiwan at Wikimedia Commons

demographics, taiwan, this, article, uses, bare, urls, which, uninformative, vulnerable, link, please, consider, converting, them, full, citations, ensure, article, remains, verifiable, maintains, consistent, citation, style, several, templates, tools, availab. This article uses bare URLs which are uninformative and vulnerable to link rot Please consider converting them to full citations to ensure the article remains verifiable and maintains a consistent citation style Several templates and tools are available to assist in formatting such as reFill documentation and Citation bot documentation June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The population of Taiwan is approximately 23 35 million as of April 2023 1 Demographics of TaiwanPopulation pyramid of Taiwan at the end of 2021Population23 347 374 April 2023 Growth rate0 04 2022 est Birth rate5 8 births 1 000 population 2023 est Death rate8 8 deaths 1 000 population 2023 est Life expectancy81 16 years male78 17 years female84 34 yearsFertility rate0 85 children born woman 2023 est Infant mortality rate3 97 deaths 1 000 live birthsNet migration rate0 85 migrant s 1 000 population 2022 est Age structure0 14 years12 22 15 64 years69 72 65 and over18 07 Sex ratioTotal0 97 male s female 2022 est At birth1 06 male s femaleUnder 151 06 male s female65 and over0 73 male s femaleNationalityNationalityTaiwaneseMajor ethnicHan ChineseLanguageOfficialMandarin Residents per square kilometre by village Immigration of Han Chinese to the Penghu Islands started as early as the 13th century The main island was inhabited by a diversity of Taiwanese indigenous peoples speaking Austronesian languages until Han settlement began in the early 17th century around the time of the Ming Qing transition when workers were imported from Fujian to the colony of Dutch Formosa in the southwest of Taiwan According to governmental statistics in the early 21st century 95 to 97 of Taiwan s population are Han Chinese while about 2 3 are Taiwanese of Austronesian ethnicity 2 3 Half the population are followers of one or a mixture of 25 recognized religions During the 20th century the population of Taiwan rose more than sevenfold from about 3 million in 1905 to more than 22 million by 2001 This high growth was caused by a combination of factors such as very high fertility rates up to the 1960s and low mortality rates 4 In addition there was a surge in population as the Chinese Civil War ended and the Kuomintang KMT forces retreated bringing an influx of 1 2 million soldiers and civilians to Taiwan in 1948 1949 representing less than 15 of the population at the time who constitute approximately 10 of the population in 2004 5 6 3 7 Consequently the population growth rate after that was very rapid especially in the late 1940s and 1950s with an effective annual growth rate as high as 3 68 during 1951 1956 Fertility rates decreased gradually thereafter in 1984 the rate reached the replacement level 2 1 children per woman which is needed to replace the existing population Fertility rates have continued to decline In 2010 Taiwan had a population growth of less than 0 2 and a fertility rate of only 0 9 the lowest rate ever recorded in that country The population of Taiwan peaked at 23 6 million in 2019 and has been continuously decreasing ever since Most Taiwanese speak Mandarin Around 70 of the people also speak Taiwanese Hokkien and 10 speak Hakka Japanese speakers are becoming rare as the elderly generation who lived under Japanese colonization are dying out The Formosan languages are endangered as the indigenous peoples have become acculturated under Chinese culture Contents 1 Population 1 1 Historical 1 2 Population census 1 3 Details 1 4 Net migration rate 1 5 Age structure 1 6 Sex ratio 1 7 Population growth and age structure 1 8 Demographic transition and population aging 2 Ethnicity 2 1 Indigenous Taiwanese 2 2 Han Chinese 3 Foreign residents 4 Languages 5 Religion 5 1 Statistics on registered religions 2005 6 Vital statistics 6 1 Births and deaths 6 2 Current vital statistics 6 3 Fertility rate 6 4 Infant mortality rate 6 5 Life expectancy at birth 6 6 Fertility trend 7 HIV AIDS 8 Military personnel 8 1 Population available for draft 8 2 Fit for military service 9 Education 9 1 Distribution of students 9 2 Literacy 10 Data source limitations 11 Notes 12 References 13 Bibliography 14 External linksPopulation editSee also List of administrative divisions of Taiwan According to February 2022 statistics from the Ministry of the Interior the population of Taiwan was 23 319 776 99 6 of whom live on the island of Taiwan The remaining 0 4 live on offshore islands Penghu Lanyu Green Kinmen and Matsu Taiwan is ranked the 57th most populous nation in the world Historical edit See also North South divide in Taiwan Population The number of Chinese people living on the island in 1624 prior to Dutch colonial rule was about 25 000 8 During Dutch Formosa rule between 1624 and 1662 the Dutch began to encourage large scale Han immigration to the island for labour mainly from the south of Fujian It is estimated that prior to the Kingdom of Tungning 1661 the population of Taiwan was no greater than 100 000 people and the initial Zheng army with families and retainers that settled in Taiwan is estimated to be 30 000 at minimum 9 During Qing rule 1683 1895 the population of Han Chinese in Taiwan grew rapidly from 100 000 to 2 5 million while the aboriginal population was estimated to be at least 200 000 by 1895 10 The plains aboriginal population is estimated to have decreased by 90 over the hundred years from 1800 to 1900 11 The Japanese Colonial Government performed detailed censuses every five years starting in 1905 Statistics showed a population growth rate of about 1 to 3 per year throughout Japanese rule In 1905 the population of Taiwan was roughly 3 million by 1940 the population had grown to 5 87 million and after the Second World War in 1946 it numbered 6 09 million 12 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Population census edit Historical