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Census reveals German population lower than thought | Census reveals German population lower than thought |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Germany has found that it has 1.5 million fewer people than was generally assumed, following the first census since reunification in 1990. | Germany has found that it has 1.5 million fewer people than was generally assumed, following the first census since reunification in 1990. |
The new data revealed a population of 80.2 million, the federal statistics office Destatis said. | |
The census in the EU's most populous country was carried out on 9 May, 2011. | The census in the EU's most populous country was carried out on 9 May, 2011. |
Until now, the census figures dated back to a West German one conducted in 1987, and a 1981 one in the former communist East Germany. | |
The data reveals that the number of foreign passport-holders resident in Germany had been overestimated. | |
The total number of foreigners is 6.2 million - 1.1 million fewer than had been assumed. They make up 7.7% of the total population. | |
The number of residents from a non-German background is 15 million - about 19% of the total. | |
Hamburg has the highest proportion of ethnically non-German residents, at 27.5%. The figure for the capital, Berlin, is 23.9%. And in all the states of former East Germany the figure is less than 5%. | |
The census also revealed that 66.8% of respondents consider themselves Christian, and 10.5% atheists. In eastern Germany, non-believers account for about 33% - far higher than the 6% figure for western Germany. | |
Only 1.9% of respondents said they were Muslim. Statisticians believe many Muslims used their legal right not to state their religion in the survey, according to the news website, Der Spiegel. | |
On home ownership, the census put the national figure at 45.8%, with Berlin right at the bottom. Only 15.6% of people in the capital are homeowners. | |
Meanwhile, more than one in 10 dwellings in the eastern German cities of Chemnitz, Leipzig and Halle were found to be empty. Housing is much more of a problem in Jena, Muenster, Hamburg and Oldenburg, where less than 2% of dwellings are empty. |
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