Demographics of Croatia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Croatia is inhabited mostly by Croats, while minority groups include Serbs, Bosniaks, Hungarians, Italians, Germans, Czechs, Roma people and others. Catholicism is the predominant religion, while there's also Eastern Orthodoxy and Islam.

The natural growth rate is minute, as the demographic transition is long done. Life expectancy and literacy rates are reasonably high.

Demographics of Croatia, Data of FAO, year 2005 ; Number of inhabitants in thousands.
Demographics of Croatia, Data of FAO, year 2005 ; Number of inhabitants in thousands.

Contents

4.490.000

0-14 years: 16.2% (male 373,638/female 354,261)
15-64 years: 67% (male 1,497,958/female 1,515,314)
65 years and over: 16.8% (male 288,480/female 465,098) (2006 est.)

Total: 40.3 years
Male: 38.3 years
Female: 42.1 years (2006 est.)

9.61 births/1,000 population (2006 est.)

11.48 deaths/1,000 population (2006 est.)

1.58 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2006 est.)

At birth: 1.06 male(s)/female
Under 15 years: 1.05 male(s)/female
15-64 years: 0.99 male(s)/female
65 years and over: 0.62 male(s)/female
Total population: 0.94 male(s)/female (2006 est.)

Total: 6.72 deaths/1,000 live births
Male: 6.7 deaths/1,000 live births
Female: 6.74 deaths/1,000 live births (2006 est.)

Total population: 74.68 years
Male: 71.03 years
Female: 78.53 years (2006 est.)

1.4 children born/woman (2006 est.)

Adult prevalence rate: less than 0.1% (2001 est.)
People living with HIV/AIDS: 200 (2001 est.)
Deaths: less than 10 (2001 est.)

Noun: Croat(s), Croatian(s)
Adjective: Croatian

Croat 89.6%, Serb 4.5%, Bosniak 0.5%, Hungarian 0.4%, Slovene 0.3%, Czech 0.2%, Roma 0.2%, Albanian 0.1%, Montenegrin 0.1%, others 4.1% (2001 census)

Roman Catholic 87.8%, Orthodox 4.4%, other Christian 0.4%, Muslim 1.3%, other and unspecified 0.9%, none 5.2% (2001 census)

Croatian 96.1%, Serbian 1%, other and undesignated 2.9% (including Italian, Hungarian, Czech, Slovak, and German) (2001 census)

Definition: age 15 and over can read and write
Total population: 98.5%
Male: 99.4%
Female: 97.8% (2003 est.)

Population Structure (%)
Total 4.437.460 100
Croats 3.977.171 89,63
National minorities
Total 331.383 7,47
Albanians 15.082 0,34
Austrians 247 0,01
Bosniaks 20.755 0,47
Bulgarians 331 0,01
Czechs 10.510 0,24
Germans 2.902 0,07
Hungarians 16.595 0,37
Italians 19.636 0,44
Jews 576 0,01
Macedonians 4.270 0,10
Montenegrins 4.926 0,11
Poles 567 0,01
Roma 9.463 0,21
Romanians 475 0,01
Russians 906 0,02
Rusyns 2.337 0,05
Serbs 201.631 4,54
Slovaks 4.712 0,11
Slovenes 13.173 0,30
Turks 300 0,01
Ukrainians 1.977 0,04
Vlachs 12 0,00
Others1 21.801 0,49
Refrained from stating
their nationality
Total 89.130 2,01
stated regional
affiliation 9.302 0,21
Unknown 17.975 0,41

1 This mode includes, among others, Yugoslavs (176) and Muslims by nationality (19,677).

See also: Recent history of the Serbs of Croatia

The census of 1991 was the last one held before the war in Croatia, marked by ethnic conflict between Serbs and Croats. In the ethnic and religious composition of population of Croatia of that time, those two sets of numbers are quoted as important:

  • Croats 78.1%, Catholics 76.5%
  • Serbs 12.2%, Orthodox Christians 11.1%

There were also people who declared themselves Yugoslavs, but who would in recent censuses register as Serbs or others.

There were two major sets of population movements during this period - the first one during the earlier stage of the war, around 1991, and the second one during the later stage of the war, around 1995. The first movement peaked at around 550,000 on the Croatian side; the second movement peaked at around 200,000 on the Serbian side.

After the end of the war of the 1990s and everything else that it entailed, the numbers are:

  • Croats 89.6%, Catholics 87.8%
  • Serbs 4.5%, Orthodox Christians 4.4%

Most Croat refugees have since returned to their homes, while two thirds of the Serbs remain in exile; the other third either returned or had remained in Zagreb and other parts of Croatia not directly hit by war.

  • This article contains material from the CIA World Factbook (2006 edition) which, as a US government publication, is in the public domain.
  • Croatian Bureau of Statistics, official census data

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