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Demographics of Iceland

The demographics of Iceland include population density, education level, health of the populace, economic status, religious affiliations and other aspects of the population.

Demographics of Iceland
Population pyramid of Iceland in 2020
Population376,248 (2022 est.)
Growth rate0.93% (2022 est.)
Birth rate12.96 births/1,000 population
Death rate6.56 deaths/1,000 population
Life expectancy83.64 years
 • male81.41 years
 • female85.97 years
Fertility rate1.95 children
Infant mortality rate1.65 deaths/1,000 live births
Net migration rate2.89 migrant(s)/1,000 population
Sex ratio
Total1 male(s)/female (2022 est.)
At birth1.05 male(s)/female
Nationality
NationalityIcelandic

As of 2022, the Icelandic population was just over 376,000. About 86,000 residents (23.7%) were of foreign background.[1]

About 99% of the nation's inhabitants live in urban areas (localities with populations greater than 200) and 64% live in the Capital Region.

History edit

 
The population of Iceland from 1703 to 2017, using data from Statistics Iceland.

The population of Iceland probably wavered between about 30,000 and 80,000 for most of the time since settlement. Official statistics begin in 1703, since which the population has grown from 50,358 to 376,248 (January 2022).[2]

Migration edit

Settlement edit

Most Icelandic people are descendants of Norwegian settlers, and of Gaels from Ireland and Scotland who were brought over as slaves during the settlement of Iceland in the ninth century AD. Recent DNA analysis suggests that about 66 percent of the male settler-era population was of Norse ancestry and that the female population was 60 percent Celtic.[3][4] Iceland remained extremely homogenous from its settlement era until the twentieth century.

Emigration edit

Large numbers of Icelanders began to emigrate from Iceland in the 1850s. It has been estimated that 17,000 Icelanders immigrated to North America in the period 1870–1914, and that 2,000 of them moved back to Iceland; this net loss, 15,000, was about 20% of the Icelandic population in 1887.[5] According to historian Gunnar Karlsson, "migration from Iceland is unique in that most went to Canada, whereas from most or all other European countries the majority went to the United States. This was partly due to the late beginning of emigration from Iceland after the Canadian authorities had begun to promote emigration in cooperation with the Allan Line, which already had an agent in Iceland in 1873. Contrary to most European countries, this promotion campaign was successful in Iceland, because emigration was only just about to start from there and Icelandic emigrants had no relatives in the United States to help them take the first steps".[5]

In the wake of the 2008 Icelandic financial crisis, many Icelanders went to work abroad.[6]

Immigration edit

Before the 1990s, there was little immigration to Iceland, and most of it was from other Scandinavian countries: about 1% of Icelanders in 1900 were of Danish heritage (born either in Denmark or to Danish parents).[7] In the mid-1990s, 95% of Icelanders had parents of Icelandic origin, and 2% of Icelanders were first-generation immigrants (born abroad with both parents and all grandparents foreign-born).[8][9]

Immigration to Iceland rose rapidly in the late twentieth century, encouraged by Iceland's accession to the European Economic Area in 1994, its entry into the Schengen Agreement in 2001, and the country's economic boom in the early twenty-first century. The largest ethnic minority is Poles, who are about a third of the immigrant population. In 2017, 10.6% of the people were first-generation immigrants.[9]

Iceland is also developing relatively small populations of religious minorities, including Catholics (about 15,000 in 2020, 4.02% of Icelanders),[10][11][12] Baháʼís (about 400 in 2010),[13] Jews (about 250 in 2018),[14] Buddhists (about 1,500 in 2021),[15] and Muslims (about 1,300 in 2015).[16][17]

Research on the experience of immigrants to Iceland is in its early days.[18][19] There is some evidence that racism is not as acute in Iceland as in neighbouring countries.[20][21][22] But, while it is popularly believed in Iceland that racism does not exist there,[23] there is evidence that in some respects immigrant populations experience prejudice and inequalities.[24] For example, Iceland has a higher dropout rate from upper secondary school among young immigrants than the EEA average.[25]

Iceland does not formally collect data on the ethnicity or racial identification of its citizens, but does collect data of the origin and background group by birth.[26]

Historical population[27]
YearPop.±% p.a.
874 436—    
930 35,000+8.15%
1100 60,000+0.32%
1400 80,000+0.10%
1495 40,000−0.73%
1703 50,358+0.11%
1750 48,241−0.09%
1800 46,176−0.09%
1850 59,586+0.51%
1860 67,754+1.29%
1870 69,463+0.25%
1880 71,981+0.36%
1890 70,581−0.20%
1900 77,967+1.00%
1910 84,528+0.81%
1920 92,855+0.94%
1930 106,360+1.37%
1940 120,264+1.24%
1950 141,042+1.61%
1960 173,855+2.11%
1970 204,042+1.61%
1980 226,948+1.07%
1990 253,785+1.12%
2000 279,049+0.95%
2010 317,630+1.30%
2020 364,134+1.38%
Source: Statistics Iceland
Background Groups Year
1996[28] 2001[28] 2006[28] 2011[28] 2016[28] 2021[28]
Number % Number % Number % Number % Number % Number %
  Icelanders 260,054 97.10% 270,106 95.32% 278,975 93.02% 286,606 89.99% 292,326 87.90% 300,369 81.44%
Icelanders of two Icelandic parents (No foreign background) 251,057 93.74% 259,109 91.44% 265,711 88.60% 270,771 85.02% 274,115 82.43% 279,236 75.71%
Born abroad, Icelandic background 3,490 1.30% 4,214 1.48% 4,880 1.62% 5,449 1.71% 5,971 1.79% 6,634 1.79%
Born in Iceland: One parent born abroad 5,507 2.05% 6,783 2.39% 8,384 2.79% 10,386 3.26% 12,240 3.68% 14,499 3.93%
Total: Foreign 7,755 2.90% 13,255 4.67% 20,916 6.97% 31,846 10% 40,203 12.09% 68,423 18.55%
Immigrants 5,357 2.00% 10,073 3.55% 16,690 5.56% 25,697 8.06% 31,819 9.56% 57,126 15.49%
2nd generation immigrants (Descendants of Immigrants) 345 0.12% 543 0.19% 1,116 0.37% 2,586 0.81% 4,152 1.24% 6,117 1.65%
Born abroad with one Icelandic parent 2,053 0.76% 2,639 0.93% 3,110 1.03% 3,563 1.11% 4,232 1.27% 5,180 1.40%
Total 267,809 100% 283,361 100% 299,891 100% 318,452 100% 332,529 100% 368,792 100%
Foreign-born communities of over 300[1]
Country 2010 2015 2020 2021 2022
  Poland 10,088 10,967 20,515 20,558 20,927
  Denmark 3,236 3,283 3,644 3,701 3,839
  Lithuania 1,442 1,499 3,299 3,292 3,420
  United States 1,849 2,019 2,516 2,680 2,888
  Romania 205 400 1,995 2,117 2,505
  Philippines 1,407 1,565 2,223 2,276 2,374
  Germany 1,697 1,649 2,065 2,180 2,367
  Sweden 1,846 1,920 2,173 2,245 2,352
  Latvia 641 735 1,965 2,087 2,252
  United Kingdom 1,095 1,307 1,836 1,960 1,976
  Thailand 1,062 1,196 1,428 1,465 1,497
  Norway 987 1,036 1,273 1,305 1,369
  Spain 288 540 1,076 1,161 1,331
  Portugal 607 576 1,131 1,034 1,113
  France 444 538 913 966 1,080
  Vietnam 479 613 885 988 1,073
  Croatia 148 169 828 825 898
  Czech Republic 152 246 851 792 841
  Italy 218 260 556 607 758
  China 481 582 709 729 749
  Hungary 154 218 506 550 580
  Bulgaria 135 240 550 551 557
  Venezuela 36 39 229 391 557
  Serbia 312 307 516 528 550
  India 272 305 387 439 544
  Russia 294 364 502 515 534
  Slovakia 234 243 511 463 511
  Ukraine 210 274 430 457 510
  Syria 19 35 331 402 471
  Netherlands 297 288 401 431 451
  Iraq 48 57 279 400 424
  Canada 231 277 328 331 352
  Greece 25 45 228 260 342
  Moldova 13 21 173 227 341
  Bosnia and Herzegovina 144 150 277 272 305
Other 7,066 7,489 8,561 9,014 9,115
Total immigrant population 35,121 39,221 66,767 68,938 73,258

Due to a shortage of labor,[29] immigration to Iceland will most likely increase in the future.[30] Estimates show that the number of immigrants could be as high as 15% of the total population by 2030.[30][needs update]

Patronymy edit

Most Icelandic surnames are based on patronymy, or the adoption of the father's first given name, followed by "son" or "daughter". For example, Magnús and Anna, children of a man named Pétur Jónsson, would have the full name Magnús Pétursson and Anna Pétursdóttir, respectively. Magnús's daughter Sigríður Ásta would be Sigríður Ásta Magnúsdóttir, and would remain so for the rest of her life regardless of marriage. An Icelandic patronymic is essentially only a designation of fatherhood, and is therefore redundant in Icelandic social life except to differentiate people of the same first name – the phone directory, for example, lists people by their given name first, patronymic second. Thus it has little in common with traditional surnames except for its position after the given name. It is legally possible in Iceland to rework the patronymic into a matronymic, replacing the father's name with the mother's. Use of the patronymic system is required by law, except for the descendants of those who had acquired family names before 1913 (about 10% of the population). One notable Icelander who has an inherited family name is football star Eiður Smári Guðjohnsen.

