2017 Global Religion Full PEW
2017 Global Religion Full PEW
DECEMBER 2012
pew–templeton
global
project
religious
futures
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
The Pew Research Center is a nonpartisan fact tank that provides information on the issues, attitudes
and trends shaping America and the world. The center conducts public opinion polling, demographic
studies, content analysis and other empirical social science research. It does not take positions on policy
issues. The Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life is a project of the Pew Research Center; it delivers
timely, impartial information on the issues at the intersection of religion and public affairs in the U.S.
and around the world. The Pew Research Center is an independently operated subsidiary of The Pew
Charitable Trusts.
The report is a collaborative effort based on the input and analysis of the following individuals:
Table of Contents
PA G E
Preface 7
Executive Summary 9
Christians 17
Muslims 21
Religiously Unaffiliated 24
Hindus 28
Buddhists 31
Folk Religionists 34
Other Religons 38
Jews 42
Table: Religious Composition by Country 45
Appendix A: Methodology 51
Appendix B: Data Sources by Country 68
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
Preface
Three years ago the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life launched an effort
to generate up-to-date and fully sourced estimates of the current size and projected growth
of the world’s major religious groups. As part of this multi-phase project, the Pew Forum
has assembled data on the size and geographic distribution of eight major religious groups –
including the religiously unaf¿liated – as of . These estimates are presented in this report.
The estimates are based on a country-by-country analysis of data from more than ,
censuses, surveys and of¿cial population registers that were collected, evaluated and
standardized by the staff of the Pew Forum over the past several years. Researchers at the
International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) in Laxenburg, Austria, and at the
Vienna Institute of Demography in Vienna, Austria, collaborated on the analysis.
This effort is part of the Pew-Templeton Global Religious Futures project, which analyzes
religious change and its impact on societies around the world. The project is jointly and
generously funded by The Pew Charitable Trusts and the John Templeton Foundation.
In order to present data that are comparable across countries, this study focuses on groups and
individuals who identify themselves in censuses, large-scale surveys and other sources as being
members of ¿ve widely recognized world religions – %uddhism, Christianity, +induism, Islam
and Judaism. The study also includes estimates for the size and geographic distribution of
three other groups: the religiously unaf¿liated (those who say they are atheists and agnostics,
as well as people who do not identify with any particular religion in surveys); adherents of
folk or traditional religions, including members of African traditional religions, Chinese folk
religions, Native American religions and Australian aboriginal religions; and adherents of
other religions.
Some of the faiths that have been consolidated into the “other religions” category, such as the
%aha’i faith, Jainism, Sikhism, Shintoism and Taoism, have millions of adherents around the
world. +owever, in the overwhelming majority of countries, these religions are not speci¿cally
measured in censuses and large-scale surveys. For example, among the census and survey data
we found from recent decades, Sikhs are measured in fewer than countries.
In addition to providing estimates on the size and distribution of the world’s major religions,
this report also includes information on the religious groups’ median ages, both globally and
in particular regions. The age composition of a religious group is one of several factors that
inÀuence population growth, along with such factors as fertility and mortality rates, religious
switching and migration. These factors will be explored in future Pew Forum reports.
PREFACE
8
PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
The new study on the global religious landscape as of complements two previous
reports by the Pew Forum on the size and distribution of the world’s Christian and Muslim
populations: “Mapping the Global Muslim Population” (2ctober ) and “Global
Christianity” (December ). A third report, “The Future of the Global Muslim Population”
(January ), projects the future growth of the world’s Muslim population through the year
. The Pew Forum is now collaborating with IIASA researchers to project the future growth
of all major religious groups, including the religiously unaf¿liated. :e expect to publish those
projections in .
The primary researchers for “The Global Religious Landscape: A Report on the Size and
Distribution of the :orld’s Major Religions as of ” are Pew Forum demographer Conrad
+ackett and senior researcher %rian J. Grim, the Pew Forum’s director of cross-national
data. They received valuable research assistance from research analyst Noble Kuriakose and
other Pew Forum staffers listed on the masthead of this report. :e are also indebted to our
colleagues at IIASA, Marcin Stonawski, Vegard Skirbekk and Michaela Potan okovi, and to
Guy Abel at the Vienna Institute of Demography.
:hile the data collection and analysis were guided by our collaborators, the Pew Forum is
solely responsible for the interpretation and reporting of the data.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
Executive Summary
:orldwide, more than eight-in-ten people identify with a religious group. A comprehensive
demographic study of more than countries and territories conducted by the Pew Research
Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life estimates that there are . billion religiously
af¿liated adults and children around the globe, representing of the world population
of . billion.
1 Although some faiths in the “other religions” category have millions of adherents around the world, censuses and surveys in many countries do not
measure them specifically. Estimates of the global size of these faiths generally come from other sources, such as the religious groups themselves. By far
the largest of these groups are Sikhs, who number about 25 million, according to the World Religion Database. For more information, see Spotlight on Other
Religions on page 40.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
10
PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
Geographic Distribution
The geographic distribution of religious groups varies considerably. Several religious groups
are heavily concentrated in the Asia-Paci¿c region, including the vast majority of +indus
(), %uddhists (), adherents of folk or traditional religions () and members of other
world religions ().
Three-quarters of the religiously unaf¿liated () also live in the massive and populous Asia-
Paci¿c region. Indeed, the number of religiously unaf¿liated people in China alone (about
million) is more than twice the total population of the United States.
The Asia-Paci¿c region also is home to most of the world’s Muslims (). About of
Muslims live in the Middle (ast and North Africa, and nearly reside in sub-Saharan Africa.
Of the major religious groups covered in this study, Christians are the most evenly dispersed.
Roughly equal numbers of Christians live in (urope (), Latin America and the Caribbean
() and sub-Saharan Africa ().
Hindus
Buddhists
Folk Religionists*
Other Religions**
Unaffiliated
Muslims
Christians
Jews
0.0% 100%
More detailed bar charts, with percentages labeled, appear in the chapters on each of the eight religious groups. For example,
12.3%
the chart showing the percentage of Christians living in each region appears on page 17.
*Includes followers of African traditional religions, Chinese folk religions, Native American religions and Australian aboriginal religions.
**Includes Bahai’s, Jains, Sikhs, Shintoists, Taoists, followers of Tenrikyo, Wiccans, Zoroastrians and many other faiths.
Percentages may not add to 100 due to rounding.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
A plurality of Jews () live in North America, while about four-in-ten () live in the
Middle East and North Africa – almost all of them in Israel.
and Christians tend to live *Includes followers of African traditional religions, Chinese folk religions, Native
in countries where they are American religions and Australian aboriginal religions.