PopulationsYearPop 19053 123 302 19103 299 493 5 6 19203 757 838 13 9 19304 679 066 24 5 19406 077 478 29 9 19507 554 399 24 3 196010 792 202 42 9 197014 753 911 36 7 198017 866 008 21 1 199020 401 305 14 2 200022 276 672 9 2 201023 162 123 4 0 202023 561 236 1 7 Source https www census gov popclock world tw Year Males thousands Females thousands Total population thousands Average annual growth rate 1905 1 611 1 429 3 040 1915 1 813 1 669 3 480 1 4 1920 1 894 1 762 3 655 1 0 1925 2 053 1 941 3 993 1 8 1930 2 459 2 239 4 593 2 8 1935 2 660 2 553 5 212 2 6 1940 2 971 2 901 5 872 2 4 1956 4 772 4 596 9 368 3 0 1966 7 153 6 352 13 505 3 7 1970 sampling 7 723 7 047 14 770 2 3 1975 sampling 8 439 7 840 16 279 2 0 1980 9 405 8 624 18 030 2 1 1990 10 618 9 775 20 394 1 2 2000 11 386 10 915 22 301 0 9 2010 23 052 0 4 Population of Taiwan 1981 2018 13 14 Year 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 Population 18 193 955 18 515 754 18 790 538 19 069 194 19 313 825 19 509 082 19 725 010 19 954 397 20 156 587 20 401 305 1 768 1 484 1 483 1 283 1 011 1 107 1 163 1 013 1 214 Year 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 Population 20 605 831 20 802 622 20 995 416 21 177 874 21 357 431 21 525 433 21 742 815 21 928 591 22 092 387 22 276 672 1 003 0 955 0 927 0 869 0 848 0 787 1 010 0 854 0 747 0 834 Year 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 Population 22 405 568 22 520 776 22 604 550 22 689 122 22 770 383 22 876 527 22 958 360 23 037 031 23 119 772 23 162 123 0 579 0 514 0 372 0 374 0 358 0 466 0 358 0 343 0 359 0 183 Year 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 Population 23 224 912 23 315 822 23 373 517 23 433 753 23 492 074 23 539 816 23 571 227 23 588 932 23 600 903 23 539 588 0 271 0 391 0 247 0 258 0 249 0 203 0 133 0 075 0 051 0 260 14 Details edit Date 2019 07 08 CountyCity Area km2 Population Margin Density people km2 Sort New Taipei 2052 5667 4 010 657 2843 1 954 1 8 Taichung 2214 8968 2 811 729 581 1 270 2 8 Kaohsiung 2951 8524 2 773 786 195 939 3 8 Taipei 271 7997 2 650 154 3854 9 765 4 8 Taoyuan 1220 9540 2 240 328 2385 1 833 5 8 Tainan 2191 6531 1 881 730 66 859 6 8 Changhua County 1074 3960 1 273 613 661 1 186 7 8 Pingtung 2775 6003 820 798 398 296 8 8 Yunlin 1290 8326 682 577 335 529 9 8 Hsinchu County 1427 5369 561 766 1047 393 10 8 Miaoli 1820 3149 546 461 37 300 11 Chiayi 1903 6367 504 750 347 265 12 8 Nantou 4106 4360 495 084 22 121 13 Yilan 2143 6251 454 636 57 212 14 Hsinchu City 104 1526 447 781 297 4296 15 8 Keelung 132 7589 369 305 55 2782 16 Hualien 4628 5714 326 780 33 69 17 8 Chiayi City 60 0256 268 068 163 4469 18 Taitung County 3515 2526 217 540 296 62 19 Kinmen County 151 6560 139 319 46 918 20 Penghu County 126 8641 104 711 3 825 21 Lienchiang County 28 8000 13 073 11 455 22 8 Free area of the Republic of China 36 197 0669 23 593 794 1196 651 8 Source Ministry of Internal Affairs Taiwan Archived 2020 04 30 at the Wayback Machine Net migration rate edit During 2004 2010 Taiwan s migration rate was positive On average the annual net migration amounted to 22 000 people during that period which is equivalent to a rate of 1 0 per 1 000 inhabitants per year Age structure edit Age range 1980 1990 2000 2010 2015 2020 0 14 years 32 1 26 9 21 2 15 65 13 6 12 6 15 64 years 63 6 67 0 70 2 73 61 73 9 71 4 65 years and over 4 3 6 1 8 6 10 74 12 5 16 0 Sex ratio edit under 15 years 1 06 male s female 15 24 years 1 05 male s female 25 54 years 1 00 male s female 55 64 years 0 96 male s female 65 years and over 0 84 male s female total population 0 98 male s female 2018 est Population growth and age structure edit Demographic transition models DTM show how population pyramids change and go through specific stages By looking at Taiwan s population pyramid the country is in stage 4 of the DTM and its shape contracts but it will soon enter stage 5 15 In stage 5 of the DTM death rate gradually exceeds fertility rate and a country starts to experience overall population loss 16 Access to good medical care increases the lifespan of a population Knowledge of and access to contraception along with an increase in women s participation in the workforce cause a sharp decline in the fertility rate 16 National statistics of Taiwan in 2018 indicate that there are approximately 140 000 more females than males The birth rate 8 3 births 1 000 population is slightly higher than the death rate 7 4 deaths 1 000 population 17 The total dependency ratio in Taiwan is 35 2 which is relatively low 18 The low dependency ratio indicates that the dependent part of the population is less than half of the working part Experts estimate the dependency ratio will rise to 92 9 by 2060 19 A rising dependency ratio and longer life expectancy will most likely require the government to support part of the elderly population as the working age population is shrinking and thus less able to support the elderly directly Demographic transition and population aging edit The process of population aging is primarily determined by fertility and mortality rate 20 The proportions of elderly people are different across countries For example developing countries with limited access to healthcare and contraceptives where populations have a high fertility rate tend to have a lower proportion of older people 21 Medical advancements industrial developments and better knowledge of sanitation which started in the 18th century in many developed countries have caused a decline in mortality rates and an increase in fertility rates factors which raise the number of older people worldwide 22 According to the United Nations many developed countries are in more advanced stages 4 or 5 of the demographic transition model and their number of elderly will remain high compared to less developed countries 23 This phenomenon is known as population aging According to the World Health Organization WHO since 1993 Taiwan has reached the threshold of an aging society It was estimated the percentage of people over 65 was 8 24 The CEPD estimated that the percentage of people 65 years or older will be over 