Urbanisation edit

According to University of Iceland economists Davíd F. Björnsson and Gylfi Zoega, "The policies of the colonial masters in Copenhagen delayed urbanisation. The Danish king maintained a monopoly in trade with Iceland from 1602 until 1855, which made the price of fish artificially low – the price of fish was higher in Britain – and artificially raised the price of agricultural products. Instead, Denmark bought the fish caught from Iceland at below world market prices. Although the trade monopoly ended in 1787, Icelanders could not trade freely with other countries until 1855. Following trade liberalisation, there was a substantial increase in fish exports to Britain, which led to an increase in the number of sailing ships used in fishing, introduced for the first time in 1780. The growth of the fishing industry then created demand for capital, and in 1885 Parliament created the first state bank (Landsbanki). In 1905 came the first motorised fishing vessel, which marked an important step in the development of a specialised fishing industry in Iceland. Iceland exported fresh fish to Britain and salted cod to southern Europe, with Portugal an important export market. Fishing replaced agriculture as the country’s main industry. These developments set the stage for the urbanisation that was to follow in the twentieth century."[31]

A 2017 study looking at individuals going to the capital area for higher education found that "Only about one in three [University of Iceland] students from regions beyond commuting distance return after graduation, while about half remain in the capital area and others mostly emigrate."[32] Iceland's 10 most populous urban areas:

Religion edit

In 2016, 71.6% of the population belonged to the state church (the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Iceland), approximately 5% in free churches, 3.7% to the Roman Catholic Church, approximately 1% to the Ásatrúarfélagið (a legally recognized revival of the pre-Christian religion of Iceland), approximately 1% to Zuism, 8% in unrecognized or unspecified religious groups, and 9% do not belong to any religious group.[33]

Icelandic National Registry edit

All living Icelanders, as well as all foreign citizens with permanent residence in Iceland, have a personal identification number (kennitala) identifying them in the National Registry. This number is composed of 10 digits, whereof the first six are made up of the individual's birth date in the format DDMMYY. The next two digits are chosen at random when the kennitala is allocated, the 9th digit is a check digit, and the last digit indicates the period of one hundred years in which the individual was born (for instance, '9' for the period 1900–1999). An example would be 120192-3389. While similar, all-inclusive personal registries exist in other countries, the use of the national registry is unusually extensive in Iceland. It is worth noting that the completeness of the National Registry eliminates any need for census to be performed.

Summary of vital statistics since 1900 edit

Data according to Statistics Iceland, which collects the official statistics for Iceland.[34][35][36]