**Includes Bahai’s, Jains, Sikhs, Shintoists, Taoists, followers of Tenrikyo, Wiccans,
in the majority. Fully Zoroastrians and many other faiths.
of all +indus live in the Percentages may not add to 100 due to rounding.
Though by smaller margins, most Muslims () and religiously unaf¿liated people () also
live in countries in which they are the predominant religious group. Muslims are a majority in
countries, including of the countries in the Middle East and North Africa. The religiously
unaf¿liated make up a majority of the population in six countries, of which China is by far the
largest. (The others are the Czech Republic, Estonia, +ong Kong, Japan and North Korea.)
Most members of the other major religious groups live in countries in which they are in the
minority. Seven-in-ten %uddhists (), for example, live as religious minorities. Just three-
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
12
PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
Christians Buddhists
Muslims Jews
Unaffiliated No clear majority
Hindus
Nine countries have no clear religious majority: Guinea Bissau, Ivory Coast, Macau, Nigeria, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Togo and
Vietnam. There are no countries in which adherents of folk religions make up a clear majority. There are also no countries in which
followers of other religions (such as Bahai’s, Jains, Sikhs, Shintoists, Taoists, followers of Tenrikyo, Wiccans or Zoroastrians) make up
a clear majority.
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in-ten () live in the seven countries where %uddhists are in the majority: %hutan, %urma
(Myanmar), Cambodia, Laos, Mongolia, Sri Lanka and Thailand.
Israel is the only country with a Jewish majority. There are no countries where members
of other religions (such as %aha’is, Jains, Shintoists, Sikhs, Taoists, followers of Tenrikyo,
:iccans and =oroastrians) make up a majority of the population. There are also no countries
where people who identify with folk or traditional religions clearly form a majority.
2 For a discussion of the challenges of measuring the pervasiveness of folk or traditional religions, see the section on Folk Religionists on page 34.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
40 years
36
33 34 34
32
30
30
26 Global median
28 years
23
20
10
0
Muslims Hindus Christians Other Folk Unaffiliated Buddhists Jews
Religions** Religionists*
The median age of two major groups – Muslims ( years) and +indus () – is younger than
the median age of the world’s overall population (). All the other groups are older than the
global median. Christians have a median age of , followed by members of other religions
(), adherents of folk or traditional religions (), the religiously unaf¿liated () and
%uddhists (). Jews have the highest median age (), more than a dozen years older than the
youngest group, Muslims.
3 The median in a population is the midpoint when the entire population is ordered by some characteristic, such as age or income. If everyone alive in 2010
lined up from youngest to oldest, the person in the middle (the median) would be 28 years old.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
14
PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
The demographic study explores the size, geographic distribution and median age of eight
major religious groups – including the unaf¿liated – that together represent of the
estimated global population. The study is based on a country-by-country analysis of data
from more than , national censuses, large-scale surveys and of¿cial population registers
that were collected, evaluated and standardized by the Pew Forum’s demographers and other
research staff. Many countries have recently conducted a national census or are in the midst
of doing so. Therefore, new data are likely to emerge over the next few years. +owever, a data-
collection cut-off had to be made at some point; this report is based on information available
as of early .
For estimates of the religious composition of individual countries, see table on page . For
details on the methodology used to produce estimates of religious populations in countries
and territories, see Appendix A. For a list of data sources by country, see Appendix %.
To see each country’s and territory’s population broken down by number and percentage
into the eight major religious groups in the study, see the sortable tables at http://features.
pewforum.org/grl/population-number.php.
There are some minor differences between the estimates presented in this study and
previous Pew Forum estimates of Christian and Muslim populations around the world. These
differences reÀect the availability of new data sources, such as recently released censuses in a
few countries, and the use of population growth projections to update estimates in countries
with older primary sources. (For more details, see page in the Methodology.)
4 A population register is a list of all permanent residents of a country. See the United Nations Statistics Division’s description of population registers (http://
unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/sources/popreg/popregmethods.htm).
5 For instance, in December 2012, just before the release of this report, new religion data were released from the 2011 Census of England and Wales. The
new data suggest a slightly different religious landscape than the estimate made by this study for the broader United Kingdom (England, Wales, Scotland
and Northern Ireland), which is based primarily on the 2010 Annual Population Survey carried out by the U.K.’s Office for National Statistics.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
In order to obtain statistics that are comparable across countries, the study attempts to count
groups and individuals who self-identify as members of ¿ve widely recognized world religions
– %uddhists, Christians, +indus, Muslims and Jews – as well as people associated with three
other religious categories that may be less familiar:
Other Religions
The “other religions” category is diverse and comprises groups not classi¿ed elsewhere. This
category includes followers of religions that often are not measured separately in censuses and
surveys: the %aha’i faith, Jainism, Shintoism, Sikhism, Taoism, Tenrikyo, :icca, =oroastrian-
ism and many other religions. %ecause of the lack of data on these faiths in many countries, the
Pew Forum has not attempted to estimate the size of individual religions within this category,
though some rough estimates are available from other sources. (See Spotlight on Other Reli-
gions on page .)
6 For more information on the beliefs and practices of religiously unaffiliated adults in the United States, see the Pew Forum’s October 2012 report “‘Nones’
on the Rise.” The Pew Forum’s U.S. surveys typically ask about belief in “God or a universal spirit.” French results are based on a Pew Forum analysis of
2008 International Social Survey Programme (ISSP) data. The ISSP survey asks about belief in God or a “higher power of some kind.” Chinese results are
based on a Pew Forum analysis of the 2007 Spiritual Life Study of Chinese Residents, conducted by the Chinese polling firm Horizon. In China, the belief in
God statistic measures belief in God, gods, spirits, ghosts or Buddha.
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
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PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
Christians
Muslims
Religiously Unaf¿liated
+indus
%uddhists
Folk Religionists
Other Religions
Jews
To discuss the geographic distribution of religious groups, this report divides the world into six
major regions: Asia and the Paci¿c, Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, the Middle East
and North Africa, North America and sub-Saharan Africa. For a list of countries in each region,
see the Methodology.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
Christians
Christians number . billion, or about one-in-three () people worldwide. About
half of all Christians are Catholic (). An estimated of Christians belong to the
Protestant tradition, broadly de¿ned to include Anglicans as well as independent and non-
denominational churches. The Orthodox Communion, including the Greek and Russian
Orthodox, make up of Christians. And people who belong to other traditions that view
themselves as Christian (including Christian Scientists, Mormons and Jehovah’s :itnesses)
make up about of the global Christian population.
Sub-Saharan Africa
517,340,000
7 As previously noted, this study is based on self-identification. The intent is sociological rather than theological, and no set of beliefs (such as adherence to
a particular creed) or practices (such as regular church attendance) is used to define who is a Christian. For more information on Christian traditions, see the
Pew Forum’s December 2011 report “Global Christianity: A Report on the Size and Distribution of the World’s Christian Population.”
