Half of the World's Population Lives in This Circle

Impact

The news: World Population Day was on Friday and the UN's new data makes one thing very clear: Our planet is more crowded than ever.

According to the UN, the global population now stands at 7.2 billion. But perhaps the most striking fact is that half of the world's people live in just six countries: China (1.4 billion) and India (1.3 billion), followed by the U.S., Indonesia, Pakistan and Brazil, which have just under than 1 billion combined. Or, in other words: Half of the world's population lives in this circle:

Image Credit: Imgur

The area above consists of China, India, Indonesia, Bangladesh, Japan, the Philippines, Vietnam, Thailand, Myanmar, South Korea, Nepal, Malaysia, North Korea, Taiwan, Sri Lanka, Cambodia, Laos, Mongolia and Bhutan — where roughly half of humanity resides.

If you want to get a sense of just how immense Asian population growth is, watch this fantastic visualization by NPR:

But the trend is slowing down. While the global population has been furiously expanding in the last few decades, research indicates that the pace will slow down as aging populations die off and younger populations become increasingly selective about having children. Still, for the foreseeable future, Asia remains the population center of the world and the respective governments will have to figure out how to share their resources adequately among an ever-expanding population.