Year Average
population
Live
births
Deaths Natural
change
Crude
birth rate
(per 1000)
Crude
death rate
(per 1000)
Natural
change
(per 1000)
Total
fertility
rate
1900 78,000 2,237 1,545 692 28.6 19.8 8.9 3.93
1901 78,000 2,179 1,155 1,024 27.8 14.7 13.1 3.86
1902 79,000 2,220 1,262 958 28.1 16.0 12.1 3.95
1903 79,000 2,244 1,324 920 28.3 16.7 11.6 4.00
1904 80,000 2,293 1,242 1,051 28.7 15.5 13.2 4.09
1905 81,000 2,271 1,435 836 28.1 17.8 10.4 4.02
1906 82,000 2,346 1,193 1,153 28.8 14.6 14.2 4.14
1907 83,000 2,304 1,396 908 27.9 16.9 11.0 4.04
1908 83,000 2,270 1,594 676 27.3 19.1 8.2 4.01
1909 84,000 2,283 1,263 1,020 27.2 15.0 12.2 4.00
1910 85,000 2,171 1,304 867 25.6 15.4 10.2 3.79
1911 85,000 2,205 1,152 1,053 25.8 13.5 12.3 3.80
1912 86,000 2,234 1,171 1,063 26.0 13.6 12.4 3.82
1913 87,000 2,216 1,060 1,156 25.6 12.2 13.4 3.76
1914 88,000 2,338 1,428 910 26.7 16.3 10.4 3.90
1915 89,000 2,446 1,376 1,070 27.6 15.5 12.1 4.00
1916 89,000 2,377 1,322 1,055 26.6 14.8 11.8 3.81
1917 91,000 2,427 1,111 1,316 26.8 12.3 14.5 3.82
1918 92,000 2,441 1,518 923 26.6 16.6 10.1 3.78
1919 92,000 2,342 1,169 1,173 25.4 12.7 12.7 3.62
1920 94,000 2,627 1,360 1,267 28.1 14.5 13.6 3.96
1921 95,000 2,601 1,478 1,123 27.4 15.6 11.8 3.87
1922 96,000 2,546 1,280 1,266 26.6 13.4 13.2 3.72
1923 97,000 2,612 1,287 1,325 26.9 13.3 13.7 3.77
1924 98,000 2,525 1,462 1,063 25.7 14.9 10.8 3.62
1925 99,000 2,554 1,229 1,325 25.7 12.4 13.3 3.59
1926 101,000 2,676 1,121 1,555 26.5 11.1 15.4 3.71
1927 103,000 2,642 1,282 1,360 25.8 12.5 13.3 3.59
1928 104,000 2,542 1,124 1,418 24.4 10.8 13.6 3.40
1929 106,000 2,644 1,237 1,407 25.0 11.7 13.3 3.47
1930 107,000 2,808 1,248 1,560 26.1 11.6 14.5 3.59
1931 109,000 2,804 1,277 1,527 25.7 11.7 14.0 3.53
1932 111,000 2,696 1,191 1,505 24.4 10.8 13.6 3.31
1933 112,000 2,531 1,159 1,372 22.5 10.3 12.2 3.07
1934 114,000 2,597 1,181 1,416 22.8 10.4 12.4 3.10
1935 115,000 2,551 1,402 1,149 22.1 12.2 10.0 2.99
1936 116,000 2,557 1,253 1,304 22.0 10.8 11.2 2.98
1937 117,000 2,397 1,317 1,080 20.4 11.2 9.2 2.78
1938 118,000 2,374 1,207 1,167 20.1 10.2 9.9 2.71
1939 120,000 2,363 1,160 1,203 19.8 9.7 10.1 2.68
1940 121,000 2,480 1,200 1,280 20.5 9.9 10.6 2.75
1941 122,000 2,634 1,352 1,282 21.6 11.1 10.5 2.91
1942 123,000 3,005 1,293 1,712 24.4 10.5 13.9 3.26
1943 125,000 3,173 1,268 1,905 25.4 10.1 15.2 3.36
1944 127,000 3,213 1,218 1,995 25.3 9.6 15.7 3.34
1945 129,000 3,434 1,179 2,255 26.6 9.1 17.5 3.55
1946 132,000 3,434 1,121 2,313 26.1 8.5 17.6 3.47
1947 134,000 3,706 1,162 2,544 27.6 8.6 18.9 3.67
1948 137,000 3,821 1,114 2,707 27.8 8.1 19.7 3.72
1949 140,000 3,884 1,106 2,778 27.8 7.9 19.9 3.73
1950 143,000 4,093 1,122 2,971 28.7 7.9 20.8 3.86
1951 145,000 3,999 1,145 2,854 27.5 7.9 19.6 3.72
1952 148,000 4,075 1,082 2,993 27.5 7.3 20.2 3.79
1953 151,000 4,254 1,118 3,136 28.1 7.4 20.7 3.94
1954 154,000 4,281 1,064 3,217 27.7 6.9 20.8 3.91
1955 158,000 4,505 1,099 3,406 28.5 7.0 21.5 4.07
1956 161,000 4,603 1,153 3,450 28.5 7.2 21.3 4.14
1957 165,000 4,725 1,157 3,568 28.6 7.0 21.6 4.20
1958 168,000 4,641 1,165 3,476 27.5 6.9 20.6 4.09
1959 172,000 4,837 1,242 3,595 28.1 7.2 20.9 4.24
1960 176,000 4,916 1,167 3,749 28.0 6.6 21.4 4.27
1961 179,000 4,563 1,248 3,315 25.5 7.0 18.5 3.88
1962 182,000 4,711 1,237 3,474 25.9 6.8 19.1 3.98
1963 186,000 4,820 1,327 3,493 26.0 7.1 18.9 3.98
1964 189,000 4,787 1,315 3,472 25.3 7.0 18.3 3.86
1965 192,000 4,721 1,291 3,430 24.6 6.7 17.9 3.71
1966 196,000 4,692 1,391 3,301 24.0 7.1 16.9 3.58
1967 199,000 4,404 1,385 3,019 22.2 7.0 15.2 3.28
1968 201,000 4,227 1,390 2,837 21.0 6.9 14.1 3.07
1969 203,000 4,218 1,451 2,767 20.8 7.1 13.7 2.99
1970 204,000 4,023 1,457 2,566 19.7 7.1 12.6 2.81
1971 206,000 4,277 1,501 2,776 20.8 7.3 13.5 2.92
1972 209,000 4,676 1,447 3,229 22.3 6.9 15.4 3.09
1973 212,000 4,598 1,475 3,123 21.7 6.9 14.8 2.95
1974 215,000 4,276 1,495 2,781 19.9 6.9 13.0 2.66
1975 218,000 4,384 1,412 2,972 20.1 6.5 13.6 2.65
1976 220,000 4,291 1,343 2,948 19.5 6.1 13.4 2.52
1977 222,000 3,996 1,435 2,561 18.0 6.5 11.5 2.31
1978 224,000 4,162 1,421 2,741 18.6 6.4 12.2 2.35
1979 226,000 4,475 1,482 2,993 19.8 6.6 13.2 2.49
1980 228,000 4,528 1,538 2,990 19.8 6.7 13.1 2.48
1981 231,000 4,345 1,656 2,689 18.8 7.2 11.6 2.33
1982 234,000 4,337 1,583 2,754 18.5 6.8 11.7 2.26
1983 237,000 4,371 1,653 2,718 18.4 7.0 11.4 2.24
1984 240,000 4,113 1,584 2,529 17.2 6.6 10.6 2.08
1985 241,000 3,856 1,652 2,204 16.0 6.8 9.2 1.93
1986 243,000 3,881 1,598 2,283 16.0 6.6 9.4 1.93
1987 246,000 4,193 1,724 2,469 17.0 7.0 10.0 2.07
1988 250,000 4,673 1,818 2,855 18.7 7.3 11.4 2.27
1989 253,000 4,560 1,716 2,844 18.0 6.8 11.2 2.20
1990 255,000 4,768 1,704 3,064 18.7 6.7 12.0 2.31
1991 258,000 4,533 1,796 2,737 17.6 7.0 10.6 2.19
1992 261,000 4,609 1,719 2,890 17.7 6.6 11.1 2.21
1993 264,000 4,623 1,753 2,870 17.5 6.6 10.9 2.22
1994 266,000 4,442 1,717 2,725 16.7 6.4 10.3 2.14
1995 267,000 4,280 1,923 2,357 16.0 7.2 8.8 2.08
1996 269,000 4,329 1,879 2,450 16.1 7.0 9.1 2.12
1997 271,000 4,151 1,843 2,308 15.3 6.8 8.5 2.04
1998 274,000 4,178 1,821 2,357 15.3 6.7 8.6 2.05
1999 277,000 4,100 1,901 2,199 14.9 6.9 8.0 1.99
2000 281,000 4,315 1,828 2,487 15.5 6.5 9.0 2.08
2001 285,000 4,091 1,725 2,366 14.4 6.1 8.3 1.95
2002 288,000 4,049 1,822 2,227 14.1 6.3 7.8 1.93
2003 290,000 4,143 1,826 2,317 14.3 6.3 8.0 1.99
2004 292,000 4,234 1,824 2,410 14.5 6.2 8.3 2.03
2005 297,000 4,280 1,837 2,443 14.4 6.2 8.2 2.05
2006 304,000 4,415 1,903 2,512 14.7 6.3 8.4 2.07
2007 308,000 4,560 1,943 2,617 14.9 6.3 8.6 2.09
2008 315,000 4,835 1,987 2,848 15.4 6.2 9.2 2.14
2009 318,000 5,026 2,002 3,024 15.8 6.3 9.5 2.22
2010 318,000 4,907 2,020 2,887 15.5 6.4 9.1 2.20
2011 320,000 4,492 1,986 2,506 14.1 6.2 7.9 2.02
2012 322,000 4,533 1,955 2,578 14.2 6.1 8.1 2.04
2013 326,000 4,326 2,154 2,172 13.3 6.6 6.7 1.93
2014 329,000 4,375 2,049 2,326 13.4 6.2 7.2 1.93
2015 333,000 4,129 2,178 1,951 12.5 6.5 6.0 1.81
2016 338,000 4,034 2,309 1,725 12.1 6.8 5.3 1.75
2017 349,000 4,071 2,239 1,832 11.8 6.4 5.4 1.71
2018 357,000 4,228 2,257 1,971 12.0 6.4 5.6 1.71
2019 364,000 4,452 2,277 2,175 12.3 6.3 6.0 1.74
2020 369,000 4,512 2,308 2,204 12.4 6.3 6.1 1.72
2021 376,000 4,879 2,338 2,541 13.0 6.2 6.8 1.82
2022 388,000 4,391 2,693 1,698 11.3 6.9 4.4 1.59

[37]

Current vital statistics edit

[38]

Period Live births Deaths Natural increase
January - September 2022 3,380 2,050 +1,330
January - September 2023 3,300 1,890 +1,440
Difference   -80 (-2.37%)   -160 (-7.8%)   +110

Structure of the population edit

Population Estimates by Sex and Age Group (01.I.2020): [39]
Age Group Male Female Total %
Total 186 941 177 193 364 134 100
0–4 11 029 10 333 21 362 5.87
5–9 11 831 11 396 23 227 6.38
10–14 12 186 11 444 23 630 6.49
15–19 11 289 10 954 22 243 6.11
20–24 13 251 12 519 25 770 7.08
25–29 16 328 14 239 30 567 8.39
30–34 14 816 12 572 27 388 7.52
35–39 13 992 12 081 26 073 7.16
40–44 12 557 11 454 24 011 6.59
45–49 12 007 10 958 22 965 6.31
50–54 11 232 10 795 22 027 6.05
55–59 10 985 10 980 21 965 6.03
60–64 10 288 10 145 20 433 5.61
65-69 8 550 8 431 16 981 4.66
70-74 6 821 6 796 13 617 3.74
75-79 4 402 4 871 9 273 2.55
80-84 2 866 3 272 6 138 1.69
85-89 1 724 2 430 4 154 1.14
90-94 667 1 199 1 866 0.51
95-99 109 285 394 0.11
100+ 11 39 50 0.01
Age group Male Female Total Percent
0–14 35 046 33 173 68 219 18.73
15–64 126 745 116 697 243 442 66.86
65+ 25 150 27 323 52 473 14.41

Population projection edit

Population projection
(1 January)[40]
Year Low Medium High
2014 325,671
2015 332,529
2020 340,418 342,716 346,279
2025 352,280 357,894 365,893
2030 361,853 371,796 385,405
2035 369,888 384,397 404,053
2040 376,580 395,866 422,047
2045 381,846 406,271 439,756
2050 385,536 415,627 457,317
2055 387,489 423,790 474,561
2060 387,597 430,545 490,976

Life expectancy edit

 
Life expectancy in Iceland since 1838
 
Life expectancy in Iceland since 1960 by gender
Period Life expectancy in
Years
Period Life expectancy in
Years
1950–1955 72.2 1985–1990 77.6
1955–1960 73.2 1990–1995 78.5
1960–1965 73.5 1995–2000 79.1
1965–1970 73.7 2000–2005 80.7
1970–1975 74.2 2005–2010 81.4
1975–1980 76.3 2010–2015 82.2
1980–1985 76.9

Source: UN World Population Prospects[41]

CIA World Factbook demographic statistics edit

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

Age structure

0–14 years: 20.4% (male 35,418/female 33,887)
15–24 years: 13.5% (male 23,190/female 22,659)
25–54 years: 39.88% (male 68,579/female 66,899)
55–64: 11.81% (male 20,119/female 20,007)
65 years and over: 14.42% (male 22,963/female 26,053) (2017 est.)

