This article is about the demographic features of the population of North Macedonia, including population density, ethnicity, education level, health of the populace, economic status, religious affiliations and other aspects of the population.
The latest population census was held in 2002 due to ethnic issues between Albanians and Macedonians, therefore demographic information may be unreliable as it is based on estimates.
According to Apostol Simovski, the director of the State Statistical Office, the population of North Macedonia is around 1.5 million.
Total population
2,022,547 (2002)
2,038,514 (2006)
2,057,284 (2010)
2,065,719 (2015)
2,073,702 (2016)
2,084,367 (2017)
1,832,696 (2021)
International statistics and estimates
According to statistics from the European Union, the actual population has been reduced by at least 230,000 people who emigrated into European Union member states between 1998 and 2011.
Further Albanian news sources estimated at October 2012 that the real population is closer to the sum of 1,744,237 people who are accounted within all of the health funds of the country.
According to Bozhidar Dimitrov, the Bulgarian authorities have granted 87,000 to many of those emigrants a Bulgarian passport, as of 2012, which requires that they declare to be ethnic Bulgarians.
Since Bulgaria's entry into the European Union, and under pressure from fellow European Union members, Bulgaria imposed more stringent rules and measures for the acquisition of a Bulgarian citizenship and passport.
The provisions of the Ohrid agreement to elevate any minority language if the minority in question is above 20% of the population of any municipality into a co-official language for that municipality has created friction within the government, and between officials of different political and ethnic interests, resulting in the indefinite postponement of the census for almost twenty years until it was finally conducted in 2021.
Vital statistics
Source: State Statistical Office of the Republic of Macedonia
Current vital statistics
Marriages and divorces
Vital statistics, marriages and divorces by decade
Births and fertility rates
</div> Ethnic groups
The process of industrialization and urbanization after the Second World War that caused the population growth to decrease involved the ethnic Macedonians to a greater extent than Muslims.
Rates of increase were very high among rural Muslims: Turks and Torbesh (Macedonian Muslims) had rates 2.5 times those of the Macedonian majority, while Roma had rates 3 times as high.
In 1994, Macedonians had a TFR of 2.07, while the TFR of others were: Albanian (2.10), Turkish (3.55), Roma (4.01), Serb (2.07), Vlachs (1.88) and Others (3.05).
The TFR by religions was: Christian (2.17, with 2.20 for Catholics and 2.06 for Orthodox), Islam (4.02) and others (2.16).
However, it is unlikely that this high minority TFR has continued since then in North Macedonia, as Balkan fertility elsewhere (Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo) has dropped sharply toward the European average.
A more recent survey pegs Muslim fertility in North Macedonia at 1.7, versus 1.5 for non-Muslims.
File:Makedonija - Etnicki sastav po naseljima 1961.gif|Ethnic structure of North Macedonia by settlements 1961.
File:Makedonija - Etnicki sastav po naseljima 1971.gif|Ethnic structure of North Macedonia by settlements 1971.
File:Makedonija - Etnicki sastav po naseljima 1981.gif|Ethnic structure of North Macedonia by settlements 1981.
File:Macedonia ethnic.png|Ethnic map of North Macedonia, according to the 1981 census File:Makedonija - Etnicki sastav po naseljima 1991 1.gif|Ethnic structure of North Macedonia by settlements 1991.
File:Makedonija - Etnicki sastav po naseljima 1991 2.gif|Ethnic structure of North Macedonia by settlements 1991.
File:Makedonija - Etnicki sastav po naseljima 1994.gif|Ethnic structure of North Macedonia by settlements 1994.
File:Makedonija - Etnicki sastav po naseljima 2002.gif|Ethnic structure of North Macedonia by settlements 2002.