CHRISTIANS
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PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
Christianity has spread far from its historical origins and is geographically widespread. Indeed,
the vast majority of Christians () live outside the Middle East-North Africa region where
Christianity began. The greatest share of the global Christian population is in Europe (6),
followed closely by Latin America and the Caribbean () and sub-Saharan Africa ().
Signi¿cant numbers of Christians also live in Asia and the Paci¿c () and North America
(). Less than of the world’s Christians are found in the Middle East and North Africa.
Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding.
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Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
Among the six regions analyzed in this study, four have Christian majorities: Latin America and the
Caribbean (), North America (), Europe () and sub-Saharan Africa (6). Christians
live as minorities in the Asia-Paci¿c region () and the Middle East-North Africa region ().
The countries with the largest number of Christians account for about half () of the
global Christian population. The largest share of all Christians live in the United States (),
followed by %razil (), Mexico (), Russia (), the Philippines (), Nigeria (), China
(), the Democratic Republic of the Congo (), Germany () and Ethiopia ().
Most Christians () live in countries where Christians are in the majority. Of the
countries and territories included in this study, have Christian majorities. +owever, most
of the Christian-majority countries have relatively small populations: about seven-in-ten have
fewer Christians than the Christian-minority country of Vietnam ( million Christians).
Median Age
As a whole, Christians are older (median age of ) than the overall global population (median
age of ). Among the six regions analyzed in this study, Christians are youngest in sub-
Saharan Africa (median age of ), followed by Latin America and the Caribbean (), Asia and
the Paci¿c (), the Middle East and North Africa () and North America (). Europe has
the oldest Christian population ().
Regional Median Ages of Christians Compared with Overall Median Ages, 2010
50 years
Christian median age in region
Regional median age 42
40 39 40
37
30 28 29 29 Christian
27 27 median age
24 30 years
20 19 18
10
0
Sub-Saharan Latin America- Asia- Middle East- North Europe
Africa Caribbean Pacific North Africa America
CHRISTIANS
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PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
Christians are older than the general population in four regions: the Middle East and North
Africa (where the Christian median is years and the general population median is years),
North America ( vs. ), Europe ( vs. ), and sub-Saharan Africa ( vs. ). Christians
have the same median age as the general population in Latin America and the Caribbean ().
Christians are younger than the general population in the Asia-Paci¿c region ( vs. ).
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
Muslims
Muslims number .6 billion, representing of all people worldwide. There are two major
branches of Islam – Sunni and Shia. The overwhelming majority (-) of Muslims are
Sunnis; about - are Shia Muslims.
Muslims are concentrated in the Asia-Paci¿c region, where six-in-ten (6) of all Muslims
reside. Many Muslims also live in the Middle East and North Africa () and sub-Saharan
Africa (6). The remainder of the world’s Muslim population is in Europe (), North
America (less than ) and Latin America and the Caribbean (also less than ).
Europe
43,490,000
North America
3,480,000
Middle East-
North Africa
317,070,000
Asia-Pacific
985,530,000
Latin America-
Caribbean Sub-Saharan
840,000 Africa
248,110,000
8 For definitions of Sunni and Shia Muslims and more information on their geographic distribution, see the Pew Forum’s October 2009 report “Mapping the
Global Muslim Population: A Report on the Size and Distribution of the World’s Muslim Population.”
MUSLIMS
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PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
Although a majority of the world’s Muslims live in Asia and the Paci¿c, only about one-in-four
people () in that region are Muslims. %y contrast, the Middle East-North Africa region has
an overwhelmingly Muslim population (), but they represent only about of the world’s
Muslims. Muslims also make up about three-in-ten people in sub-Saharan Africa, 6 of those
who live in Europe, of North Americans, and less than of the population of Latin America
and the Caribbean.
Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding.
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Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
The countries with the largest number of Muslims are home to fully two-thirds (66) of all
Muslims. The largest share lives in Indonesia (), followed by India (), Pakistan (),
%angladesh (), Nigeria (), Egypt (), Iran (), Turkey (), Algeria () and Morocco ().
Muslims make up a majority of the population in countries. Nearly three-quarters of all Muslims
() live in these countries. Although Muslims are a minority in India ( of the total population),
India nonetheless has one of the largest Muslim populations in the world (in raw numbers).
Median Age
Globally, Muslims are younger (median age of ) than the overall global population (median age
of ). Among the ¿ve regions for which data are available, Muslims are youngest in sub-Saharan
Africa (median age of ), followed by the Middle East and North Africa (), Asia and the Paci¿c
(), North America (6) and Europe ().
Muslims are younger than the general population in each of the major regions for which
data are available: North America (Muslims 6 years; general population years),
Europe ( vs. ), Asia and the Pacific ( vs. ), sub-Saharan Africa ( vs. ) and
the Middle East and North Africa ( vs. ).
Regional Median Ages of Muslims Compared with Overall Median Ages, 2010
50 years
Muslim median age in region
Regional median age
40 40
37
32
30 29
26
23 24 24
Muslim
20 18 median age
17 23 years
10
0
Sub-Saharan Middle East- Asia- North Europe
Africa North Africa Pacific America
9 India and Pakistan have Muslim populations of roughly similar size, and it is not entirely clear which is larger. The Pew Forum previously estimated that
Pakistan had the world’s second-largest Muslim population and India had the third-largest; see the Pew Forum’s January 2011 report “The Future of the
Global Muslim Population” and October 2009 report “Mapping the Global Muslim Population.” The difference between the rankings in this report and the
previous reports is primarily due to a downward revision by the United Nations Population Division of its estimate of the size of Pakistan’s total population
and an upward revision of the U.N. estimate of India’s total population. For more details, see the discussion in the Methodology.
MUSLIMS
24
PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
Religiously Unaffiliated
The religiously unaffiliated number . billion, accounting for about one-in-six (6)
people worldwide. The religiously unaffiliated include atheists, agnostics and people who
do not identify with any particular religion in surveys. +owever, many of the religiously
unaffiliated have some religious beliefs. For example, belief in God or a higher power is
shared by of Chinese unaffiliated adults, of French unaffiliated adults and 6 of
unaffiliated U.S. adults. Some of the unaffiliated also engage in certain kinds of religious
practices. For example, of unaffiliated adults in France and of those in the
United States say they attend religious services at least once a year. And in China, of
unaffiliated adults say they have worshiped at a graveside or tomb in the past year.
Europe
North America 134,820,000
59,040,000
Latin America-
Caribbean
45,390,000
Sub-Saharan Africa
26,580,000
Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers.