Sex ratio

at birth: 1.05 males: 1 female
under 15 years: 1.05 males: 1 female

15–24 years: 1.03 males: 1 female

25–54 years: 1.02 males: 1 female
55–64 years: 1.01 males: 1 female
65 years and over: 0.88 males: 1 female
total population: 1.01 male: 1 female (2016 est.)

Maternal mortality rate

3 deaths/100,000 live births (2015 est.)

Infant mortality rate

2.1 deaths/1,000 live births (2016 est.)

Life expectancy at birth

total population: 83.0 years
male: 80.9 years
female: 85.3 years (2016 est.)

Health expenditures

8.9% of GDP (2014)

Physicians density

3.79 physicians/1,000 population (2015)

Obesity – adult prevalence rate

23.9% (2014)

Education expenditures

7.8% of GDP (2013)

Mother's mean age at first birth

27.4 (2015 est.)

 
Citizenship of Iceland residents.
  3 000 +
  1 500-3 000
  750-1 500
  500-750
Nationality

noun: Icelander(s)
adjective: Icelandic

Ethnic groups

94% Icelandic, 6% other

Religions

Evangelical Lutheran Church of Iceland (official) 69.9%, Roman Catholic 3.8%, Reykjavik Free Church 2.9%, Hafnarfjörður Free Church 2%, Ásatrú Association 1.1%, The Independent Congregation 1%, other religions 4% (includes Zuist and Pentecostal), none 6.1%, other or unspecified 9.2% (2017 est.)

Languages

Icelandic (English and a second Nordic language, Danish by default, are also a part of the Icelandic compulsory education)[42]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Mannfjöldi eftir bakgrunni, kyni og aldri 1996-2020".
  2. ^ "Population – key figures 1703–2017". Px.hagstofa.is. Retrieved 8 November 2017.
  3. ^ Agnar Helgason; Eileen Hickey; Sara Goodacre; Vidar Bosnes; Ka´ri Stefa´nsson; Ryk Ward; Bryan Sykes (2001). "mtDNA and the Islands of the North Atlantic: Estimating the Proportions of Norse and Gaelic Ancestry". Am. J. Hum. Genet. 68 (3): 723–737. doi:10.1086/318785. PMC 1274484. PMID 11179019.
  4. ^ Agnar Helgason; Sigrún Sigurðardóttir; Jeffrey R. Gulcher; Ryk Ward; Kári Stefánsson (2000). "mtDNA and the Origin of the Icelanders: Deciphering Signals of Recent Population History". Am. J. Hum. Genet. 66 (3): 999–1016. doi:10.1086/302816. PMC 1288180. PMID 10712214.
  5. ^ a b Karlsson, Gunnar (2000). History of Iceland. p. 236.
  6. ^ Guðbjört Guðjónsdóttir. “ ‘We Blend in with the Crowd but They Don’t’: (In)visibility and Icelandic Migrants in Norway.” Nordic Journal of Migration Research 4 (2014): 176–183.
  7. ^ Karlsson, Gunnar (2000). History of Iceland. p. 234.
  8. ^ Kristín Loftsdóttir, “Being ‘the Damned Foreigner’: Affective National Sentiments and Racialization of Lithuanians in Iceland.” Nordic Journal of Migration Research 7.2 (2017): 70–77 (p. 72) doi:10.1515/njmr-2017-0012.
  9. ^ a b '' (16 June 2017).
  10. ^ . Statistics Iceland. Archived from the original on 2019-09-13. Retrieved 2017-08-22.
  11. ^ "Statistics Iceland". Statistics Iceland.
  12. ^ "From Iceland — Catholic Congregation in Iceland Growing Rapidly". Grapevine.is. 2019-10-24. Retrieved 2022-03-21.
  13. ^ Demographic data as published by Statistics Iceland, found online for the period of 1990 and later Hagtíðindi for the years 1973-1989 2009-06-07 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ Jónsson, Stefán Ó. (12 February 2018). "Fyrsti íslenski rabbíninn mun beita sér gegn umskurðarbanninu". www.visir.is.
  15. ^ . Statistics Iceland. Archived from the original on 2021-07-13. Retrieved 2021-09-12.
  16. ^ "Religious Composition by Country, 2010-2050". Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project. 2015-04-02. Retrieved 2017-04-20.
  17. ^ . PX-Web. Archived from the original on 2022-01-27. Retrieved 2019-01-15.
  18. ^ Hanna Ragnarsdóttir, Collisions and Continuities: Ten Immigrant Families and Their Children in Icelandic Society and Schools. Saarbrücken: VDM Verlag Dr. Müller, 2008.
  19. ^ Skaptadóttir, UD 2004, ‘Mobilities and cultural difference: immigrant’s experiences in Iceland’ in Topographies of globalization: politics, culture, language, eds V Ingimundarson, K Loftsdóttir & I Erlingsdóttir, The University of Iceland Press, Reykjavík pp. 133-149.
  20. ^ Rannveig Thorisdottir, “Armed with a Pen.” In Black Light, White Shadows: Young People in the Nordic Countries Write about Racism. Edited by Leena Suurpää, 85–97. Copenhagen: Nordic Council of Ministers, 1998.
  21. ^ Kristín Loftsdóttir, “ ‘Still a Lot of Staring and Curiosity’: Racism and the Racialization of African Immigrants in Iceland.” In New Dimensions of Diversity in Nordic Culture and Society. Edited by Jenny Björklund, Ursula Lindqvist, 263–78. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2016.
  22. ^ Gunnar J. Gunnarsson, Gunnar E. Finnbogason, Hanna Ragnarsdóttir and Halla Jónsdóttir. “Friendship, Diversity and Fear: Young People’s Life Views and Life Values in a Multicultural Society.” Nordidactica: Journal of Humanities and Social Science Education (2015 part 2): 94–113.
  23. ^ Kristín Loftsdóttir, “The Country without Racism: Multiculturalism and Colonial Identity Formations in Iceland.” Social Identities 17 (2011): 11–25.
  24. ^ Kristín Loftsdóttir, “Being ‘the Damned Foreigner’: Affective National Sentiments and Racialization of Lithuanians in Iceland.” Nordic Journal of Migration Research 7.2 (2017): 70–77 doi:10.1515/njmr-2017-0012.
  25. ^ Hanna Ragnarsdóttir, “Competences for Active Communication and Participation in Diverse Societies: Views of Young People in Iceland.” In Intercultural Competence in Education: Alternative Approaches for Different Times. Edited by Fred Dervin and Zehavit Gross, 73–93. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 2016. p. 75.
  26. ^ Shendruk, Amanda (2021-07-08). "Are you even trying to stop racism if you don't collect data on race?". Quartz. Retrieved 2022-07-04.
  27. ^ "Population - key figures 1703-2023". PxWeb.
  28. ^ a b c d e f "Population by origin, sex and age 1996–2021". PX-Web. Retrieved 2021-12-29.
  29. ^ (PDF). Arion Banki. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-03-11. Retrieved 2016-01-10.
  30. ^ a b "Ísland að breytast í innflytjendaþjóð". RÚV. 8 January 2016. Retrieved 2016-01-10.
  31. ^ Björnsson, Davíd F.; Zoega, Gylfi (2017-06-26). "Seasonality of birth rates in agricultural Iceland" (PDF). Scandinavian Economic History Review. 65 (3): 294–306. doi:10.1080/03585522.2017.1340333. ISSN 0358-5522. S2CID 157474068.
  32. ^ Bjarnason, Thoroddur; Edvardsson, Ingi Runar (August 2017). "University pathways of urban and rural migration in Iceland" (PDF). Journal of Rural Studies. 54: 244–254. doi:10.1016/j.jrurstud.2017.07.001. hdl:20.500.11815/1073.
  33. ^ . Eyjan.pressan.is. Archived from the original on 2017-11-08. Retrieved 2017-07-17.
  34. ^ "Population - key figures 1703-2021". Statistics Iceland. Retrieved 2022-02-14.
  35. ^ "Population by municipality, sex, citizenship and quarters 2010-2021". Statistics Iceland. Retrieved 2022-02-14.
  36. ^ "Fertility and reproduction rates 1853-2020". Statistics Iceland. Retrieved 2022-02-14.
  37. ^ Note: Crude migration change % is a trend analysis, an extrapolation based average population change (current year minus previous) minus natural change of the current year (see table vital statistics). As average population is an estimate of the population in the middle of the year and not end of the year.
  38. ^ "Births, deaths and migration by sex and citizenship, NUTS3 regions and quarters 2010-2023". PxWeb.
  39. ^ "UNSD — Demographic and Social Statistics". unstats.un.org. Retrieved 2023-05-10.
  40. ^ "Population projection by main indicators 2013–2061". Reykjavík, Iceland: Statistics Iceland.
  41. ^ "World Population Prospects – Population Division – United Nations". Retrieved 2017-07-15.
  42. ^ (PDF). Ministry of Education, Science and Culture, Iceland. 2002. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 8 November 2017.