20 in 2025 which means Taiwan will soon become a super aged society 25 The critical factors that accelerate the speed of aging in Taiwan are high life expectancy and low fertility rate The average life expectancy in 2014 was 80 years The total fertility rate in 2014 was 1 1 per 1 000 women and dropped to 0 87 in 2022 26 Ethnicity editSee also Taiwanese people Taiwanese indigenous peoples and Han Taiwanese The ROC government reports that 95 to 97 percent of Taiwan s population is of the Han Chinese ethnicity which includes Hoklo Hakka and other ethnic groups originating from mainland China 27 28 Over 2 of the population consists of indigenous Taiwanese 3 21 000 Westerners live in Taiwan accounting for 0 1 of its total population 29 Indigenous Taiwanese edit nbsp Original geographic distributions of Taiwanese aboriginal peoples Main articles Taiwanese indigenous peoples List of indigenous peoples of Taiwan Plains indigenous peoples and Indigenous Area Taiwan The total population of recognized indigenous people in Taiwan is approximately 569 000 or approximately 2 38 of Taiwan s population 30 These groups primarily inhabit the eastern half of Taiwan which consists mostly of mountainous terrain Their population growth rate 1 2 and population pyramid are considerably more youthful than the overall population 31 Including migrant workers the Austronesian population of Taiwan is approaching 1 million 32 Place Population Pct Male Female Total Living in the Eastern plains 111 372 109 141 220 513 47 1 Living in the mountains 122 016 126 073 248 089 52 9 Total 233 388 235 214 468 602 100 Note Source data obtained from the Ministry of the Interior website Spreadsheet data m1 04 xls Archived 2017 06 20 at the Wayback Machine The Taiwanese government officially recognizes sixteen ethnic groups of Taiwanese indigenous peoples Chinese 原住民 pinyin yuanzhumin Pe h ōe ji Goan chu bin 33 In the early 1910s research in the Japanese era recognized nine ethnic groups Amis Atayal Bunun Paiwan Puyuma Rukai Saisiyat Tsou and Yami After the 2000s indigenous cultural revitalization movements forced the government to change its attitude towards the indigenous people of Taiwan The Yami people were renamed to Tao New ethnic groups were also recognized by the government including Thao in 2001 Kavalan in 2002 Truku Taroko in 2004 Sakizaya in 2007 Seediq in 2008 Kanakanavu in 2014 and Saaroa in 2014 There are at least another dozen groups that are not officially recognized by the government Officially Recognized Taiwanese Indigenous Peoples Name Formosannative name Chinese Populationat census 2000 34 Population 02 2016 35 Notes Amis Pangcah Amis 阿美族 148 992 203 740 Recognized since Japanese era Amis name means north Atayal Tayal Tayan 泰雅族 91 883 87 156 Recognized since Japanese era Atayal name means brave person Bunun Bunun 布農族 41 038 56 844 Recognized since Japanese era Kanakanavu Kanakanavu 卡那卡那富族 267 Classified as Tsou recognized since 2014 Kavalan Kebalan Kbaran 噶瑪蘭族 1 416 Some Kavalan were classified as Amis recognized since 2002 Paiwan Payuan 排灣族 70 331 97 788 Recognized since Japanese era Puyuma Pinuyumayan 卑南族 9 606 13 651 Recognized since Japanese era Rukai Drekay 魯凱族 12 084 12 996 Recognized since Japanese era Saaroa Hla alua 拉阿魯哇族 294 Classified as Tsou recognized since 2014 Saisiyat Say Siyat 賽夏族 5 311 6 495 Recognized since Japanese era Sakizaya Sakizaya 撒奇萊雅族 863 Classified as Amis recognized since 2007 Seediq Seediq 賽德克族 9 451 Classified as Atayal recognized since 2008 Taroko Truku 太魯閣族 30 382 Classified as Atayal recognized since 2004 Thao Thao Ngan 邵族 768 Classified as Tsou recognized since 2001 Tsou Cou 鄒族 6 169 6 647 Recognized since Japanese era Yami Tao 達悟族 雅美族 3 872 4 494 Recognized since Japanese era Yami name means person Unspecified 尚未申報 8 249 14 206 Total 397 535 547 465 Unrecognized indigenous groups may include extinct tribes mostly Plains indigenous peoples or communities currently classified with other groups There are also 25 943 indigenous people who are currently not classified in any group Unrecognized Taiwanese indigenous Peoples Name Formosannative name Chinese Notes Arikun Arikun 阿立昆族 Sometimes classified as Hoanya Babuza Babuza Poavasa 貓霧拺族 Basay Basay Basai 巴賽族 馬塞族 Sometimes classified as Ketagalan Hoanya Hoanya 洪雅族 和安雅族 Sometimes split into Lloa and Arikun Kaxabu Kaxabu Kahapu 噶哈巫族 Sometimes classified as Pazeh In revitalization Ketagalan Ketagalan 凱達格蘭族 Kulon Kulon 龜崙族 Lloa Lloa 羅亞族 Sometimes classified Hoanya Luilang Luilang 雷朗族 Sometimes classified as Ketagalan Makatao Makatao Tao 馬卡道族 Sometimes classified as Siraya Recognized in Pingtung In revitalization Papora Papora Vupuran 拍瀑拉族 巴布拉族 Pazeh Pazeh Pazih 巴宰族 巴則海族 In revitalization Qauqaut Qauqaut 猴猴族 Siraya Siraya 西拉雅族 希萊耶族 Recognized in Tainan and Fuli In revitalization Taivoan Taivoan Taivuan 大武壠族 Sometimes classified as Siraya Recognized in Fuli In revitalization Taokas Taokas 道卡斯族 In revitalization Han Chinese edit Main articles Han Chinese Han Taiwanese Hoklo Taiwanese and Hakka people The majority of Han Chinese descend from immigrants who arrived to the island prior to Japanese rule 1895 1945 and can be classified as the Hoklo and Hakka on the basis of language and customs 36 As the majority of early immigrants were Hokkien speakers from Fujian 37 who arrived starting in the 17th century the Hoklos account for about 70 of the total population today During Qing rule a large number of Hoklo men took indigenous brides 38 Some of the plains aboriginals also adopted Chinese customs and language so as to be indistinguishable from the Han 39 Thus many who categorize themselves as Han have some degree of indigenous ancestry A significant minority of Han Chinese are Hakka and they constitute about 15 of the total population The Hakkas emigrated chiefly from eastern Guangdong speak Hakka Chinese and originally took up residence in the hills of the indigenous border districts 40 38 Waishengren form another significant mixed ethnic group in Taiwan The term refers to migrants who moved from China to Taiwan between 1945 when the ROC