Percentages may not add to 100 due to rounding
10 Beliefs and practices of unaffiliated adults in the United States are documented in the Pew Forum’s October 2012 report “ ‘Nones’ on the Rise.” The Pew
Forum’s belief-in-God question measures belief in God or a universal spirit. French results are based on a Pew Forum analysis of 2008 International Social
Survey Programme (ISSP) data; the ISSP survey measures belief in God or a “higher power of some kind.” Chinese results are based on a Pew Forum analy-
sis of the 2007 Spiritual Life Study of Chinese Residents survey, conducted by the Chinese polling firm Horizon. In China, the belief-in-God statistic includes
belief in God, gods, spirits, ghosts or Buddha.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
The religiously unaf¿liated are heavily concentrated in Asia and the Paci¿c, where more than
three-quarters (6) of the world’s unaf¿liated population resides. The remainder is in Europe
(), North America (), Latin America and the Caribbean (), sub-Saharan Africa ()
and the Middle East and North Africa (less than ).
Although a majority of the religiously unaf¿liated live in Asia and the Paci¿c, only about one-
in-¿ve people () in that region are unaf¿liated. More than one-in-six people in Europe
Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding.
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Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding.
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RELIGIOUSLY UNAFFILIATED
26
PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
() and North America () are religiously unaf¿liated. The unaf¿liated make up smaller
shares in the remaining regions. For instance, less than of those who live in the Middle
East-North Africa region are unaf¿liated.
More than six-in-ten (6) of all religiously unaf¿liated people live in one country, China.
The largest populations of the religiously unaf¿liated outside China are in Japan (6 of all
unaf¿liated), the United States (), Vietnam () and Russia ().
There are six countries where the religiously unaf¿liated make up a majority of the population:
the Czech Republic (6 are religiously unaf¿liated), North Korea (), Estonia (6),
Japan (), +ong Kong (6) and China ().
This report estimates that 6. of the total U.S. population (adults and children) was
unaf¿liated as of . +owever, recent Pew Research Center surveys found that, as of ,
.6 of U.S. adults are unaf¿liated. The different ¿ndings reÀect both an increase in the
percentage of U.S. adults who are religiously unaf¿liated and differences between the portion
of adults and the portion of children in the U.S. who are unaf¿liated. Slightly higher shares of
children than adults are estimated to have a religious af¿liation.
Regional Median Ages of the Unaffiliated Compared with Overall Median Ages, 2010
50 years
Unaffiliated median age in region
Regional median age
40 40
37 37 Unaffiliated
35
median age
31 34 years
30 29
26 27
20 20
18
10
0
Sub-Saharan Latin America- North Asia-Pacific Europe
Africa Caribbean America
Regions are ordered by median age of the unaffiliated from youngest to oldest.
Median age is not presented when reliable age structure data are unavailable.
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11 China, the world’s most populous country, also is home to a majority of followers of folk or traditional religions (73%) and Buddhists (62%).
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
Median Age
Globally, the religiously unaf¿liated are older (median age of ) than the overall global
population (median age of ). Among the ¿ve regions for which data are available, sub-
Saharan Africa has the youngest population of religiously unaf¿liated people (median age of
), followed by Latin America and the Caribbean (6), North America () and Asia and the
Paci¿c (). Europe has the oldest unaf¿liated population, with a median age of .
Median ages of the religiously unaf¿liated differ from the general population in each of the
major regions for which data are available. In two regions, the religiously unaf¿liated are older
than the general population: Asia and the Paci¿c (where the unaf¿liated median is years
and the general population median is years) and sub-Saharan Africa ( vs. ). In three
regions, the religiously unaf¿liated are younger than the general population: North America
(unaf¿liated years; general population years), Europe ( vs. ) and Latin America and
the Caribbean (6 vs. ).
RELIGIOUSLY UNAFFILIATED
28
PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
Hindus
There are about billion +indus around the world, representing of the global
population. Major traditions within +induism include Vaishnavism, which is devoted
to worship of the god Vishnu, and Shaivism, organized around worship of the god Shiva.
%ecause of a lack of census or survey data on subgroups of +indus in most countries,
however, reliable estimates of the size of the traditions are not available.
+induism traces its roots to the Asia-Pacific region, where the overwhelming majority
of its adherents (more than ) reside. Indeed, +induism is the most geographically
concentrated of the eight religious groups analyzed in this report. Less than of +indus
live outside Asia and the Pacific.
Europe
1,290,000
North America
2,250,000
Asia-Pacific
Middle East-North Africa 1,025,470,000
1,720,000
Latin America-
Caribbean
660,000 Sub-Saharan Africa
1,670,000
99.3%
0.2 Middle East-North Africa Asia-Pacific
0.2 Sub-Saharan Africa
0.1 Europe
0.1 Latin America-Caribbean
0.2 North America
Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers.
100
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
Although most +indus live in Asia and the Paci¿c, only about one-in-four people ()
across that vast and populous region are +indu. +indus make up less than of the general
population in the ¿ve other major geographic regions.
An overwhelming majority of +indus () live in one country, India. The largest populations of
+indus outside India are in Nepal ( of all +indus) and %angladesh ().
Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding.
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Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding.
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HINDUS
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PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
+indus form a majority in just three countries: Nepal (), India () and Mauritius (6).
%ut of all +indus live in those countries, making +indus the most likely of the religious
groups in this study to live as a majority.
Median Age
As a whole, +indus are younger (median age of 6) than the overall global population (median
age of ). Among the six regions analyzed in this study, the Asia-Paci¿c region has the
youngest +indu population (median age of 6), followed by sub-Saharan Africa () and Latin
America and the Caribbean (). In three regions – North America, the Middle East and North
Africa and Europe – +indus have a median age of .
Median ages of +indus differ from the general population in each of the major geographic
regions. In three regions, +indus are older than the general population: sub-Saharan Africa
(where +indus have a median age of and the general population has a median age of ),
the Middle East and North Africa ( vs. ) and Latin America and the Caribbean ( vs. ).
In three regions, +indus are younger than the general population: Europe (+indus , general
population ), North America ( vs. ) and Asia and the Paci¿c (6 vs. ).