External links edit

  • "Hagstofa Íslands" [Statistics Iceland]. statice.is – the national statistical institute of Iceland
  • "ICELAND". The World Factbook. 20 June 2023.
  • A 2012 report by the Ministry of Welfare on migration to and from Iceland 1961–2011.

demographics, iceland, demographics, iceland, include, population, density, education, level, health, populace, economic, status, religious, affiliations, other, aspects, population, population, pyramid, iceland, 2020population376, 2022, growth, rate0, 2022, b. The demographics of Iceland include population density education level health of the populace economic status religious affiliations and other aspects of the population Demographics of IcelandPopulation pyramid of Iceland in 2020Population376 248 2022 est Growth rate0 93 2022 est Birth rate12 96 births 1 000 populationDeath rate6 56 deaths 1 000 populationLife expectancy83 64 years male81 41 years female85 97 yearsFertility rate1 95 childrenInfant mortality rate1 65 deaths 1 000 live birthsNet migration rate2 89 migrant s 1 000 populationSex ratioTotal1 male s female 2022 est At birth1 05 male s femaleNationalityNationalityIcelandicAs of 2022 the Icelandic population was just over 376 000 About 86 000 residents 23 7 were of foreign background 1 About 99 of the nation s inhabitants live in urban areas localities with populations greater than 200 and 64 live in the Capital Region Contents 1 History 1 1 Migration 1 1 1 Settlement 1 1 2 Emigration 1 1 3 Immigration 2 Patronymy 3 Urbanisation 4 Religion 5 Icelandic National Registry 6 Summary of vital statistics since 1900 6 1 Current vital statistics 6 2 Structure of the population 6 3 Population projection 6 4 Life expectancy 7 CIA World Factbook demographic statistics 8 References 9 External linksHistory edit nbsp The population of Iceland from 1703 to 2017 using data from Statistics Iceland The population of Iceland probably wavered between about 30 000 and 80 000 for most of the time since settlement Official statistics begin in 1703 since which the population has grown from 50 358 to 376 248 January 2022 2 Migration edit Settlement edit Most Icelandic people are descendants of Norwegian settlers and of Gaels from Ireland and Scotland who were brought over as slaves during the settlement of Iceland in the ninth century AD Recent DNA analysis suggests that about 66 percent of the male settler era population was of Norse ancestry and that the female population was 60 percent Celtic 3 4 Iceland remained extremely homogenous from its settlement era until the twentieth century Emigration edit Large numbers of Icelanders began to emigrate from Iceland in the 1850s It has been estimated that 17 000 Icelanders immigrated to North America in the period 1870 1914 and that 2 000 of them moved back to Iceland this net loss 15 000 was about 20 of the Icelandic population in 1887 5 According to historian Gunnar Karlsson migration from Iceland is unique in that most went to Canada whereas from most or all other European countries the majority went to the United States This was partly due to the late beginning of emigration from Iceland after the Canadian authorities had begun to promote emigration in cooperation with the Allan Line which already had an agent in Iceland in 1873 Contrary to most European countries this promotion campaign was successful in Iceland because emigration was only just about to start from there and Icelandic emigrants had no relatives in the United States to help them take the first steps 5 In the wake of the 2008 Icelandic financial crisis many Icelanders went to work abroad 6 Immigration edit Before the 1990s there was little immigration to Iceland and most of it was from other Scandinavian countries about 1 of Icelanders in 1900 were of Danish heritage born either in Denmark or to Danish parents 7 In the mid 1990s 95 of Icelanders had parents of Icelandic origin and 2 of Icelanders were first generation immigrants born abroad with both parents and all grandparents foreign born 8 9 Immigration to Iceland rose rapidly in the late twentieth century encouraged by Iceland s accession to the European Economic Area in 1994 its entry into the Schengen Agreement in 2001 and the country s economic boom in the early twenty first century The largest ethnic minority is Poles who are about a third of the immigrant population In 2017 10 6 of the people were first generation immigrants 9 Iceland is also developing relatively small populations of religious minorities including Catholics about 15 000 in 2020 4 02 of Icelanders 10 11 12 Bahaʼis about 400 in 2010 13 Jews about 250 in 2018 14 Buddhists about 1 500 in 2021 15 and Muslims about 1 300 in 2015 16 17 Research on the experience of immigrants to Iceland is in its early days 18 19 There is some evidence that racism is not as acute in Iceland as in neighbouring countries 20 21 22 But while it is popularly believed in Iceland that racism does not exist there 23 there is evidence that in some respects immigrant populations experience prejudice and inequalities 24 For example Iceland has a higher dropout rate from upper secondary school among young immigrants than the EEA average 25 Iceland does not formally collect data on the ethnicity or racial identification of its citizens but does collect data of the origin and background group by birth 26 Historical population 27 YearPop p a 874436 93035 000 8 15 110060 000 0 32 140080 000 0 10 149540 000 0 73 170350 358 0 11 175048 241 0 09 180046 176 0 09 185059 586 0 51 186067 754 1 29 187069 463 0 25 188071 981 0 36 189070 581 0 20 190077 967 1 00 191084 528 0 81 192092 855 0 94 1930106 360 1 37 1940120 264 1 24 1950141 042 1 61 1960173 855 2 11 1970204 042 1 61 1980226 948 1 07 1990253 785 1 12 2000279 049 0 95 2010317 630 1 30 2020364 134 1 38 Source Statistics IcelandBackground Groups Year1996 28 2001 28 2006 28 2011 28 2016 28 2021 28 Number Number Number Number Number Number nbsp Icelanders 260 054 97 10 270 106 95 32 278 975 93 02 286 606 89 99 292 326 87 90 300 369 81 44 Icelanders of two Icelandic parents No foreign background 251 057 93 74 259 109 91 44 265 711 88 60 270 771 85 02 274 115 82 43 279 236 75 71 Born abroad Icelandic background 3 490 1 30 4 214 1 48 4 880 1 62 5 449 1 71 5 971 1 79 6 634 1 79 Born in Iceland One parent born abroad 5 507 2 05 6 783 2 39 8 384 2 79 10 386 3 26 12 240 3 68 14 499 3 93 Total Foreign 7 755 2 90 13 255 4 67 20 916 6 97 31 846 10 40 203 12 09 68 423 18 55 Immigrants 5 357 2 00 10 073 3 55 16 690 5 56 25 697 8 06 31 819 9 56 57 126 15 49 2nd generation immigrants Descendants of Immigrants 345 0 12 543 0 19 1 116 0 37 2 586 0 81 4 152 1 24 6 117 1 65 Born abroad with one Icelandic parent 2 053 0 76 2 639 0 93 3 110 1 03 3 563 1 11 4 232 1 27 5 180 1 40 Total 267 809 100 283 361 100 299 891 100 318 452 100 332 529 100 368 792 100 Foreign born communities of over 300 1 Country 2010 2015 2020 2021 2022 nbsp Poland 10 088 10 967 20 515 20 558 20 927 nbsp Denmark 3 236 3 283 3 644 3 701 3 839 nbsp Lithuania 1 442 1 499 3 299 3 292 3 420 nbsp United States 1 849 2 019 2 516 2 680 2 888 nbsp Romania 205 400 1 995 2 117 2 505 nbsp Philippines 1 407 1 565 2 223 2 276 2 374 nbsp Germany 1 697 1 649 2 065 2 180 2 367 nbsp Sweden 1 846 1 920 2 173 2 245 2 352 nbsp Latvia 641 735 1 965 2 087 2 252 nbsp United Kingdom 1 095 1 307 1 836 1 960 1 976 nbsp Thailand 1 062 1 196 1 428 1 465 1 497 nbsp