took control of Taiwan from the Japanese empire and 1949 during the relocation of the ROC from mainland China to Taiwan Estimates vary regarding how many waishengren migrated with most estimates ranging between 950 000 and 2 million 41 with 1 2 million being the most commonly cited figure in Taiwan 42 which would have constituted less than 15 of the population at the time who constitute approximately 10 of the population in 2004 5 7 Foreign residents edit nbsp Foreign residents in Taiwan There are 812 603 foreign residents in Taiwan as of April 2023 representing 3 48 of the country s population 43 44 1 Nationality Origin 2019 2021 2022 in 2019 1 nbsp Indonesia 255 770 254 403 234 329 33 1 2 nbsp Vietnam 224 108 247 817 234 100 29 0 3 nbsp Philippines 152 179 156 996 154 075 19 7 4 nbsp Thailand 64 381 67 308 72 061 8 34 5 nbsp Malaysia 20 549 22 819 23 749 2 66 6 nbsp Japan 13 768 16 160 15 956 1 78 7 nbsp United States 9 979 12 847 11 462 1 29 8 nbsp South Korea 4 481 5 132 4 843 0 58 9 nbsp India 3 748 4 695 4 671 0 49 10 nbsp United Kingdom 2 097 2 961 2 989 0 27 11 nbsp Myanmar 1 671 1 852 2 611 0 22 12 nbsp Canada 2 167 2 737 2 579 0 28 13 nbsp France 1 553 1 790 1 841 0 20 14 nbsp Singapore 1 456 1 726 1 766 0 19 15 nbsp South Africa 1 207 1 416 1 539 0 16 16 nbsp Germany 965 1 224 1 271 0 12 18 nbsp Australia 838 1 051 985 0 11 19 nbsp Russia 578 663 680 0 07 20 nbsp Netherlands 346 512 531 0 04 21 nbsp Italy 489 579 523 0 06 22 nbsp Mongolia 1 126 684 500 0 15 23 nbsp Spain 390 473 492 0 05 24 nbsp Eswatini 363 412 0 05 25 nbsp Honduras 288 374 0 04 26 nbsp Cambodia 164 359 0 02 27 nbsp Belize 181 334 0 02 28 nbsp Paraguay 176 328 0 02 28 nbsp New Zealand 313 352 328 0 04 30 nbsp Poland 217 285 311 0 03 31 nbsp Portugal 217 312 300 0 03 32 nbsp Pakistan 186 297 0 02 33 nbsp Denmark 147 284 0 02 33 nbsp Turkey 279 311 284 0 04 35 nbsp Brazil 307 261 259 0 04 36 nbsp Belgium 198 302 254 0 03 37 nbsp Mexico 196 226 229 0 03 38 nbsp Ireland 165 216 0 02 39 nbsp Ukraine 245 230 214 0 03 40 nbsp Guatemala 138 199 0 02 41 nbsp Switzerland 168 219 181 0 02 42 nbsp Saint Lucia 102 170 43 nbsp Ethiopia 181 164 0 02 43 nbsp Nepal 159 164 0 02 45 nbsp Iran 118 163 0 02 46 nbsp Haiti 148 158 0 02 47 nbsp Egypt 87 157 48 nbsp Sweden 125 152 0 02 49 nbsp Israel 105 151 50 nbsp Nicaragua 183 141 0 02 51 nbsp Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 104 140 52 nbsp Colombia 106 128 53 nbsp Austria 117 126 0 02 54 nbsp Nigeria 81 116 55 nbsp Sri Lanka 95 109 56 nbsp Peru 85 104 57 nbsp Gambia 122 100 0 02 58 nbsp Saint Kitts and Nevis 73 96 59 nbsp Jordan 80 95 60 nbsp Bangladesh 62 94 61 nbsp Czech Republic 101 92 62 nbsp El Salvador 125 90 0 02 62 nbsp Hungary 79 86 63 nbsp Venezuela 88 81 64 nbsp Belarus 65 78 65 nbsp Palau 48 66 66 nbsp Chile 48 65 67 nbsp Tanzania 64 68 nbsp Romania 63 69 nbsp Argentina 57 61 69 nbsp Kyrgyzstan 45 61 71 nbsp Burkina Faso 65 55 72 nbsp Malawi 60 54 73 nbsp Laos 41 54 74 nbsp Marshall Islands 43 52 74 nbsp Panama 83 52 76 nbsp Slovakia 41 48 77 nbsp Uzbekistan 38 46 78 nbsp Uganda 19 43 78 nbsp Finland 37 43 80 nbsp Ecuador 42 42 81 nbsp Kenya 32 41 81 nbsp Lithuania 41 83 nbsp Croatia 31 39 84 nbsp Latvia 17 35 85 nbsp Tuvalu 30 34 86 nbsp Morocco 30 33 87 nbsp Papua New Guinea 27 32 88 nbsp Nauru 24 31 89 nbsp Ghana 28 30 90 nbsp Burundi 15 29 90 nbsp Greece 25 29 92 nbsp Norway 28 28 92 nbsp Serbia 21 28 94 nbsp Mauritius 23 27 94 nbsp Dominican Republic 43 27 96 nbsp Kazakhstan 22 25 97 nbsp Bulgaria 18 24 98 nbsp Bolivia 15 22 99 nbsp Iraq 17 19 100 nbsp Costa Rica 17 18 101 nbsp North Macedonia 14 17 101 nbsp Lebanon 9 17 103 nbsp Slovenia 23 16 103 nbsp Zimbabwe 17 16 103 nbsp Yemen 11 16 106 nbsp Solomon Islands 88 15 107 nbsp Brunei 21 14 108 nbsp Armenia 21 13 108 nbsp Turkmenistan 13 13 108 nbsp Republic of the Congo 10 13 108 nbsp Fiji 8 13 112 nbsp Uruguay 13 12 114 nbsp Tunisia 11 11 114 nbsp Palestine 6 11 116 nbsp Syria 9 10 116 nbsp Bhutan 7 10 118 nbsp Algeria 9 8 118 nbsp Zambia 6 8 118 nbsp Estonia 11 8 118 nbsp Iceland 3 8 118 nbsp Luxembourg 8 118 nbsp Jamaica 5 8 125 nbsp Lesotho 4 7 125 nbsp Cameroon 8 7 127 nbsp Georgia 9 6 127 nbsp Trinidad and Tobago 4 6 127 nbsp Namibia 7 6 127 nbsp Chad 6 6 127 nbsp Democratic Republic of the Congo 6 6 127 nbsp Senegal 4 6 132 nbsp Cyprus 2 5 132 nbsp Botswana 5 5 132 nbsp Benin 2 5 132 nbsp Tajikistan 6 5 132 nbsp Albania 2 5 137 nbsp Ivory Coast 4 4 137 nbsp Moldova 9 4 137 nbsp Kiribati 85 4 137 nbsp Sudan 7 4 137 nbsp Mozambique 6 4 137 nbsp Tonga 6 4 137 nbsp Timor Leste 4 4 144 nbsp Sierra Leone 6 3 144 nbsp Dominica 1 3 144 nbsp Guyana 3 144 nbsp Niger 4 3 144 nbsp Togo 2 3 144 nbsp Azerbaijan 3 3 144 nbsp Maldives 2 3 144 nbsp Oman 4 3 152 nbsp Guinea Bissau 1 2 152 nbsp Libya 4 2 152 nbsp Cuba 5 2 152 nbsp Mali 3 2 152 nbsp Rwanda 3 2 152 nbsp Bahrain 2 2 152 nbsp Saudi Arabia 3 2 152 nbsp Vanuatu 1 2 152 nbsp Malta 2 2 152 nbsp Afghanistan 1 2 152 nbsp Suriname 1 2 152 nbsp Samoa 2 164 nbsp Guinea 3 1 164 nbsp Madagascar 2 1 164 nbsp Djibouti 1 164 nbsp Gabon 1 1 164 nbsp Federated States of Micronesia 1 1 164 nbsp Seychelles 1 1 164 nbsp Grenada 1 164 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina 1 164 nbsp Barbados 1 1 164 nbsp Kuwait 1 164 nbsp Bahamas 1 164 nbsp United Arab Emirates 1 176 nbsp Sao Tome and Principe 3 177 nbsp Somalia 2 178 nbsp Angola 1 179 nbsp Cape Verde 1 180 nbsp Bermuda 1 Other stateless 103 102 lt 0 02 Total 772 281 783 662 100 0 Source National Immigration Agency Ministry of the Interior 45 46 47 Languages editMain articles Languages of Taiwan Formosan languages Taiwanese Hokkien Taiwanese Hakka Taiwanese Mandarin and Matsu dialect During Japanese rule between 1895 and 1945 Japanese was the medium of instruction and could be fluently spoken by many of those educated during that period Almost everyone in Taiwan born after the early 1950s can speak Mandarin 48 which was the official language and has been the medium of instruction in schools ever since Hanyu Pinyin the official romanization system in mainland China has also been the standard