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Ireland has, throughout most of its history, had a relatively small population; until the 19th century this was comparable to other regions of similar area in Europe. Ireland experienced a major population boom in the 18th and early 19th centuries, as did the rest of Europe as a result of the Agricultural and Industrial revolutions, and at the time had comparable population densities to Britain and Western Europe. However this changed dramatically with the Great Famine of the mid-19th century, which created conditions of mass starvation and emigration. The famine was by far the most significant turning point in the demographics of the country, as not only did Ireland's population not grow for the next century, it continued a slow decline, the result of which is that the Republic of Ireland has a significantly smaller population today then would be expected for a western European country of its size. Only in the mid-20th century did the Republic's population start to grow once more, but emigration was still common until the 1990s. For centuries a relatively poor nation of emigrants, the Demographics of the county changed significantly from the 1990s onwards, as a result of the economic boom know as the Celtic Tiger. After this point, immigration far outweighed emigration and many former Irish Emigrants returned home. Ireland then became an attractive destination for immigrants from a number of nations, mainly from Eastern Europe, but also from Africa, Asia and elsewhere. The nation's population is the youngest in the European Unioncitation needed and its population is now predicted to grow for many decades into the future, bucking the trend of decline that is predicted for most European countries. A report in 2008 predicted that the population of the country would reach 6.7 million by 2060.1 Even more unique is that Ireland has been experiencing a baby boom for the past few years, with increasing birth rates and fertility rates.2 Celtic culture and language forms an important part of the Irish national identity. The Irish Travellers are a native ethnic minority group. Demographic statistics from the CIA World FactbookThe following demographic statistics are from the CIA World Factbook.
Age structure
Population growth rate
Birth rate
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Net migration rate
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Infant mortality rate
4 deaths/1,000 live births (2005) PopulationLife expectancy at birth
Total fertility rate1.85 children born/woman (2008) HIV/AIDS - adult prevalence rate0.1% (2001 est.) HIV/AIDS - people living with HIV/AIDS2,400 (2001 est.) Nationality
===Nationalities in Ireland=== Irish (including dual-Irish/other): 88.9%, UK: 2.7%, Other EU 25: 3.9%, Other Europe: 0.6%, Africa: 0.8%, Asia: 1.1%, USA: 0.3%, Other countries: 0.5%, Multiple nationality: 0.1%, No nationality: 0.0%, Not stated: 1.1% (2006) Ethnic groupsIrish (of largely Gaelic stock, with Norse, Norman, English, Scottish, Welsh, and French admixture), Irish Travellers, Ulster-Scots and various immigrant populations - the largest immigrant groups, with over 10,000 people, are the English and Welsh, Poles, Americans, Lithuanians, Scots, Nigerians, Latvians, Germans and the Chinese.3 Ethnic backgroundsWhite: 94.8% (including 0.5% Irish Traveller), Asian: 1.3%, Black: 1.1%, Other/Mixed: 1.1%, Not Stated: 1.7% (2006) ReligionsRoman Catholic 86.8% (however, only 48% attend services as of 20014), No Religion 6.2%, Church of Ireland 3.0%, Islam 0.8%, Presbyterian 0.6%, Orthodox 0.5%, Methodist 0.3%, Other 2.1% (2006) Geographic Population Distribution
Population pyramid of Ireland, 2001
LanguagesEnglish is the most commonly used language, with 94%5 of the population calling it their mother tongue. Irish, the first official language of the state, is spoken by 42%6; with 11%7 calling it their mother tongue. Irish is the main language of the Gaeltacht regions, where 91,862 people live. Shelta and Ulster Scots are also spoken by small communities. The main sign language used is Irish Sign Language. Literacy
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