Norway 987 1 036 1 273 1 305 1 369 nbsp Spain 288 540 1 076 1 161 1 331 nbsp Portugal 607 576 1 131 1 034 1 113 nbsp France 444 538 913 966 1 080 nbsp Vietnam 479 613 885 988 1 073 nbsp Croatia 148 169 828 825 898 nbsp Czech Republic 152 246 851 792 841 nbsp Italy 218 260 556 607 758 nbsp China 481 582 709 729 749 nbsp Hungary 154 218 506 550 580 nbsp Bulgaria 135 240 550 551 557 nbsp Venezuela 36 39 229 391 557 nbsp Serbia 312 307 516 528 550 nbsp India 272 305 387 439 544 nbsp Russia 294 364 502 515 534 nbsp Slovakia 234 243 511 463 511 nbsp Ukraine 210 274 430 457 510 nbsp Syria 19 35 331 402 471 nbsp Netherlands 297 288 401 431 451 nbsp Iraq 48 57 279 400 424 nbsp Canada 231 277 328 331 352 nbsp Greece 25 45 228 260 342 nbsp Moldova 13 21 173 227 341 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina 144 150 277 272 305Other 7 066 7 489 8 561 9 014 9 115Total immigrant population 35 121 39 221 66 767 68 938 73 258Due to a shortage of labor 29 immigration to Iceland will most likely increase in the future 30 Estimates show that the number of immigrants could be as high as 15 of the total population by 2030 30 needs update Patronymy editSee also Icelandic naming conventions Most Icelandic surnames are based on patronymy or the adoption of the father s first given name followed by son or daughter For example Magnus and Anna children of a man named Petur Jonsson would have the full name Magnus Petursson and Anna Petursdottir respectively Magnus s daughter Sigridur Asta would be Sigridur Asta Magnusdottir and would remain so for the rest of her life regardless of marriage An Icelandic patronymic is essentially only a designation of fatherhood and is therefore redundant in Icelandic social life except to differentiate people of the same first name the phone directory for example lists people by their given name first patronymic second Thus it has little in common with traditional surnames except for its position after the given name It is legally possible in Iceland to rework the patronymic into a matronymic replacing the father s name with the mother s Use of the patronymic system is required by law except for the descendants of those who had acquired family names before 1913 about 10 of the population One notable Icelander who has an inherited family name is football star Eidur Smari Gudjohnsen Urbanisation editSee also Iceland Urbanisation According to University of Iceland economists David F Bjornsson and Gylfi Zoega The policies of the colonial masters in Copenhagen delayed urbanisation The Danish king maintained a monopoly in trade with Iceland from 1602 until 1855 which made the price of fish artificially low the price of fish was higher in Britain and artificially raised the price of agricultural products Instead Denmark bought the fish caught from Iceland at below world market prices Although the trade monopoly ended in 1787 Icelanders could not trade freely with other countries until 1855 Following trade liberalisation there was a substantial increase in fish exports to Britain which led to an increase in the number of sailing ships used in fishing introduced for the first time in 1780 The growth of the fishing industry then created demand for capital and in 1885 Parliament created the first state bank Landsbanki In 1905 came the first motorised fishing vessel which marked an important step in the development of a specialised fishing industry in Iceland Iceland exported fresh fish to Britain and salted cod to southern Europe with Portugal an important export market Fishing replaced agriculture as the country s main industry These developments set the stage for the urbanisation that was to follow in the twentieth century 31 A 2017 study looking at individuals going to the capital area for higher education found that Only about one in three University of Iceland students from regions beyond commuting distance return after graduation while about half remain in the capital area and others mostly emigrate 32 Iceland s 10 most populous urban areas Largest cities or towns in Iceland statice wbr isRank Name Region Pop nbsp Reykjavik nbsp Kopavogur 1 Reykjavik Capital Region 128 793 nbsp Hafnarfjordur nbsp Reykjanesbaer2 Kopavogur Capital Region 36 9753 Hafnarfjordur Capital Region 29 7994 Reykjanesbaer Southern Peninsula 18 9205 Akureyri Northeastern Region 18 9256 Gardabaer Capital Region 16 2997 Mosfellsbaer Capital Region 11 4638 Arborg Southern Region 9 4859 Akranes Western Region 7 41110 Fjardabyggd Eastern Region 5 070Religion editIn 2016 71 6 of the population belonged to the state church the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Iceland approximately 5 in free churches 3 7 to the Roman Catholic Church approximately 1 to the Asatruarfelagid a legally recognized revival of the pre Christian religion of Iceland approximately 1 to Zuism 8 in unrecognized or unspecified religious groups and 9 do not belong to any religious group 33 Icelandic National Registry editMain article Kennitala All living Icelanders as well as all foreign citizens with permanent residence in Iceland have a personal identification number kennitala identifying them in the National Registry This number is composed of 10 digits whereof the first six are made up of the individual s birth date in the format DDMMYY The next two digits are chosen at random when the kennitala is allocated the 9th digit is a check digit and the last digit indicates the period of one hundred years in which the individual was born for instance 9 for the period 1900 1999 An example would be 120192 3389 While similar all inclusive personal registries exist in other countries the use of the national registry is unusually extensive in Iceland It is worth noting that the completeness of the National Registry eliminates any need for census to be performed Summary of vital statistics since 1900 editData according to Statistics Iceland which collects the official statistics for Iceland 34 35 36 Year Average population Live births Deaths Natural change Crude birth rate per 1000 Crude death rate per 1000 Natural change per 1000 Total fertility rate1900 78 000 2 237 1 545 692 28 6 19 8 8 9 3 931901 78 000 2 179 1 155 1 024 27 8 14 7 13 1 3 861902 79 000 2 220 1 262 958 28 1 16 0 12 1 3 951903 79 000 2 244 1 324 920 28 3 16 7 11 6 4 001904 80 000 2 293 1 242 1 051 28 7 15 5 13 2 4 091905 81 000 2 271 1 435 836 28 1 17 8 10 4 4 021906 82 000 2 346 1 193 1 153 28 8 14 6 14 2 4 141907 83 000 2 304 1 396 908 27 9 16 9 11 0 4 041908 83 000 2 270 1 594 676 27 3 19 1 8 2 4 011909 84 000 2 283 1 263 1 020 27 2 15 0 12 2 4 001910 85 000 2 171 1 304 867 25 6 15 4 10 2 3 791911 85 000 2 205 1 152 1 053 25 8 13 5 12 3 3 801912 86 000 2 234 1 171 1 063 26 0 13 6 12 4 3 821913 87 000 2 216 1 060 1 156 25 6 12 2 13 4 3 761914 88 000 2 338 1 428 910 26 7 16 3 10 4 3 901915 89 000 2 446 1 376 1 070 27 6 15 5 12 1 4 001916 89 000 2 377 1 322 1 055 26 6 14 8 11 8 3 811917 91 000 2 427 1 111 1 316 26 8 12 3 14 5 3 821918 92 000 2 441 1 518 923 26 6 16 6 10 1 3 781919 92 000 2 342 1 169 1 173 25 4 12 7 12 7 3 621920 94 000 2 627 1 360 1 267 28 1 14 5 13 6 3 961921 95 000 2 601 1 478 1 123 27 4 15 6 11 8 3 871922 96 000 2 546 1 280 1 266 26 6 13 4 13 2 3 721923 97 000 2 612 1 287 1 325 26 9 13 3 13 7 3 771924 98 000 2 525 1 462 1 063 25 7 14 9 10 8 3 621925 99 000 2 554 1 229 1 325 25 7 12 4 13 3 3 591926 101 000 2 676 1 121 1 555 26 5 11 1 15 4 3 711927 