of Taiwan since 2009 A number of romanization systems are still seen in Taiwan including Tongyong the official romanization in Taiwan between 2002 and 2008 Wade Giles often found on passports and Postal Other Sinitic languages can also be seen in Taiwan The majority speak Taiwanese Hokkien a branch of Southern Min which had formerly been the most commonly spoken language On Matsu Islands the Eastern Min Fuzhou dialect is prevalent Although people on Kinmen Quemoy also speak Southern Min it is not the case in the Wuqiu Islands for they speak a dialect of the Pu Xian Min The ethnic Hakka speak various Taiwanese Hakka dialects including Sixian Hailu Dabu Raoping and Zhao an The most widely spoken Formosan languages today are Amis Atayal Bunun and Paiwan The other aboriginal languages that have gained official recognition are Kanakanavu Kavalan Puyuma Rukai Hla alua Saisiyat Sakizaya Seediq closely related to Truku Thao Tsou and Yami also known as Tao Languages used at home for the resident nationals aged 6 years and over 2010 per 100 resident nationals a 49 Division Population Mandarin Hokkien Hakka Indigenous Others Total 21 407 235 83 5 81 9 6 6 1 4 2 New Taipei City 3 779 575 92 82 9 2 4 0 9 2 4 Taipei 2 475 422 93 2 73 5 3 5 0 5 3 2 Keelung 358 927 87 2 91 1 0 9 1 8 1 8 Hsinchu 427 792 92 70 7 11 1 0 8 1 6 Yilan 393 109 78 2 94 9 0 6 1 8 1 Taoyuan 1 982 734 93 4 58 2 17 1 1 3 1 3 Hsinchu County 464 165 90 6 27 7 56 2 1 1 Taichung 2 521 926 87 1 89 9 3 5 0 6 1 4 Miaoli 482 329 79 4 45 8 52 4 1 0 5 Changhua 1 123 439 69 5 98 1 0 3 0 2 0 9 Nantou 426 631 75 3 92 3 2 4 3 1 2 Yunlin 573 064 60 98 2 1 6 0 1 1 4 Tainan 1 719 853 71 7 95 8 0 5 0 3 2 7 Kaohsiung 2 596 510 78 6 90 9 3 0 7 2 4 Chiayi 250 900 76 5 94 7 0 4 0 3 1 Chiayi County 458 244 61 97 5 0 8 0 8 3 6 Pingtung 750 122 66 2 82 3 12 4 7 0 5 Penghu 80 203 75 93 6 0 5 0 3 2 4 Taitung 187 763 89 9 65 9 5 4 21 3 5 5 Hualien 287 858 90 8 60 9 10 8 16 9 1 6 Kinmen 52 603 85 4 92 8 1 1 0 5 0 8 Lienchiang 14 066 96 6 44 7 3 9 1 6 24 1Religion editMain article Religion in Taiwan nbsp Lungshan Temple of Manka Taipei nbsp Still Thoughts Hall Hualien City nbsp Holy Rosary Cathedral Kaohsiung nbsp Taipei Grand Mosque Taipei Article 13 of the Constitution of the Republic of China guarantees freedom of religion as a right of all its citizens As of 2013 update the Republic of China government recognizes 27 religions which are registered with the Civil Affairs Department of the Ministry of the Interior MOI 50 Statistics on registered religions 2005 edit About 81 3 of the population can be considered religious believers most of whom identify as Buddhists 35 or Taoists 33 Chinese folk religion is generally practised under the aegis of Taoism while more than 10 of the population adheres to popular movements of salvation Confucianism also is an honored school of thought and ethical codes Christian churches have been active in Taiwan for centuries a majority of them are Protestant with Presbyterians playing a particularly significant role The Republic of China s government has diplomatic relations with the Holy See which is the only European nation to formally recognize the Republic of China and is its longest lasting diplomatic ally having established relations in 1942 Islam has seen a surge in recent years as a result of foreign Muslims seeking work in Taiwan most notably from Indonesia There is also a small group of Shinto followers under the Tenriist sect which was introduced in the 1970s The table below shows official statistics on religion issued by the Department of Civil Affairs Ministry of the Interior MOI in 2005 The Taiwanese government recognises 26 religions in Taiwan 51 The statistics are reported by the various religious organisations to the MOI 51 52 Religion Members of total population Temples amp churches Buddhism 佛教 including Tantric Buddhism 8 086 000 35 1 4 006 Taoism 道教 7 600 000 33 0 18 274 Yiguandao 一貫道 810 000 3 5 3 260 Protestantism 基督新教 605 000 2 6 3 609 Roman Catholic Church 羅馬天主教 298 000 1 3 1 151 Lord of Universe Church Tiandiism 天帝教 298 000 1 3 50 Miledadao 彌勒大道 250 000 1 1 2 200 Holy Church of the Heavenly Virtue Tiandiism 天德教 200 000 0 9 14 Zailiism Liism 理教 186 000 0 8 138 Xuanyuanism 軒轅教 152 700 0 7 22 Islam 伊斯蘭教 58 000 0 3 7 Mormonism 耶穌基督後期聖徒教會 51 090 0 2 54 Tenriism 天理教 35 000 0 2 153 Church of Maitreya the King of the Universe 宇宙彌勒皇教 35 000 0 2 12 Haizidao 亥子道 30 000 0 1 55 Church of Scientology 山達基教會 20 000 lt 0 1 7 Baha i Faith 巴哈伊教 16 000 lt 0 1 13 Jehovah s Witnesses 耶和華見證人 9 256 lt 0 1 85 True School of the Mysterious Gate 玄門真宗 5 000 lt 0 1 5 Holy Church of the Middle Flower 中華聖教 3 200 lt 0 1 7 Mahikari 真光教團 1 000 lt 0 1 9 Precosmic Salvationism 先天救教 1 000 lt 0 1 6 Yellow Middle 黃中 1 000 lt 0 1 1 Dayiism 大易教 1 000 lt 0 1 1 Total religious population 18 724 823 81 3 33 223 Total population 23 036 087 100 The figures for The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints are not from the MOI rather they are based on self reported data from LDS Newsroom 53 The figures for Jehovah s Witnesses are not from the MOI either they are based on the Witnesses own 2007 Service Year Report 54 In the original report both of them were counted as part of Protestantism 51 Vital statistics editBirths and deaths edit 55 56 Average population x 1000 Live births Deaths Natural change CBR CDR NC TFR 1906 3 060 119 107 102 000 16 000 38 6 33 4 5 2 6 13 1907 3 090 121 756 100 000 21 000 39 1 32 4 6 7 6 16 1908 3 120 119 800 100 000 19 000 38 2 31 9 6 3 6 14 1909 3 160 127 286 98 000 29 000 40 2 31 1 9 1 6 29 1910 3 210 132 141 88 000 45 000 41 3 27 5 13 8 6 37 1911 3 270 135 658 86 000 51 000 41 8 26 2 15 6 6 42 1912 3 330 136 622 83 000 55 000 41 3 25 0 16 3 6 46 1913 3 390 136 967 85 000 53 000 40 8 25 0 15 8 6 45 1914 3 440 141 450 95 000 47 000 41 4 27 6 13 8 6 62 1915 3 480 137 669 110 000 29 000 40 0 31 5 8 5 6 45 1916 3 510 128 605 100 000 31 000 37 3 28 6 8 7 1917 3 560 142 414 96 000 50 000 40 9 27 0 13 9 1918 3 590 139 465 122 000 21 000 39 7 34 1 5 6 1919 3 630 136 707 97 000 43 000 38 5 26 8 11 7 1920 3 655 141 313 