Regional Median Ages of Hindus Compared with Overall Median Ages, 2010
50 years
Hindu median age in region
Regional median age
40 40
37
32 33 33 33
30 29 30
27 Hindu
26 median age
24
26 years
20 18
10
0
Asia- Sub-Saharan Latin America- North Middle East- Europe
Pacific Africa Caribbean America North Africa
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
Buddhists
There are about million %uddhists worldwide, representing of the world’s total
population as of . The three major branches of %uddhism in the modern world are
Mahayana %uddhism, Theravada %uddhism and Vajrayana (sometimes described as Tibetan)
%uddhism. :hile af¿liation with particular branches of %uddhism is not measured in most
censuses and surveys, Mahayana %uddhism is widely believed to be the largest, because it is
prevalent in several countries with very large %uddhist populations, particularly China, Japan,
South Korea and Vietnam. Theravada %uddhism, the second-largest branch, is concentrated
in such countries as Thailand, %urma (Myanmar), Sri Lanka, Laos and Cambodia. Vajrayana
Europe
1,330,000
North America
3,860,000
Asia-Pacific
481,290,000
Middle East-North Africa
500,000
Latin America-
Sub-Saharan Africa
Caribbean
150,000
410,000
98.7%
0.1 Middle East-North Africa Asia-Pacific
0.3 Europe
0.1 Latin America-Caribbean
0.8 North America <0.1 Sub-Saharan Africa
Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers.
Percentages may not add to 100 due to rounding
12 Alternatively, some scholars consider there to be two main Buddhist branches – Mahayana and Theravada – and classify Vajrayana as part of the
Mahayana branch. Other schools within the Mahayana tradition include Zen, Nichiren and Pure Land. See, for example, Williams, Paul. 2008. “Mahayana
Buddhism: The Doctrinal Foundations.” Routledge.
BUDDHISTS
32
PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
%uddhism, the smallest of the three major branches, is concentrated in Tibet, Nepal, %hutan
and Mongolia. The %uddhist population ¿gures in this study also include members of other
groups that identify as %uddhist, such as Soka Gakkai and +oa +ao.
%uddhism began in Asia, and the vast majority of all %uddhists (nearly ) still live in the Asia-
Paci¿c region. Only two other regions – North America (. million) and Europe (. million) –
have more than million %uddhists.
Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding.
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Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
Although the majority of %uddhists live in Asia and the Paci¿c, only about one-in-eight people
() in that region are %uddhists. About of North Americans are %uddhists. In each of the
other four regions, %uddhists make up less than of the population.
All countries with the largest %uddhist populations are in the Asia-Paci¿c region, and these
countries collectively are home to the lion’s share () of all %uddhists. +alf () of the
world’s %uddhists live in one country, China. The largest %uddhist populations outside China
are in Thailand (), Japan (), %urma (Myanmar) (), Sri Lanka (), Vietnam (),
Cambodia (), South Korea (), India () and Malaysia ()
Seven countries have %uddhist majorities: Cambodia, Thailand, %urma (Myanmar), %hutan,
Sri Lanka, Laos and Mongolia.
Median Age
Globally, %uddhists are older
Regional Median Ages of Buddhists Compared with
(median age of ) than the
Overall Median Ages, 2010
overall population (median
50 years
age of ). Of the three Buddhist median age in region
regions for which data are Regional median age
40
available, sub-Saharan Africa 37 Buddhist
33 34
has the youngest %uddhist median age
30 29 29 34 years
population (median age of ),
followed by North America
(). The Asia-Paci¿c region 20 18
has the oldest %uddhist
population, with a median age 10
of .
0
%uddhists are older than the Sub-Saharan North Asia-
Africa America Pacifc
general population in two
Regions are ordered by median age of Buddhists from youngest to oldest.
of the three major regions Median age is not presented when reliable age structure data are unavailable.
for which data are available: Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life
sub-Saharan Africa (where
%uddhists have a median age of and the general population has a median age of ) and Asia
and the Paci¿c ( vs. ). In North America, the median age of %uddhists is , four years
younger than the general population ().
BUDDHISTS
34
PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
Folk Religionists
An estimated million people – or about 6 of the world’s total population – are adherents
of folk or traditional religions. These are faiths that are closely associated with a particular
group of people, ethnicity or tribe. They often have no formal creeds or sacred texts. Examples
of folk religions include African traditional religions, Chinese folk religions, Native American
religions and Australian aboriginal religions.
Folk religions are challenging to measure. Less institutionalized and more diffuse than many
other faiths, folk religions often are omitted as a category in surveys even in countries where they
are widely practiced. For example, though folk religions are pervasive in China, they typically do
not appear in surveys in China because they are not one of the ¿ve religions of¿cially recognized
by the government. Of necessity, the Pew Forum’s estimate of the number of folk religionists in
Europe
1,020,000
North America
1,020,000
Asia-Pacific
365,120,000
Middle East-North Africa
1,060,000
Latin America-
Caribbean
10,040,000
Sub-Saharan Africa
26,860,000
90.1%
0.3 Middle East-North Africa Asia-Pacific
6.6 Sub-Saharan Africa
0.3 Europe
2.5 Latin America-Caribbean
0.3 North America
Includes followers of African traditional religions, Chinese folk religions, Native American religions and Australian aboriginal religions.
Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Percentages may not
add to 100 due to rounding
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35
GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
China relies instead on survey questions about worship of gods or spirits associated with Chinese
folk religions (see discussion in the Methodology).
In addition, the boundaries between folk religions and other religions are blurry in some
contexts. For example, anthropologist Tik-sang Liu observes that for ordinary people in
+ong Kong and Macau, “there is no clear boundary between %uddhism, Daoism and local
PERCENTAGE OF
ESTIMATED 2010 ESTIMATED 2010 POPUL ATION THAT
FOLK RELIGIONIST POPUL ATION TOTAL POPUL ATION BELONGS TO FOLK RELIGIONS
Includes followers of African traditional religions, Chinese folk religions, Native American religions and Australian aboriginal religions.
Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding.
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PERCENTAGE OF
ESTIMATED 2010 POPUL ATION THAT PERCENTAGE OF WORLD
FOLK RELIGIONIST POPUL ATION BELONGS TO FOLK RELIGIONS FOLK RELIGION POPUL ATION
Includes followers of African traditional religions, Chinese folk religions, Native American religions and Australian aboriginal religions.
Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding.
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FOLK RELIGIONISTS
36
PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
[folk] religious practice.” On the basis of the limited data available on religion in Macau, the
Pew Forum estimates that about of its people practice folk religions and that practice
%uddhism (this was the share of %uddhist af¿liation measured in the census, the last census
to measure religion in Macau). +owever, some recent descriptions of religion in Macau contend
that of its population practices %uddhism; presumably, this broad measure includes
folk religion as part of %uddhism. Due to the uncertain boundary between folk religion and
%uddhism in Macau, this study does not claim that Macau has a clear majority of folk religionists.
In sub-Saharan Africa, many of those who indicate that they are committed to the practice
of Christianity and Islam also incorporate elements of African traditional religions into their
lives. Moreover, folk and traditional religions are not always offered as response categories in
large-scale demographic and health surveys in the region.