103 000 2 642 1 282 1 360 25 8 12 5 13 3 3 591928 104 000 2 542 1 124 1 418 24 4 10 8 13 6 3 401929 106 000 2 644 1 237 1 407 25 0 11 7 13 3 3 471930 107 000 2 808 1 248 1 560 26 1 11 6 14 5 3 591931 109 000 2 804 1 277 1 527 25 7 11 7 14 0 3 531932 111 000 2 696 1 191 1 505 24 4 10 8 13 6 3 311933 112 000 2 531 1 159 1 372 22 5 10 3 12 2 3 071934 114 000 2 597 1 181 1 416 22 8 10 4 12 4 3 101935 115 000 2 551 1 402 1 149 22 1 12 2 10 0 2 991936 116 000 2 557 1 253 1 304 22 0 10 8 11 2 2 981937 117 000 2 397 1 317 1 080 20 4 11 2 9 2 2 781938 118 000 2 374 1 207 1 167 20 1 10 2 9 9 2 711939 120 000 2 363 1 160 1 203 19 8 9 7 10 1 2 681940 121 000 2 480 1 200 1 280 20 5 9 9 10 6 2 751941 122 000 2 634 1 352 1 282 21 6 11 1 10 5 2 911942 123 000 3 005 1 293 1 712 24 4 10 5 13 9 3 261943 125 000 3 173 1 268 1 905 25 4 10 1 15 2 3 361944 127 000 3 213 1 218 1 995 25 3 9 6 15 7 3 341945 129 000 3 434 1 179 2 255 26 6 9 1 17 5 3 551946 132 000 3 434 1 121 2 313 26 1 8 5 17 6 3 471947 134 000 3 706 1 162 2 544 27 6 8 6 18 9 3 671948 137 000 3 821 1 114 2 707 27 8 8 1 19 7 3 721949 140 000 3 884 1 106 2 778 27 8 7 9 19 9 3 731950 143 000 4 093 1 122 2 971 28 7 7 9 20 8 3 861951 145 000 3 999 1 145 2 854 27 5 7 9 19 6 3 721952 148 000 4 075 1 082 2 993 27 5 7 3 20 2 3 791953 151 000 4 254 1 118 3 136 28 1 7 4 20 7 3 941954 154 000 4 281 1 064 3 217 27 7 6 9 20 8 3 911955 158 000 4 505 1 099 3 406 28 5 7 0 21 5 4 071956 161 000 4 603 1 153 3 450 28 5 7 2 21 3 4 141957 165 000 4 725 1 157 3 568 28 6 7 0 21 6 4 201958 168 000 4 641 1 165 3 476 27 5 6 9 20 6 4 091959 172 000 4 837 1 242 3 595 28 1 7 2 20 9 4 241960 176 000 4 916 1 167 3 749 28 0 6 6 21 4 4 271961 179 000 4 563 1 248 3 315 25 5 7 0 18 5 3 881962 182 000 4 711 1 237 3 474 25 9 6 8 19 1 3 981963 186 000 4 820 1 327 3 493 26 0 7 1 18 9 3 981964 189 000 4 787 1 315 3 472 25 3 7 0 18 3 3 861965 192 000 4 721 1 291 3 430 24 6 6 7 17 9 3 711966 196 000 4 692 1 391 3 301 24 0 7 1 16 9 3 581967 199 000 4 404 1 385 3 019 22 2 7 0 15 2 3 281968 201 000 4 227 1 390 2 837 21 0 6 9 14 1 3 071969 203 000 4 218 1 451 2 767 20 8 7 1 13 7 2 991970 204 000 4 023 1 457 2 566 19 7 7 1 12 6 2 811971 206 000 4 277 1 501 2 776 20 8 7 3 13 5 2 921972 209 000 4 676 1 447 3 229 22 3 6 9 15 4 3 091973 212 000 4 598 1 475 3 123 21 7 6 9 14 8 2 951974 215 000 4 276 1 495 2 781 19 9 6 9 13 0 2 661975 218 000 4 384 1 412 2 972 20 1 6 5 13 6 2 651976 220 000 4 291 1 343 2 948 19 5 6 1 13 4 2 521977 222 000 3 996 1 435 2 561 18 0 6 5 11 5 2 311978 224 000 4 162 1 421 2 741 18 6 6 4 12 2 2 351979 226 000 4 475 1 482 2 993 19 8 6 6 13 2 2 491980 228 000 4 528 1 538 2 990 19 8 6 7 13 1 2 481981 231 000 4 345 1 656 2 689 18 8 7 2 11 6 2 331982 234 000 4 337 1 583 2 754 18 5 6 8 11 7 2 261983 237 000 4 371 1 653 2 718 18 4 7 0 11 4 2 241984 240 000 4 113 1 584 2 529 17 2 6 6 10 6 2 081985 241 000 3 856 1 652 2 204 16 0 6 8 9 2 1 931986 243 000 3 881 1 598 2 283 16 0 6 6 9 4 1 931987 246 000 4 193 1 724 2 469 17 0 7 0 10 0 2 071988 250 000 4 673 1 818 2 855 18 7 7 3 11 4 2 271989 253 000 4 560 1 716 2 844 18 0 6 8 11 2 2 201990 255 000 4 768 1 704 3 064 18 7 6 7 12 0 2 311991 258 000 4 533 1 796 2 737 17 6 7 0 10 6 2 191992 261 000 4 609 1 719 2 890 17 7 6 6 11 1 2 211993 264 000 4 623 1 753 2 870 17 5 6 6 10 9 2 221994 266 000 4 442 1 717 2 725 16 7 6 4 10 3 2 141995 267 000 4 280 1 923 2 357 16 0 7 2 8 8 2 081996 269 000 4 329 1 879 2 450 16 1 7 0 9 1 2 121997 271 000 4 151 1 843 2 308 15 3 6 8 8 5 2 041998 274 000 4 178 1 821 2 357 15 3 6 7 8 6 2 051999 277 000 4 100 1 901 2 199 14 9 6 9 8 0 1 992000 281 000 4 315 1 828 2 487 15 5 6 5 9 0 2 082001 285 000 4 091 1 725 2 366 14 4 6 1 8 3 1 952002 288 000 4 049 1 822 2 227 14 1 6 3 7 8 1 932003 290 000 4 143 1 826 2 317 14 3 6 3 8 0 1 992004 292 000 4 234 1 824 2 410 14 5 6 2 8 3 2 032005 297 000 4 280 1 837 2 443 14 4 6 2 8 2 2 052006 304 000 4 415 1 903 2 512 14 7 6 3 8 4 2 072007 308 000 4 560 1 943 2 617 14 9 6 3 8 6 2 092008 315 000 4 835 1 987 2 848 15 4 6 2 9 2 2 142009 318 000 5 026 2 002 3 024 15 8 6 3 9 5 2 222010 318 000 4 907 2 020 2 887 15 5 6 4 9 1 2 202011 320 000 4 492 1 986 2 506 14 1 6 2 7 9 2 022012 322 000 4 533 1 955 2 578 14 2 6 1 8 1 2 042013 326 000 4 326 2 154 2 172 13 3 6 6 6 7 1 932014 329 000 4 375 2 049 2 326 13 4 6 2 7 2 1 932015 333 000 4 129 2 178 1 951 12 5 6 5 6 0 1 812016 338 000 4 034 2 309 1 725 12 1 6 8 5 3 1 752017 349 000 4 071 2 239 1 832 11 8 6 4 5 4 1 712018 357 000 4 228 2 257 1 971 12 0 6 4 5 6 1 712019 364 000 4 452 2 277 2 175 12 3 6 3 6 0 1 742020 369 000 4 512 2 308 2 204 12 4 6 3 6 1 1 722021 376 000 4 879 2 338 2 541 13 0 6 2 6 8 1 822022 388 000 4 391 2 693 1 698 11 3 6 9 4 4 1 59Graphs 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 37 Graphs are unavailable due to technical issues There is more info on Phabricator and on MediaWiki org Current vital statistics edit 38 Period Live births Deaths Natural increaseJanuary September 2022 3 380 2 050 1 330January September 2023 3 300 1 890 1 440Difference nbsp 80 2 37 nbsp 160 7 8 nbsp 110Structure of the population edit Population Estimates by Sex and Age Group 01 I 2020 39 Age Group Male Female Total Total 186 941 177 193 364 134 1000 4 11 029 10 333 21 362 5 875 9 11 831 11 396 23 227 6 3810 14 12 186 11 444 23 630 6 4915 19 11 289 10 954 22 243 6 1120 24 13 251 12 519 25 770 7 0825 29 16 328 14 239 30 567 8 3930 34 14 816 12 572 27 388 7 5235 39 13 992 12 081 26 073 7 1640 44 12 557 11 454 24 011 6 5945 49 12 007 10 958 22 965 6 3150 54 11 232 10 795 22 027 6 0555 59 10 985 10 980 21 965 6 0360 64 10 288 10 145 20 433 5 6165 69 8 550 8 431 16 981 4 6670 74 6 821 6 796 13 617 3 7475 79 4 402 4 871 9 273 2 5580 84 2 866 3 272 6 138 1 6985 89 1 724 2 430 4 154 1 1490 94 667 1 199 1 866 0 5195 99 109 285 394 0 11100 11 39 50 0 01Age group Male Female Total Percent0 14 35 046 33 173 68 219 18 7315 64 126 745 116 697 243 442 66 8665 25 150 27 323 52 473 14 41 Population projection edit Population projection 1 January 40 Year Low Medium High2014 325 6712015 332 5292020 340 418 342 716 346 2792025 352 280 357 894 365 8932030 361 853 371 796 385 4052035 369 888 384 397 404 0532040 376 580 395 866 422 0472045 381 846 406 271 439 7562050 385 536 415 627 457 3172055 387 489 423 790 474 5612060 387 597 430 545 490 976 Life expectancy edit nbsp Life expectancy in Iceland since 1838 nbsp Life expectancy in Iceland since 1960 by genderPeriod Life expectancy inYears Period Life expectancy inYears1950 1955 72 2 1985 1990 77 61955 1960 73 2 1990 1995 78 51960 1965 73 5 1995 2000 79 11965 1970 73 7 2000 2005 80 71970 1975 74 2 2005 2010 81 41975 1980 76 3 2010 2015 82 21980 1985 76 9Source UN World Population Prospects 41 CIA World Factbook demographic statistics editThe following demographic statistics are from the CIA World Factbook unless otherwise indicated Age structure0 14 years 20 4 male 35 418 female 33 887 15 24 years 13 5 male 23 190 female 22 659 25 54 years 39 88 male 68 579 female 66 899 55 64 11 81 male 20 119 female 20 007 65 years and over 14 42 male 22 963 female 26 053 2017 est Sex ratioat birth 1 05 males 1 femaleunder 15 years 1 05 males 1 female15 24 years 1 03 males 1 female25 54 years 1 02 males 1 female55 64 years 1 01 males 1 female65 years and over 0 88 males 1 femaletotal population 1 01 male 1 female 2016 est Maternal mortality rate3 deaths 100 000 live births 2015 est Infant mortality rate2 1 deaths 1 000 live