117 000 27 000 39 5 32 1 7 4 6 48 1921 3 720 155 159 90 000 69 000 42 8 24 2 18 6 1922 3 790 154 531 93 000 65 000 41 8 24 6 17 2 1923 3 860 146 984 82 000 69 000 39 1 21 3 17 8 1924 3 930 158 688 96 000 67 000 41 4 24 5 16 9 1925 3 993 159 423 95 000 68 000 40 8 23 9 16 9 1926 4 100 175 802 92 000 87 000 43 7 22 4 21 3 1927 4 210 177 422 93 000 89 000 43 2 22 1 21 1 1928 4 330 183 699 95 000 94 000 43 7 22 0 21 7 1929 4 460 190 031 96 000 100 000 44 0 21 6 22 4 1930 4 593 198 186 89 000 117 000 44 8 19 4 25 4 7 02 1931 4 710 208 137 100 000 116 000 45 8 21 3 24 5 1932 4 867 204 913 99 000 115 000 44 0 20 4 23 6 1933 4 995 211 737 98 000 123 000 44 3 19 7 24 6 1934 5 128 219 189 105 166 123 510 44 6 20 5 24 1 1935 5 255 225 980 106 905 129 040 44 9 20 3 24 6 1936 5 384 223 961 106 332 127 725 43 5 19 8 23 7 1937 5 530 237 090 109 096 138 570 44 8 19 7 25 1 1938 5 678 235 821 111 723 133 117 43 1 19 7 23 4 1939 5 821 244 707 115 044 139 119 43 7 19 8 23 9 1940 5 987 246 691 116 239 141 232 43 0 19 4 23 6 6 11 1941 6 163 241 894 99 858 153 447 41 1 16 2 24 9 5 98 1942 6 339 242 796 112 161 143 243 40 3 17 7 22 6 5 93 1943 6 507 247 427 122 001 138 662 40 0 18 8 21 2 1944 1945 1946 1947 6 294 241 071 114 000 127 000 38 3 18 1 20 2 1948 6 648 264 000 95 000 169 000 39 7 14 3 25 4 5 98 1949 7 099 300 843 93 000 208 000 42 4 13 1 29 3 6 49 1950 7 468 323 643 86 000 238 000 43 4 11 5 31 9 7 14 1951 7 695 385 383 89 000 296 000 50 0 11 6 38 5 7 59 1952 8 000 372 905 79 000 294 000 46 6 9 9 36 8 7 56 1953 8 297 374 536 78 000 297 000 45 2 9 4 35 8 7 54 1954 8 617 383 574 71 000 313 000 44 6 8 2 36 3 7 25 1955 8 924 403 683 77 000 327 000 45 3 8 6 36 6 7 32 1956 9 242 414 036 74 000 340 000 44 8 8 0 36 8 7 27 1957 9 539 394 870 81 000 314 000 41 4 8 5 32 9 6 83 1958 9 858 410 885 75 000 336 000 41 7 7 6 34 1 6 48 1959 10 227 421 458 74 000 347 000 41 2 7 2 33 9 5 98 1960 10 602 419 442 74 000 345 000 39 5 7 0 32 5 5 75 1961 10 983 420 254 74 000 346 254 38 3 6 7 31 5 5 58 1962 11 312 423 469 72 000 351 469 37 4 6 4 31 1 5 46 1963 11 680 424 250 71 000 353 250 36 3 6 1 30 2 5 35 1964 12 088 416 926 69 000 347 926 34 5 5 7 28 8 5 10 1965 12 442 406 604 67 887 338 717 32 7 5 5 27 2 4 82 1966 12 812 415 108 69 778 345 330 32 4 5 4 27 0 4 95 1967 13 147 374 282 71 861 302 421 28 5 5 5 23 0 4 22 1968 13 474 394 260 73 650 320 610 29 3 5 5 23 8 4 36 1969 13 995 390 728 70 549 320 179 27 9 5 0 22 9 4 14 1970 14 507 394 015 71 135 322 883 27 2 4 9 22 3 4 00 1971 14 837 380 424 70 954 309 470 25 6 4 8 20 9 3 70 1972 15 145 365 749 71 486 294 263 24 1 4 7 19 4 3 36 1973 15 424 366 942 73 477 293 465 23 8 4 8 19 0 3 21 1974 15 699 355 933 74 760 293 063 23 4 4 8 18 7 2 94 1975 15 999 357 653 75 061 292 586 23 0 4 7 18 3 2 76 1976 16 298 424 075 77 000 347 075 26 0 4 7 21 3 3 08 1977 16 601 393 633 79 000 316 796 23 7 4 8 19 1 2 64 1978 16 951 411 637 79 000 330 203 24 3 4 7 19 5 2 71 1979 17 337 421 720 82 000 340 518 24 3 4 7 19 6 2 67 1980 17 608 413 881 84 333 329 548 23 5 4 8 18 7 2 51 1981 17 972 414 069 87 192 326 877 23 0 4 9 18 2 2 45 1982 18 261 405 263 87 578 317 685 22 2 4 8 17 4 2 32 1983 18 538 383 439 90 951 292 488 20 7 4 9 15 8 2 17 1984 18 873 371 008 89 915 281 093 19 7 4 8 14 9 2 05 1985 19 135 346 208 92 348 253 860 18 1 4 8 13 3 1 88 1986 19 356 309 230 95 057 214 173 16 0 4 9 11 1 1 68 1987 19 564 314 024 96 319 217 705 16 1 4 9 11 1 1 70 1988 19 788 342 031 102 113 239 918 17 3 5 2 12 1 1 86 1989 20 004 315 299 103 288 212 011 15 8 5 2 10 6 1 68 1990 20 230 335 618 105 669 229 949 16 6 5 2 11 4 1 81 1991 20 455 321 932 106 284 215 648 15 7 5 2 10 5 1 72 1992 20 655 321 632 110 516 211 116 15 6 5 4 10 2 1 73 1993 20 848 325 613 110 901 214 712 15 6 5 3 10 3 1 76 1994 21 087 322 938 113 866 209 072 15 3 5 4 9 9 1 76 1995 21 268 329 581 119 112 210 469 15 5 5 6 9 9 1 78 1996 21 441 325 545 122 489 203 056 15 2 5 7 9 5 1 76 1997 21 634 326 002 121 000 205 002 15 1 5 6 9 5 1 77 1998 21 836 271 450 123 180 148 270 12 4 5 6 6 8 1 47 1999 22 011 283 661 126 113 157 548 12 9 5 7 7 2 1 56 2000 22 185 305 312 125 957 179 355 13 8 5 7 8 1 1 68 2001 22 342 260 354 127 647 132 707 11 7 5 7 5 9 1 40 2002 22 464 247 530 128 636 118 894 11 0 5 7 5 3 1 34 2003 22 554 227 070 130 801 96 269 10 1 5 8 4 3 1 24 2004 22 647 216 419 135 092 81 327 9 6 6 0 3 6 1 18 2005 22 730 205 854 139 398 66 456 9 1 6 1 2 9 1 12 2006 22 824 204 459 135 839 68 620 9 0 6 0 3 0 1 12 2007 22 918 204 414 141 111 63 303 8 9 6 2 2 8 1 10 2008 22 998 198 733 143 624 55 109 8 6 6 2 2 4 1 05 2009 23 079 191 310 143 582 47 728 8 3 6 2 2 1 1 03 2010 23 141 166 886 145 772 21 114 7 2 6 3 0 9 0 90 2011 23 194 196 627 152 915 43 712 8 5 6 6 1 9 1 07 2012 23 271 229 481 154 251 75 230 9 9 6 6 3 2 1 27 2013 23 345 199 113 155 908 43 205 8 5 6 7 1 8 1 07 2014 23 434 210 383 163 929 46 454 9 0 7 0 2 0 1 17 2015 23 472 213 598 163 858 49 740 9 1 7 0 2 1 1 18 2016 23 540 208 440 172 405 36 035 8 8 7 3 1 5 1 17 2017 23 571 193 844 171 242 22 602 8 2 7 3 0 9 1 13 2018 23 589 181 601 172 784 8 817 7 7 7 3 0 4 1 06 2019 23 603 177 767 176 296 1 471 7 5 7 5 0 0 1 05 2020 57 23 561 165 249 173 156 7 907 7 0 7 4 0 4 0 99 2021 23 359 153 820 183 732 29 912 6 6 7 9 1 3 0 98 2022 23 264 138 986 207 230 68 244 6 0 8 9 2 9 0 87 2023 23 420 135 571 205 368 69 797 5 8 8 8 3 0 0 85 e CBR crude birth rate per 1000 CDR crude deathrate per 1000 NC natural change per 1000 TFR total fertility rate Current vital statistics edit 58 Period Live births Deaths Natural increase January March 2023 33 567 56 848 23 281 January March 2024 31 513 54 492 22 979 Difference nbsp 2 054 6 12 nbsp 2 356 4 14 nbsp 382 Fertility rate edit The fertility rate 59 60 in Taiwan is one of the lowest ever recorded in the world in historical times It reached its lowest level in 2023 0 85 children per female In 1980 the rate was still well above replacement level 2 515 but it dropped to 1 88 in 1985 1 81 in 1990 1 78 in 1995 1 68 in 2000 1 12 in 2005 0 90 in 2010 Infant mortality rate edit total 6 29 deaths 1 000 live births male 6 97 deaths 1 000 live births female 5 55 deaths 1 000 live