Folk religionists are most prevalent in the Asia-Paci¿c region, where nine-in-ten of the world’s
folk religionists () reside. The remaining folk religion populations are concentrated in sub-
Saharan Africa () and Latin America and the Caribbean (between and ).
Although the majority of folk religionists live in the Asia-Paci¿c region, less than one-in-ten
people in the region () are folk religionists. Folk religionists make up about of the total
population of sub-Saharan Africa and of the total population of Latin America and the
Caribbean. Folk religionists make up less than of the population in the remaining regions.
More than seven-in-ten () of the world’s folk religionists live in one country, China. The
largest populations of folk religionists outside China are in Vietnam (), Taiwan (), India
() and %razil ().
Practitioners of folk or traditional religions do not make up a clear majority of the population
in any country.
Median Age
Globally, folk religionists are older (median age of ) than the overall population (median age of
). Among the three regions for which data are available, sub-Saharan Africa has the youngest
folk religionists (median age of ), followed by Asia and the Paci¿c () and Latin America and
the Caribbean ().
The median age of folk religionists in sub-Saharan Africa () is the same as the median age of
the general population in that region (). +owever, folk religionists are older than the general
13 Liu, Tik-sang. “A Nameless but Active Religion: An Anthropologist’s View of Local Religion in Hong Kong and Macau.” The China Quarterly, number 174,
pages 373-394.
14 See the Pew Forum’s April 2010 report “Tolerance and Tension: Islam and Christianity in Sub-Saharan Africa.”
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37
GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
20 18 18
10
0
Sub-Saharan Asia-Pacific Latin America-
Africa Caribbean
Regions are ordered by median age of folk religionists from youngest to oldest.
Median age is not presented when reliable age structure data are unavailable.
Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life
FOLK RELIGIONISTS
38
PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
Other Religions
:orldwide, there are an estimated million members of other religions, accounting for
nearly of the global population. The “other religions” category is diverse and comprises
groups not classi¿ed elsewhere. This category includes followers of religions that are not
speci¿cally measured in surveys and censuses in most countries: the %aha’i faith, Taoism,
Jainism, Shintoism, Sikhism, Tenrikyo, :icca, =oroastrianism and many others. %ecause of
the paucity of census and survey data, the Pew Forum has not estimated the size of individual
religions within this category, though some estimates from other sources are provided in the
Spotlight on Other Religions sidebar on page .
Members of other world religions are heavily concentrated in the Asia-Paci¿c region ().
The remainder is divided among North America (), sub-Saharan Africa (), Latin America
and the Caribbean (), Europe () and the Middle East and North Africa (less than ).
Europe
North America 930,000
2,200,000
Latin America-
Caribbean
990,000
Sub-Saharan Africa
1,920,00
89.2%
0.4 Middle East-North Africa Asia-Pacific
3.3 Sub-Saharan Africa
1.6 Europe
1.7 Latin America-Caribbean
3.8 North America
Includes Bahai’s, Jains, Sikhs, Shintoists, Taoists, followers of Tenrikyo, Wiccans, Zoroastrians and many other faiths.
Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Percentages may not add to
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39
GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
Although the majority of members of other religions live in Asia and the Paci¿c, only about
of the people in the region adhere to these faiths. In the remaining regions, members of other
religions make up less than of the population.
India has the largest share () of all members of other religions, including millions of
Sikhs and Jains. Outside India, the largest shares of people who belong to faiths in the “other
Includes Bahai’s, Jains, Sikhs, Shintoists, Taoists, followers of Tenrikyo, Wiccans, Zoroastrians and many other faiths.
Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding.
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Includes Bahai’s, Jains, Sikhs, Shintoists, Taoists, followers of Tenrikyo, Wiccans, Zoroastrians and many other faiths.
Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding.
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OTHER RELIGIONS
40
PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
Spotlight on Shintoism
Shintoism is a Japanese faith that has been
Other Religions part of religious life in Japan for many
The “other religions” category is diverse and centuries. Although Shinto rituals are
comprises all groups not classi¿ed elsewhere. widely practiced in Japan, only a minority
It includes followers of religions that are of the Japanese population identi¿es with
not speci¿cally measured in most censuses Shintoism in surveys. The :orld Religion
and surveys, including but not limited to the Database estimates there are almost
faiths listed below. Estimates of population million Shintoists worldwide, with the vast
sizes for these groups generally come from
majority concentrated in Japan.
sources other than censuses and nationally
representative surveys.
Sikhism
Baha’i Faith Sikhism was founded at the turn of the
6th century by Guru Nanak in the Punjab,
The %aha’i faith began in Persia (now Iran)
a region now split between India and
in the th century. %aha’is are widely
Pakistan. More than nine-in-ten Sikhs are
dispersed across many countries, with
in India, but there are also sizable Sikh
signi¿cant populations in India, the United
communities in the United Kingdom, the
States, Kenya and elsewhere. The %aha’i
United States and Canada. The :orld
International Community reports more
Religion Database estimates there are a
than million adherents.
total of about million Sikhs worldwide.
Jainism
Taoism
Jainism originated in India and dates back
Taoism (also known as Daoism)
to at least the 6th century %.C.E. Today,
traditionally is said to have been founded
the vast majority of Jains live in India,
in the 6th century %.C.E. by Chinese
though signi¿cant numbers also are found
philosopher Lao Tzu. Adherents live
among Indian immigrant communities in
predominantly in China and Taiwan. The
Kenya, the United States, Canada and the
:orld Religion Database estimates there
United Kingdom. The Indian census
are more than million Taoists.
enumerated more than million Jains
in India, but some Jains have contended
that number is a substantial undercount.
Tenrikyo
According to estimates by the :orld Tenrikyo was founded in the th century
Religion Database, there are fewer than by Nakayama Miki in Japan. The faith is
, Jains outside India. one of many new Japanese religions; others
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41
GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
include Shinreikyo, Mahakari, Omoto sometime before the 6th century %.C.E.
and PL Kyodan. Reliable estimates of the Adherents live mainly in India and Iran.
number of followers of Tenrikyo and other The :orld Religion Database estimates
new Japanese religions are not available. there are about , =oroastrians
worldwide.
Wicca
:icca is a Pagan or neo-Pagan religion that Others
gained popularity in the th century. It Other faiths in the “other religions” category
is practiced mostly in the United Kingdom include Cao Dai, I-Kuan Tao, Mandaeism,
and the United States. Reliable estimates of the Rastafari movement, the R tana
the number of :iccans around the world movement, Scientology and Yazidism, to list
are not available. just a few.
Zoroastrianism
=oroastrianism traditionally is said to have
been founded by =arathustra in Persia
religion” category are in China (6), Japan (), Taiwan (), North Korea () and the
United States ().