File:MKD muni nonn(Ethnic).png|Ethnic groups in North Macedonia, according to the 2002 census File:Map of the majority ethnic groups of Macedonia by municipality mk.svg|Ethnic groups in North Macedonia, according to the 2002 census
'''Population of North Macedonia according to ethnic group 1948–2002<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.stat.gov.mk/PXWeb2007bazi/Database/Censuses/databasetree.asp |title=Archived copy |access-date=2011-02-24 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110309211353/http://www.stat.gov.mk/PXWeb2007bazi/Database/Censuses/databasetree.asp |archive-date=2011-03-09 }}</ref>'''
In 2017, 21,754 children were born in North Macedonia.
The ethnic affiliation of these newborns was: 11,260 (51.76%) Macedonian; 7,404 (34.03%) Albanian; 940 (4.32%) Turkish; 1,276 (5.87%) Roma; 40 (0.18%) Vlach; 129 (0.59%) Serbian; 213 (0.98%) Bosniaks; 492 (2,26%) other ethnic affiliation and unknown.
In the school year 2016/2017 there were 192 715 students in elementary schools from which 104,756 (55%) were Macedonian, and 60,971 (32%) were Albanian, and in High schools there were 72 482 students from which 43,658 (60.1%) were Macedonian and 22 419 (30.9%) were Albanians.
Furthermore, in 1999 Albanians accounted for 34.6% of newborns and 26.1% of students who finished high school in 2016, which was regulated by the Ministry of Education.
'''Newborns in North Macedonia according to ethnic group'''
Languages
Macedonian: 1,344,815 (66.49%)
Albanian: 507,989 (25.12%)
Turkish: 71,757 (3.55%)
Romani: 38,528 (1.90%)
Serbian: 24,773 (1.22%)
Bosnian: 8,560 (0.42%)
Aromanian: 6,884 (0.35%)
Other: 19,241 (0.95%)
TOTAL: 2 022 547 (100.00%?)
File:Makedonija - Jezicki sastav po naseljima 2002.gif|Linguistic structure of North Macedonia by settlements 2002.
Religion
Orthodox Christianity (Macedonian Orthodox Church and Serbian Orthodox Church Ohrid Archbishopric): 1,300,000 or 61.6%
Islam: 771,672 or 36.6%
Catholicism (Roman Catholic Diocese of Skopje and Macedonian Greek Catholic Church): 8,229 or 0.4%
other: 28,801 or 1.4% (2010)
File:Makedonija - Verski sastav po naseljima 2002.gif|Religious structure of North Macedonia by settlements 2002. '
'CIA World Factbook'' demographic statistics
The following demographic statistics are from the CIA World Factbook, unless otherwise indicated.
Age structure
0–14 years: 19.5% (male 210,078; female 203,106)
15–64 years: 67.8% (male 707,298; female 696,830)
65 years and over: 12.7% (male 97,437; female 124,661) (2004 est)
Sex ratio
at birth: 1.08 male(s)/female
under 15 years: 1.08 male(s)/female
15–64 years: 1.02 male(s)/female
65 years and over: 0.78 male(s)/female
total population: 1 male(s)/female (2004 est.)
Infant mortality rate
total: 11.74 deaths/1,000 live births
female: 10.73 deaths/1,000 live births (2004 est.)
male: 12.67 deaths/1,000 live births
Life expectancy at birth
total population: 74.73 years
male: 72.45 years
female: 77.2 years (2004 est.)
Total fertility rate
1.50 children born/woman (2015 est.)
HIV/AIDS
adult prevalence rate: less than 0.1% (2001 est.)
people living with HIV/AIDS: less than 100 (1999 est.)
deaths: less than 100 (2001 est.)
Nationality
noun: Macedonian/citizen of the Republic of North MacedoniaUnder the terms of the Prespa agreement, the nationality of the country will be called "Macedonian/citizen of the Republic of North Macedonia" in full.
adjective: Macedonian / of North Macedonia
See also
Demographic history of North Macedonia
Rumelia
Demographics of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia
Demographics of Albania
Demographics of Bulgaria
Demographics of Greece
Demographics of Kosovo
Demographics of Serbia
References
Other sources
Statistical Yearbook of the Republic of Macedonia 2004 (CD version)
External links
Results of the 2002 census
CIA World Factbook entry on North Macedonia