births 2006 est Life expectancy at birth edit nbsp Historical development of life expectancy in Taiwan Taiwan is ranked 39th in the world for highest life expectancy at birth Gender Life expectancy in 2009 61 Male 75 88 years Female 82 46 years Fertility trend edit In developed countries trends like late marriage no marriage and having fewer children are growing Developed countries tend to have lower fertility rates because access to birth control and contraceptives are easier and having children could become an economic burden caused by housing education cost and other costs for childcare 62 Most women in developed countries are in the workforce and tend to have higher educations and professional careers As a result many women tend to have children late in life or no children at all 63 According to the BBC the total fertility rate in Taiwan had decreased to 0 9 children per woman in 2010 64 This figure is much lower than the replacement level and one of the lowest in the world This indicates the population is experiencing negative growth and population aging is happening fast 25 According to a Central News Agency Report total births in 2017 were below 200 000 Compared to previous decades the total number of births since 2000 has been between 197 000 and 230 000 65 If this trend continues the senior population in Taiwan will be almost 5 times higher than the youth population by 2060 66 HIV AIDS editMain article HIV AIDS in Taiwan The first reported case of HIV AIDS occurred in December 1984 and the first local infection was recorded in February 1986 As of May 2006 there were 11 486 recorded cases of HIV of which 2 631 were confirmed with AIDS There were 1 425 deaths leaving 10 029 people living with HIV AIDS This is less than 0 05 of the total population of Taiwan Statistics by the Center for Disease Control show that the gender distribution of infected persons was 90 male and 10 female Data Population Adult prevalence 11 486 People living with HIV AIDS 10 029 Deaths 1 425 Source Center for Disease Control CDC Republic of China May 2006 est PDF file in Chinese Military personnel editMain articles Conscription in Taiwan and Republic of China Armed ForcesThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Republic of China has a compulsory military draft for males aged 19 35 years of age with a service obligation of 4 months 2018 Population available for draft edit Defined as 19 49 years of age Gender Population Male 5 883 828 Female 5 680 773 Total 11 564 601 Fit for military service edit Of the available population the following are fit for military service Defined as 19 49 years of age Gender Population Male 4 749 537 Female 4 644 607 Total 9 394 144Education editMain article Education in Taiwan Taiwan has a nine year compulsory education program initiated by the Ministry of Education in 1968 This consists of six years in elementary education and three years in junior high education About 94 7 of junior high graduates continue their studies in either a senior high or vocational school citation needed Reflecting a strong commitment to education in FY 2001 16 of the ROC budget was allocated for education citation needed The enrollment rate was 96 77 for the 2004 2005 school year 67 For the 2005 2006 school year there were 5 283 855 students in both public and private schools about a quarter of the entire population The literacy rate is above 95 Since the mid 1990s the government has introduced several education reforms in a bid to further improve education standards such as the replacement in 2002 of the 48 year long Joint University Entrance Examination JUEE 大學聯考 Daxue liankǎo which had been set up in 1954 See also List of universities in Taiwan Distribution of students edit Sector Education Years of study Typical Age range Students Distribution Pre school Kindergarten 2 years 4 6 years old 224 220 4 2 Compulsory Elementary 6 years 6 12 years old 1 831 913 34 7 Junior High 3 years 12 15 years old 951 236 18 Senior Secondary Senior High 3 years 15 18 years old 420 608 8 Senior Vocation 3 years 15 18 years old 331 604 6 3 Higher Education Junior College 2 5 years 15 20 years old 37 068 0 7 University amp College 4 7 years up to 13 years 18 25 years old up to 31 years old 1 259 490 23 8 Other Special School up to 14 years 4 18 years old 6 361 0 1 Supplementary School n a n a 200 573 3 8 Open University n a n a 20 782 0 4 Total 5 283 855 100 Source Number of students at each level SY 2005 2006 Ministry of Education Republic of China Literacy edit The definition of literacy is those aged 15 and over who can read and write Gender Population Male 99 6 Female 96 8 Total 98 2 International Comparison of Education Statistical Indicators 2012 Edition Ministry of Education 2012 pp 17 Retrieved on 2012 10 05 Table 1 2 5 Literacy Rate for Age 15 Plus by Gender 2 02 Population of 15 Years and Over by Educational Attainment Archived 2013 02 17 at the Wayback Machine Statistical Yearbook of Interior Ministry of the Interior Republic of China Taiwan 2012 Retrieved on 10 05 2012 Data source limitations editThe World Bank does not publish data on Taiwan in most of its online databases 68 69 Notes edit One may use more than one language at home This table refers to the relative frequency of languages used at home to the total of resident nationals References edit a b Total Population 19 April 2022 Exec Yuan 2014 p 36 48 a b c Taiwan The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency United States Central Intelligence Agency Freedman Ronald Chang Ming Cheng Sun Te Hsiung 1994 Taiwan s Transition from High Fertility to Below Replacement Levels Studies in Family Planning 25 6 317 331 doi 10 2307 2137876 ISSN 0039 3665 JSTOR 2137876 a b 蕃薯 芋頭 臺灣土豆 臺灣當前族群認同狀況比較分析 Sweet potato taro Taiwanese potato Comparative Analysis of Taiwan s Current Ethnic Identity Status PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2021 01 20 Exec Yuan 2014 p 48 1 2 million a b Wu Nai teh July 2005 Transition without Justice or Justice without History Transitional Justice in Taiwan Taiwan Journal of Democracy 1 1 20 