Adherents of “other religions” do not make up a majority of the population in any country.
Median Age
Globally, members of other religions are older (median age of ) than the overall global
population (median age of ). Reliable regional data on the median age of followers of other
world religions is available only for Asia and the Paci¿c, where it is , four years older than
the overall regional median ().
OTHER RELIGIONS
42
PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
Jews
There are about million Jews around the world, representing . of the global population.
This estimate is based on the number of people who self-identify as Jewish when asked about
their religion on national censuses and large-scale surveys. +owever, the worldwide ¿gure
could be larger if a broader de¿nition (such as having a Jewish grandparent) or smaller if a
tighter de¿nition (such as an unbroken line of matrilineal Jewish descent) were imposed.
The main branches of Judaism in the United States include the Orthodox, Conservative,
Reform and Reconstructionist movements. %ut it is dif¿cult to estimate the size of these
movements globally because they are not familiar or relevant to Jews in many other countries;
Europe
1,410,000
North America
6,040,000
Latin America-
Caribbean
470,000 Sub-Saharan Africa
100,000
15 For more information on varying definitions of Jewishness and resulting population estimates, see DellaPergola, Sergio. 2011. “Jewish Demographic
Policies: Population Trends and Options in Israel and the Diaspora.” The Jewish People Policy Institute, pages 21-25. His estimate of the “core” population of
Jews around the world as of 2010 is slightly lower than the Pew Forum’s figure of 14 million. But he also estimates that there are 10-12 million people in the
United States alone who would qualify for citizenship under Israel’s Law of Return, including the non-Jewish spouses of Jews as well as all the children and
grandchildren of Jews.
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43
GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
in Israel and elsewhere, distinctions are often made between +aredi or Ultra-Orthodox Jews,
Modern Orthodox Jews and less traditional forms of Judaism.
Geographically, Jews are concentrated primarily in North America () and the Middle East-
North Africa region (). The remainder of the global Jewish population is found in Europe
(), Latin America and the Caribbean (), Asia and the Paci¿c (between and ) and
sub-Saharan Africa (less than ).
Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding.
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Population estimates are rounded to the ten thousands. Percentages are calculated from unrounded numbers. Figures may not add exactly due to rounding.
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JEWS
44
PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
Jews make up roughly of the total population in North America and a similar proportion in
the Middle East-North Africa region. In the remaining regions, they comprise less than of
the overall population.
:hile Jews historically have been found all around the globe, Judaism is highly geographically
concentrated today. More than four-¿fths of all Jews live in just two countries, the United
States () and Israel (). The largest remaining shares of the global Jewish population
are in Canada (about ), France (), the United Kingdom (), Germany (), Russia ()
and Argentina (between and ).
Median Age
Globally, Jews are older (median age of 6) than the overall global population (median age of ).
Among the three regions for which data are available, the Middle East and North Africa has the
youngest Jewish population,
with a median age of , Regional Median Ages of Jews Compared with Overall
followed by Asia and the Paci¿c Median Ages, 2010
50 years
(6) and North America ().
Jewish median age in region
Regional median age
Jews are older than the general 40 40
Jewish
36 37
population in each of the major median age
32 36 years
regions for which data are 30 29
available: the Middle East and 24
North Africa (Jews years; 20
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
Afghanistan 31,410,000 0.1 % 99.7 % < 0.1 % < 0.1 % < 0.1 % < 0.1 % < 0.1 % < 0.1 %
Albania 3,200,000 18.0 80.3 1.4 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.2 < 0.1
Algeria 35,470,000 0.2 97.9 1.8 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
American Samoa 70,000 98.3 < 0.1 0.7 < 0.1 0.3 0.4 0.3 < 0.1
Andorra 80,000 89.5 0.8 8.8 0.5 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.1 0.3
Angola 19,080,000 90.5 0.2 5.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 4.2 < 0.1 < 0.1
Anguilla 20,000 90.6 0.3 4.0 0.4 < 0.1 2.9 1.6 0.1
Antigua and Barbuda 90,000 93.0 0.6 1.7 0.2 < 0.1 3.6 1.0 < 0.1
Argentina 40,410,000 85.2 1.0 12.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.8 0.3 0.5
Armenia 3,090,000 98.5 < 0.1 1.3 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.1 < 0.1
Aruba 110,000 91.9 0.2 6.0 < 0.1 0.1 1.3 0.1 0.4
Australia 22,270,000 67.3 2.4 24.2 1.4 2.7 0.7 0.8 0.5
Austria 8,390,000 80.4 5.4 13.5 < 0.1 0.2 < 0.1 0.1 0.2
Azerbaijan 9,190,000 3.0 96.9 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Bahamas 340,000 96.0 0.1 3.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.3 0.3 < 0.1
Bahrain 1,260,000 14.5 70.3 1.9 9.8 2.5 < 0.1 0.2 0.6
Bangladesh 148,690,000 0.2 89.8 < 0.1 9.1 0.5 0.4 < 0.1 < 0.1
Barbados 270,000 95.2 1.0 1.9 0.4 < 0.1 < 0.1 1.4 < 0.1
Belarus 9,600,000 71.2 0.2 28.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Belgium 10,710,000 64.2 5.9 29.0 < 0.1 0.2 0.2 < 0.1 0.3
Belize 310,000 87.6 0.1 8.9 0.2 0.5 1.5 0.1 1.0
Benin 8,850,000 53.0 23.8 5.0 < 0.1 < 0.1 18.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Bermuda 60,000 75.0 1.1 19.4 < 0.1 0.5 3.0 0.8 0.3
Bhutan 730,000 0.5 0.2 < 0.1 22.6 74.7 1.9 < 0.1 < 0.1
Bolivia 9,930,000 93.9 < 0.1 4.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.9 1.0 < 0.1
Bosnia-Herzegovina 3,760,000 52.3 45.2 2.5 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Botswana 2,010,000 72.1 0.4 20.6 0.3 < 0.1 6.0 0.6 < 0.1
