Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. 2021. 7,909,295,151. 0.87 %. 68,342,271. 53. 2020. 7,840,952,880. 0.98 %. 76,001,848.

  2. Nov 18, 2021 · Total world population (mid-year figures) Ten-year growth rate (%) 1950: 2,556,000,053: 18.9%: 1960: 3,039,451,023: 22.0: 1970: 3,706,618,163: 20.2: 1980: 4,453,831,714: 18.5: 1990: 5,278,639,789: 15.2: 2000: 6,082,966,429: 12.6: 2010: 6,956,823,603: 10.7: 2020: 7,794,798,739: 8.7: 2030: 8,548,487,000: 7.3: 2040: 9,198,847,000: 5.6: 2050: ...

  3. People also ask

  4. Chart and table of World population from 1950 to 2024. United Nations projections are also included through the year 2100. The current population of World in 2024 is 8,118,835,999, a 0.91% increase from 2023. The population of World in 2023 was 8,045,311,447, a 0.88% increase from 2022.

  5. Estimates of historical world population. Comparison of humans living today with all previous generations. This article lists current estimates of the world population in history. In summary, estimates for the progression of world population since the Late Middle Ages are in the following ranges: Year. 1400.

  6. The current world population is 8,111,284,090 as of Saturday, May 25, 2024 according to the most recent United Nations estimates [ 1] elaborated by Worldometer. The term "World Population" refers to the human population (the total number of humans currently living) of the world.

    #
    Country (or Dependency)
    Population (2023)
    Yearly Change
    1
    1,428,627,663
    0.81 %
    2
    1,425,671,352
    -0.02 %
    3
    339,996,563
    0.5 %
    4
    277,534,122
    0.74 %
  7. Mar 31, 2023 · About this data. Population by country, available from 10,000 BCE to 2100, based on data and estimates from different sources. Gapminder - Population v7 (2022); Gapminder - Systema Globalis (2022); HYDE (2017); United Nations - World Population Prospects (2022) – with major processing by Our World in Data.

  8. How long did it take for the world population to increase by one billion? This visualization provides an additional perspective on population growth: the number of years it took to add one billion to the global population. This is based on the 2022 revision of world population estimates from the UN Population Division.

  1. People also search for