births 2016 est Life expectancy at birthtotal population 83 0 yearsmale 80 9 yearsfemale 85 3 years 2016 est Health expenditures8 9 of GDP 2014 Physicians density3 79 physicians 1 000 population 2015 Obesity adult prevalence rate23 9 2014 Education expenditures7 8 of GDP 2013 Mother s mean age at first birth27 4 2015 est nbsp Citizenship of Iceland residents 3 000 1 500 3 000 750 1 500 500 750Nationalitynoun Icelander s adjective Icelandic Ethnic groups94 Icelandic 6 other ReligionsEvangelical Lutheran Church of Iceland official 69 9 Roman Catholic 3 8 Reykjavik Free Church 2 9 Hafnarfjordur Free Church 2 Asatru Association 1 1 The Independent Congregation 1 other religions 4 includes Zuist and Pentecostal none 6 1 other or unspecified 9 2 2017 est LanguagesIcelandic English and a second Nordic language Danish by default are also a part of the Icelandic compulsory education 42 References edit a b Mannfjoldi eftir bakgrunni kyni og aldri 1996 2020 Population key figures 1703 2017 Px hagstofa is Retrieved 8 November 2017 Agnar Helgason Eileen Hickey Sara Goodacre Vidar Bosnes Ka ri Stefa nsson Ryk Ward Bryan Sykes 2001 mtDNA and the Islands of the North Atlantic Estimating the Proportions of Norse and Gaelic Ancestry Am J Hum Genet 68 3 723 737 doi 10 1086 318785 PMC 1274484 PMID 11179019 Agnar Helgason Sigrun Sigurdardottir Jeffrey R Gulcher Ryk Ward Kari Stefansson 2000 mtDNA and the Origin of the Icelanders Deciphering Signals of Recent Population History Am J Hum Genet 66 3 999 1016 doi 10 1086 302816 PMC 1288180 PMID 10712214 a b Karlsson Gunnar 2000 History of Iceland p 236 Gudbjort Gudjonsdottir We Blend in with the Crowd but They Don t In visibility and Icelandic Migrants in Norway Nordic Journal of Migration Research 4 2014 176 183 Karlsson Gunnar 2000 History of Iceland p 234 Kristin Loftsdottir Being the Damned Foreigner Affective National Sentiments and Racialization of Lithuanians in Iceland Nordic Journal of Migration Research 7 2 2017 70 77 p 72 doi 10 1515 njmr 2017 0012 a b Immigrants and persons with foreign background 2017 16 June 2017 Populations by religious and life stance organizations 1998 2017 Statistics Iceland Archived from the original on 2019 09 13 Retrieved 2017 08 22 Statistics Iceland Statistics Iceland From Iceland Catholic Congregation in Iceland Growing Rapidly Grapevine is 2019 10 24 Retrieved 2022 03 21 Demographic data as published by Statistics Iceland found online for the period of 1990 and later Hagtidindi for the years 1973 1989 Archived 2009 06 07 at the Wayback Machine Jonsson Stefan o 12 February 2018 Fyrsti islenski rabbininn mun beita ser gegn umskurdarbanninu www visir is Populations by religious and life stance organizations Statistics Iceland Archived from the original on 2021 07 13 Retrieved 2021 09 12 Religious Composition by Country 2010 2050 Pew Research Center s Religion amp Public Life Project 2015 04 02 Retrieved 2017 04 20 Populations by religious and life stance organizations 1998 2018 PX Web Archived from the original on 2022 01 27 Retrieved 2019 01 15 Hanna Ragnarsdottir Collisions and Continuities Ten Immigrant Families and Their Children in Icelandic Society and Schools Saarbrucken VDM Verlag Dr Muller 2008 Skaptadottir UD 2004 Mobilities and cultural difference immigrant s experiences in Iceland in Topographies of globalization politics culture language eds V Ingimundarson K Loftsdottir amp I Erlingsdottir The University of Iceland Press Reykjavik pp 133 149 Rannveig Thorisdottir Armed with a Pen In Black Light White Shadows Young People in the Nordic Countries Write about Racism Edited by Leena Suurpaa 85 97 Copenhagen Nordic Council of Ministers 1998 Kristin Loftsdottir Still a Lot of Staring and Curiosity Racism and the Racialization of African Immigrants in Iceland In New Dimensions of Diversity in Nordic Culture and Society Edited by Jenny Bjorklund Ursula Lindqvist 263 78 Newcastle upon Tyne Cambridge Scholars Publishing 2016 Gunnar J Gunnarsson Gunnar E Finnbogason Hanna Ragnarsdottir and Halla Jonsdottir Friendship Diversity and Fear Young People s Life Views and Life Values in a Multicultural Society Nordidactica Journal of Humanities and Social Science Education 2015 part 2 94 113 Kristin Loftsdottir The Country without Racism Multiculturalism and Colonial Identity Formations in Iceland Social Identities 17 2011 11 25 Kristin Loftsdottir Being the Damned Foreigner Affective National Sentiments and Racialization of Lithuanians in Iceland Nordic Journal of Migration Research 7 2 2017 70 77 doi 10 1515 njmr 2017 0012 Hanna Ragnarsdottir Competences for Active Communication and Participation in Diverse Societies Views of Young People in Iceland In Intercultural Competence in Education Alternative Approaches for Different Times Edited by Fred Dervin and Zehavit Gross 73 93 London Palgrave Macmillan 2016 p 75 Shendruk Amanda 2021 07 08 Are you even trying to stop racism if you don t collect data on race Quartz Retrieved 2022 07 04 Population key figures 1703 2023 PxWeb a b c d e f Population by origin sex and age 1996 2021 PX Web Retrieved 2021 12 29 Efnahagslegt sjonarhorn a mottoku flottamanna PDF Arion Banki Archived from the original PDF on 2017 03 11 Retrieved 2016 01 10 a b Island ad breytast i innflytjendathjod RUV 8 January 2016 Retrieved 2016 01 10 Bjornsson David F Zoega Gylfi 2017 06 26 Seasonality of birth rates in agricultural Iceland PDF Scandinavian Economic History Review 65 3 294 306 doi 10 1080 03585522 2017 1340333 ISSN 0358 5522 S2CID 157474068 Bjarnason Thoroddur Edvardsson Ingi Runar August 2017 University pathways of urban and rural migration in Iceland PDF Journal of Rural Studies 54 244 254 doi 10 1016 j jrurstud 2017 07 001 hdl 20 500 11815 1073 Aldrei laegra hlutfall Islendinga i THjodkirkjunni Zuistar naerri 1 prosent thjodarinnar Eyjan pressan is Archived from the original on 2017 11 08 Retrieved 2017 07 17 Population key figures 1703 2021 Statistics Iceland Retrieved 2022 02 14 Population by municipality sex citizenship and quarters 2010 2021 Statistics Iceland Retrieved 2022 02 14 Fertility and reproduction rates 1853 2020 Statistics Iceland Retrieved 2022 02 14 Note Crude migration change is a trend analysis an extrapolation based average population change current year minus previous minus natural change of the current year see table vital statistics As average population is an estimate of the population in the middle of the year and not end of the year Births deaths and migration by sex and citizenship NUTS3 regions and quarters 2010 2023 PxWeb UNSD Demographic and Social Statistics unstats un org Retrieved 2023 05 10 Population projection by main indicators 2013 2061 Reykjavik Iceland Statistics Iceland World Population Prospects Population Division United Nations Retrieved 2017 07 15 The Educational System in Iceland PDF Ministry of Education Science and Culture Iceland 2002 Archived from the original PDF on 27 September 2007 Retrieved 8 November 2017 External links edit Hagstofa Islands Statistics Iceland statice is the national statistical institute of Iceland ICELAND The World Factbook 20 June 2023 A 2012 report by the Ministry of Welfare on migration to and from Iceland 1961 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Demographics of Iceland amp oldid 1213791582 Population, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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