Cyprus to record strongest population growth by 2060 in EU27

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Cyprus will record the strongest population growth between 2008 and 2060 among all EU-27 member states. According to Eurostat, between 2008 and 2060, the population in EU27 is projected to rise in thirteen member states and fall in fourteen.
The strongest population growth is projected to be recorded in Cyprus (+66%), Ireland (+53%), Luxembourg (+52%), the United Kingdom (+25%) and Sweden (+18%), and the sharpest declines in Bulgaria (-28%), Latvia (-26%), Lithuania (-24%), Romania (-21%) and Poland (-18%).
Cyprus’ population is 795,000 in 2008, in 2035 it will reach 1,121,000 and in 2060 will increase further to 1,320,000, recording an increase of 66.2% between 2008-2060.
In 2060, the Member States with the largest populations would be the United Kingdom (77 million), France (72 mn), Germany (71 mn), Italy (59 mn) and Spain (52 mn).
The EU27 population is projected to increase from 495 million on 1 January 2008 to 521 million in 2035, and thereafter gradually decline to 506 million in 2060.
The annual number of births is projected to fall over the period 2008-2060, while at the same time the annual number of deaths is projected to continue rising.
From 2015 onwards, deaths would outnumber births, and hence population growth due to natural increase would cease. From this point onwards, positive net migration would be the only population growth factor.
However, from 2035, this positive net migration would no longer counterbalance the negative natural change, and the population is projected to begin to fall.
The EU27 population is also projected to continue to grow older, with the share of the population aged 65 years and over rising from 17.1% in 2008 to 30.0% in 2060, and those aged 80 and over rising from 4.4% to 12.1% over the same period.