Davidson 1903 p 13 Lin A Keating J 2008 Island in the Stream a quick case study of Taiwan s complex history 4th ed Taipei SMC Pub ISBN 9789576387050 Davidson 1903 p 561 Davidson 1903 p 563 北市府網站管理員 2009 07 28 Taipei City Government Taipei City Government Retrieved 2023 04 05 人口數三段齡組 內政部統計處 Retrieved 2017 07 18 permanent dead link a b 內政部全球資訊網 中文網 Taiwan Age structure Demographics www indexmundi com a b Stage 5 of the Demographic Transition Model Population Education populationeducation org 18 October 2014 National Statistics Republic of China Taiwan eng stat gov tw Age dependency ratio of working age population Data data worldbank org Taiwan s demographic crunch and its military implications AEI aei org Archived from the original on 2018 01 24 Retrieved 2018 04 13 Wan Ahmad Wan Ibrahim Astina I Komang Budijanto Budijanto 1 May 2015 Demographic Transition and Population Ageing Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences 6 3 213 218 doi 10 5901 mjss 2015 v6n3s2p213 nbsp Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2018 04 03 Retrieved 2018 04 17 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2018 05 16 Retrieved 2019 02 10 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link United Nations 2001a World populationprospect The 2000 revision Volume 1 Comprehensive Tables New York United Nations Publications Sales No E 01 XIII 8 WHO World Health Organization www who int a b https www gtap agecon purdue edu resources download 6470 pdf bare URL PDF Lin Yi Yin Huang Chin Shan 19 November 2015 Aging in Taiwan Building a Society for Active Aging and Aging in Place The Gerontologist 56 2 176 183 doi 10 1093 geront gnv107 PMID 26589450 Exec Yuan 2014 p 36 中華民國國情簡介 ROC Vital Information Executive Yuan 2016 Archived from the original on 2017 02 18 Retrieved 2019 04 19 臺灣住民以漢人為最大族群 約占總人口97 https www immigration gov tw Exec Yuan 2014 p 49 Taiwan s indigenous population grows to 552 000 Taiwan News 2016 11 18 19 00 00 18 November 2016 Archived from the original on 2021 03 08 Retrieved 2019 03 01 Interactive chart shows how foreigners are distributed in Taiwan Taiwan News 2018 04 07 18 21 00 7 April 2018 Gov t officially recognizes two more aboriginal tribes the China Post Archived from the original on 2014 11 11 Retrieved 2014 06 26 Directorate General of Budget Accounting and Statistics Executive Yuan R O C DGBAS National Statistics Republic of China Taiwan Preliminary statistical analysis report of 2000 Population and Housing Census Archived March 12 2007 at the Wayback Machine Excerpted from Table 28 Indigenous population distribution in Taiwan Fukien Area Accessed PM 8 30 06 Council of Indigenous Peoples 1 Archived 2016 04 13 at the Wayback Machine 首頁 gt 本會資訊 gt 主動公開資訊 gt 統計資料 gt 原住民人口數統計資料 Accessed 07 Mar 2016 Davidson 1903 p 590 categorized as originating from Xiamen Quanzhou Zhangzhou and Zhangpu Davidson 1903 p 591 a b Exec Yuan 2014 p 48 Davidson 1903 p 581 Davidson 1903 pp 590 1 Yang Dominic Meng Hsuan 2021 The Great Exodus from China Cambridge University Press pp 63 65 ISBN 9781108784306 林 桶法 2009 大撤退 Taipei 聯經出版事業有限公司 ISBN 9789570834512 Statistics 2023 4Foreign Residents by Nationality 2021 9Foreign Residents by Nationality Foreign Residents by Nationality National Immigration Agency Ministry of the Interior 2018 11 28 Archived from the original on 2018 12 18 Retrieved 2018 12 18 2022 9Foreign Residents by Nationality Note that the Mandarin spoken in Taiwan has minor differences from the Putonghua spoken in mainland China 行政院主計處 6歲以上本國籍常住人口之父母相互溝通使用語言情形 PDF 行政院主計處 99年普查統計結果表 Retrieved 2020 04 19 Exec Yuan 2014 p 272 a b c Taiwan Yearbook 2006 Taiwan Government Information Office Department of Civil Affairs Ministry of the Interior 2006 Archived from the original on 8 July 2007 2006 Report on International Religious Freedom U S Department of State 2006 Retrieved 1 September 2007 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Taiwan Country Profile Jehovah s Witnesses Interactive Map of the Worldwide Work Archived from the original on 2005 05 04 Retrieved 2014 12 09 B R Mitchell International historical statistics Africa Asia amp Oceania 1750 2000 National Statistics Republic of China Taiwan Yearly Statistics eng stat gov tw Taiwan records historic low birth rate 出生數 出生率 死亡數 死亡率 National Statistics Retrieved 12 February 2024 http eng stat gov tw public data dgbas03 bs2 yearbook eng y015 pdf bare URL PDF National Statistics Republic of China Taiwan Monthly Statistics off eng stat gov tw http eng dgbas gov tw public data dgbas03 bs2 yearbook eng y017 pdf bare URL PDF Nargund G 30 May 2018 Declining birth rate in Developed Countries A radical policy re think is required Facts Views amp Vision in ObGyn 1 3 191 193 PMC 4255510 PMID 25489464 Trends in Higher Education Research College Board PDF 10 June 2019 Sui Cindy 15 August 2011 Taiwan s birth rate drops further BBC News Taiwan s birth rate is declining again nownews com 14 July 2017 Seniors population may be 4 times that of kids in 60 20 November 2014 Taiwan Yearbook 2005 Education Government Information Office Republic of China Archived from the original on 2006 12 12 Where are your data on Taiwan World Bank Data Help Desk datahelpdesk worldbank org Retrieved 2021 07 26 Taiwan China Data data worldbank org Retrieved 2021 07 26 Bibliography editBrown Melissa J 2004 Is Taiwan Chinese The Impact of Culture Power and Migration on Changing Identities Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 23182 1 Davidson James W 1903 The Island of Formosa Past and Present history people resources and commercial prospects tea camphor sugar gold coal sulphur economical plants and other productions London and New York Macmillan OCLC 1887893 OL 6931635M The Republic of China Yearbook 2014 PDF Executive Yuan R O C 2014 ISBN 9789860423020 Retrieved 2016 06 11 External links edit nbsp Media related to Demographics of Taiwan at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Demographics of Taiwan amp oldid 1218504057, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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