ianstone
07-29-2010, 03:14 PM
Britain to be biggest country in Europe by 2050
Britain will be the biggest country in Europe by 2050, overtaking both France and Germany, according to official projections.
By Harry Wallop (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/journalists/harry-wallop/), Consumer Affairs Editor
Published: 4:56PM BST 29 Jul 2010
62 Comments (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/7916924/Britain-to-be-biggest-country-in-Europe-by-2050.html#disqus_thread)
http://i.telegraph.co.uk/telegraph/multimedia/archive/01506/population-article_1506492c.jpg Europe's population will fall in the next 40 years, but Britain's population will swell by 15 million to hit 77 million Photo: PA
Britain will see its population swell from today's 62.2 million to 77 million, an increase of 24 per cent.
This will make it bigger than France, projected to be 70 million and Germany, which is predicted to have 71.5 million citizens.
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The forecasts come form the Population Reference Bureau, a US body which supplies data to governments and institutions around the world.
The predictions suggest that Britain will see its population increase over the next 40 years at a far faster rate than nearly every other European (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/) country. The extra 15 million equates to the combined populations of Glasgow, Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool being added to the total national population over the next two generations.
Britain's population has started to climb sharply in recent years. Last year the Office for National Statistics indicated that mothers had more children than at any time since 1973.
Immigrant mothers accounted for more than half of the increase in births, but the fertility rate among British-born women also rose sharply.
The Population Reference Bureau predicts that France's population, in contrast, will increase at half the rate, adding 7 million to its 63 million. While Germany will actually see its population fall sharply from 81.6 million to 71.5 million because of a lack of immigration, and a far lower birth rate than that in Britain. It already has the second oldest population in the world after Japan, with one in five of all Germans over the age of 65.
Europe, in total, will see its population dip from 739 million to 720 million, because of its low birth rate.
The world's population will increase inexorably, swelling from 6.89 billion to 9.49 billion. India will be responsible for a significant part of this increase, becoming the largest country in the world by overtaking China.
The country, which hit 1 billion just a decade ago and now has a population of 1.19 billion, is expected to hit 1.75 billion, adding the equivalent of the entire population of the European Union in a mere 40 years.
China's population will increase, but relatively modestly, moving from 1.34 billion to 1.48 billion.
Britain will be the biggest country in Europe by 2050, overtaking both France and Germany, according to official projections.
By Harry Wallop (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/journalists/harry-wallop/), Consumer Affairs Editor
Published: 4:56PM BST 29 Jul 2010
62 Comments (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/7916924/Britain-to-be-biggest-country-in-Europe-by-2050.html#disqus_thread)
http://i.telegraph.co.uk/telegraph/multimedia/archive/01506/population-article_1506492c.jpg Europe's population will fall in the next 40 years, but Britain's population will swell by 15 million to hit 77 million Photo: PA
Britain will see its population swell from today's 62.2 million to 77 million, an increase of 24 per cent.
This will make it bigger than France, projected to be 70 million and Germany, which is predicted to have 71.5 million citizens.
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The forecasts come form the Population Reference Bureau, a US body which supplies data to governments and institutions around the world.
The predictions suggest that Britain will see its population increase over the next 40 years at a far faster rate than nearly every other European (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/) country. The extra 15 million equates to the combined populations of Glasgow, Birmingham, Manchester, Leeds and Liverpool being added to the total national population over the next two generations.
Britain's population has started to climb sharply in recent years. Last year the Office for National Statistics indicated that mothers had more children than at any time since 1973.
Immigrant mothers accounted for more than half of the increase in births, but the fertility rate among British-born women also rose sharply.
The Population Reference Bureau predicts that France's population, in contrast, will increase at half the rate, adding 7 million to its 63 million. While Germany will actually see its population fall sharply from 81.6 million to 71.5 million because of a lack of immigration, and a far lower birth rate than that in Britain. It already has the second oldest population in the world after Japan, with one in five of all Germans over the age of 65.
Europe, in total, will see its population dip from 739 million to 720 million, because of its low birth rate.
The world's population will increase inexorably, swelling from 6.89 billion to 9.49 billion. India will be responsible for a significant part of this increase, becoming the largest country in the world by overtaking China.
The country, which hit 1 billion just a decade ago and now has a population of 1.19 billion, is expected to hit 1.75 billion, adding the equivalent of the entire population of the European Union in a mere 40 years.
China's population will increase, but relatively modestly, moving from 1.34 billion to 1.48 billion.