Demographic history of Pakistan

This article presents the demographic history of Pakistan mainly through the census results. See Demographics of Pakistan for a more detailed overview of the country's present-day demographics.

Indus Valley Civilization

At its peak, the Indus Valley civilization, that covered mainly modern Pakistan as well as parts of Afghanistan and India, was mostly fertile land that may have had a population of over five million. The Indus cities are noted for their urban planning, baked brick houses, elaborate drainage systems, water supply systems, and clusters of large non-residential buildings.

Independence and transfer of population

After Partition of India in 1947, two-thirds of the Muslims resided in Pakistan (both east and West Pakistan) but a third resided in India.[1] According to 1951 census, Dominion of Pakistan (both East and West Pakistan) had a population of 75 million population, in which West Pakistan had a population of 33.7 million and East Pakistan (now Bangladesh) had a population of 42 million.[2][3] This exchange of population had different impact within Pakistan itself. The migration of Hindus and Sikh from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Punjab to India and the settlement of Muslim Punjabis from India in Punjab created homogeneity in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and Punjab. Balochistan remained unaffected but exchange of population shook the demographic balance in Sindh. Approximately 0.77 million Sindhi Hindus left for India and 1.2 million mainly Urdu speaking North Indian Muslims settled mainly in urban Sindh. In 1954, Urdu speakers constituted 20% of the population of Sindh. Unlike the migrants settling in Punjab who spoke the same language and shared the same lifestyles the North Indian Muslims settling in Sindh were socially, linguistically, culturally, politically and economically different from Sindhis.

Post Independence

The Intercensal growth rates between 1951 and 1981 indicated a rise in the population growth rate in the 1960s and 1970s largely attributed to the sharp declines in mortality seen in the 1950s and 1960s, which were not followed by any decline in fertility in those decades. Intercensal growth rates actually peaked in the 1961-72 period and continued at fairly high levels in 1972-81 after which they began to decline. The 1981-98 period records a decline to 2.6 indicating that growth rates in the last few years of the 17 years intercensal period are likely to have been lower.[4] Pakistan’s fertility decline is a consequence of the rising age at marriage (for women, this increased from 16 to 23 between 1961 and 2007) and the “widespread recourse” to abortions.[5]

Yearly population

Pakistan's yearly population from 1950 to 2014.[6]

Year Population Absolute increase Percentage increase
1950 40,381,000
1951 41,347,000 965,000 2.39
1952 42,342,000 995,000 2.41
1953 45,372,000 2,030,000 2.43
1954 44,434,000 -1,062,000 -4.45
1955 45,536,000 1,102,000 2.48
1956 46,680,000 1,144,000 2.51
1957 47,869,000 1,189,000 2.55
1958 49,104,000 1,235,000 2.58
1959 50,387,000 1,283,000 2.61
1960 51,719,000 1,332,000 2.64
1961 53,101,000 1,382,000 2.67
1962 54,524,000 1,423,000 2.68
1963 55,988,000 1,464,000 2.69
1964 57,495,000 1,507,000 2.69
1965 59,046,000 1,551,000 2.70
1966 60,642,000 1,596,000 2.70
1967 62,282,000 1,640,000 2.70
1968 63,970,000 1,688,000 2.71
1969 65,706,000 1,736,000 2.71
1970 67,491,000 1,785,000 2.72
1971 69,326,000 1,835,000 2.72
1972 71,121,000 1,795,000 2.59
1973 72,912,000 1,791,000 2.52
1974 74,712,000 1,800,000 2.47
1975 76,456,000 1,744,000 2.33
1976 78,153,000 1,697,000 2.22
1977 80,051,000 1,898,000 2.43
1978 82,374,000 2,323,000 2.90
1979 85,219,000 2,845,000 3.45
1980 88,097,000 2,878,000 3.38
1981 90,975,000 2,878,000 3.27
1982 94,096,000 3,121,000 3.43
1983 96,881,000 2,785,000 2.96
1984 99,354,000 2,473,000 2.55
1985 102,079,000 2,725,000 2.74
1986 105,240,000 3,161,000 3.10
1987 108,584,000 3,344,000 3.18
1988 112,021,000 3,437,000 3.17
1989 115,419,000 3,398,000 3.03
1990 118,816,000 3,397,000 2.94
1991 122,248,000 3,432,000 2.89
1992 124,962,000 2,714,000 2.22
1993 127,563,000 2,601,000 2.08
1994 130,746,000 3,183,000 2.50
1995 134,185,000 3,439,000 2.63
1996 137,911,000 3,726,000 2.78
1997 141,445,000 3,534,000 2.56
1998 144,885,000 3,440,000 2.43
1999 148,379,000 3,494,000 2.41
2000 152,429,000 4,050,000 2.73
2001 156,795,000 4,366,000 2.86
2002 160,269,000 3,474,000 2.22
2003 163,166,000 2,897,000 1.81
2004 166,224,000 3,058,000 1.87
2005 169,279,000 3,055,000 1.84
2006 172,382,000 3,103,000 1.83
2007 175,495,000 3,113,000 1.81
2008 178,479,000 2,984,000 1.70
2009 181,457,000 2,978,000 1.67
2010 184,405,000 2,948,000 1.62
2011 187,343,000 2,938,000 1.59
2012 190,284,285 2,941,285 1.57
2013 193,271,748 2,987,463 1.55
2014 196,228,805 2,957,057 1.53

See also

References

  1. ^ "Muslims in Indian army". 15 March 2010.
  2. ^ "Migration from East Pakistan (1951-1961)" (PDF).
  3. ^ http://www.pbs.gov.pk/sites/default/files/other/pocket_book2006/2.pdf Archived 2018-09-20 at the Wayback Machine [bare URL PDF]
  4. ^ FERTILITY IN PAKISTAN: PAST, PRESENT AND FUTURE
  5. ^ "Pakistan's Demographics - Woodrow Wilson International" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2017-07-05. Retrieved 2014-10-24.
  6. ^ "US Census:International Data Base (IDB)". Archived from the original on 2013-10-10. Retrieved 2017-12-09.

External links

  • Capturing the Demographic Dividend in Pakistan