Brazil 194,950,000 88.9 < 0.1 7.9 < 0.1 0.1 2.8 0.2 < 0.1
British Virgin Islands 20,000 84.5 1.2 3.9 1.2 < 0.1 8.4 0.8 < 0.1
Brunei 400,000 9.4 75.1 0.4 0.3 8.6 6.2 0.1 < 0.1
Bulgaria 7,490,000 82.1 13.7 4.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Burkina Faso 16,470,000 22.5 61.6 0.4 < 0.1 < 0.1 15.4 < 0.1 < 0.1
Burma (Myanmar) 47,960,000 7.8 4.0 0.5 1.7 80.1 5.8 0.2 < 0.1
Burundi 8,380,000 91.5 2.8 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 5.7 < 0.1 < 0.1
Cambodia 14,140,000 0.4 2.0 0.2 < 0.1 96.9 0.6 < 0.1 < 0.1
Cameroon 19,600,000 70.3 18.3 5.3 < 0.1 < 0.1 3.3 2.7 < 0.1
Canada 34,020,000 69.0 2.1 23.7 1.4 0.8 1.2 0.9 1.0
Cape Verde 500,000 89.1 0.1 9.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 1.5 0.2 < 0.1
Cayman Islands 60,000 83.5 0.4 9.4 0.9 < 0.1 4.5 0.6 0.8
Central African Republic 4,400,000 89.5 8.5 1.0 < 0.1 < 0.1 1.0 < 0.1 < 0.1
Chad 11,230,000 40.6 55.3 2.5 < 0.1 < 0.1 1.4 0.1 < 0.1
Channel Islands 150,000 85.2 < 0.1 14.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.3 < 0.1
Chile 17,110,000 89.4 < 0.1 8.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 1.5 0.2 0.1
China 1,341,340,000 5.1 1.8 52.2 < 0.1 18.2 21.9 0.7 < 0.1
Colombia 46,290,000 92.5 < 0.1 6.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.8 < 0.1 < 0.1
Comoros 730,000 0.5 98.3 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 1.0 < 0.1 < 0.1
Cook Islands 20,000 96.0 < 0.1 3.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.8 < 0.1
Costa Rica 4,660,000 90.9 < 0.1 7.9 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.8 0.3 < 0.1
Croatia 4,400,000 93.4 1.4 5.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Cuba 11,260,000 59.2 < 0.1 23.0 0.2 < 0.1 17.4 < 0.1 < 0.1
Cyprus 1,100,000 73.2 25.3 1.2 < 0.1 0.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Czech Republic 10,490,000 23.3 < 0.1 76.4 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Dem. Rep. of the Congo 65,970,000 95.8 1.5 1.8 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.7 0.1 < 0.1
Denmark 5,550,000 83.5 4.1 11.8 0.4 0.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Djibouti 890,000 2.3 96.9 0.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.3 < 0.1 0.2
Dominica 70,000 94.4 0.1 0.5 < 0.1 0.1 3.0 1.7 < 0.1
Dominican Republic 9,930,000 88.0 < 0.1 10.9 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.9 0.1 < 0.1
Ecuador 14,460,000 94.1 < 0.1 5.5 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.3 < 0.1 < 0.1
Egypt 81,120,000 5.1 94.9 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
El Salvador 6,190,000 88.2 < 0.1 11.0 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.5 0.3 < 0.1
Equatorial Guinea 700,000 88.7 4.0 5.0 < 0.1 < 0.1 1.7 0.5 < 0.1
Eritrea 5,250,000 62.9 36.6 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.4 < 0.1 < 0.1
Estonia 1,340,000 39.9 0.2 59.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.1
Ethiopia 82,950,000 62.8 34.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 2.6 < 0.1 < 0.1
Faeroe Islands 50,000 98.0 < 0.1 1.7 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.3 < 0.1
Falkland Is. (Malvinas) < 10,000 67.2 0.3 31.5 < 0.1 0.2 < 0.1 0.8 < 0.1
Fed. States of Micronesia 110,000 95.3 < 0.1 0.9 < 0.1 0.4 2.7 0.7 < 0.1
Fiji 860,000 64.4 6.3 0.8 27.9 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.5 < 0.1
Finland 5,360,000 81.6 0.8 17.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
France 62,790,000 63.0 7.5 28.0 < 0.1 0.5 0.3 0.2 0.5
French Guiana 230,000 84.4 0.9 3.4 1.6 < 0.1 9.1 0.5 < 0.1
French Polynesia 270,000 94.0 < 0.1 4.9 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.5 0.4 < 0.1
Gabon 1,510,000 76.5 11.2 5.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 6.0 0.7 < 0.1
Gambia 1,730,000 4.5 95.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Georgia 4,350,000 88.5 10.7 0.7 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Germany 82,300,000 68.7 5.8 24.7 < 0.1 0.3 < 0.1 0.1 0.3
Ghana 24,390,000 74.9 15.8 4.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 4.9 0.2 < 0.1
Gibraltar 30,000 88.8 4.0 2.9 1.8 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.3 2.1
Greece 11,360,000 88.1 5.3 6.1 0.1 < 0.1 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
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Greenland 60,000 96.1 < 0.1 2.5 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.8 0.6 < 0.1
Grenada 100,000 96.6 0.3 1.0 0.7 < 0.1 1.3 0.2 < 0.1
Guadeloupe 460,000 95.9 0.4 2.5 0.5 < 0.1 0.4 0.4 < 0.1
Guam 180,000 94.2 < 0.1 1.7 < 0.1 1.1 1.5 1.6 < 0.1
Guatemala 14,390,000 95.2 < 0.1 4.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.6 < 0.1 < 0.1
Guinea 9,980,000 10.9 84.4 1.8 < 0.1 < 0.1 2.7 < 0.1 < 0.1
Guinea Bissau 1,520,000 19.7 45.1 4.3 < 0.1 < 0.1 30.9 < 0.1 < 0.1
Guyana 750,000 66.0 6.4 2.0 24.9 < 0.1 0.2 0.6 < 0.1
Haiti 9,990,000 86.9 < 0.1 10.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 2.2 0.3 < 0.1
Honduras 7,600,000 87.6 0.1 10.5 < 0.1 0.1 1.1 0.6 < 0.1
Hong Kong 7,050,000 14.3 1.8 56.1 0.4 13.2 12.8 1.5 < 0.1
Hungary 9,980,000 81.0 < 0.1 18.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.1
Iceland 320,000 95.0 0.2 3.5 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.2 < 0.1
India 1,224,610,000 2.5 14.4 < 0.1 79.5 0.8 0.5 2.3 < 0.1
Indonesia 239,870,000 9.9 87.2 < 0.1 1.7 0.7 0.3 0.1 < 0.1
Iran 73,970,000 0.2 99.5 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.2 < 0.1
Iraq 31,670,000 0.8 99.0 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Ireland 4,470,000 92.0 1.1 6.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 < 0.1 < 0.1
Isle of Man 80,000 84.1 0.2 15.4 0.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Israel 7,420,000 2.0 18.6 3.1 < 0.1 0.3 0.2 0.1 75.6
Italy 60,550,000 83.3 3.7 12.4 0.1 0.2 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Ivory Coast 19,740,000 44.1 37.5 8.0 < 0.1 < 0.1 10.2 0.2 < 0.1
Jamaica 2,740,000 77.2 < 0.1 17.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 4.5 1.0 < 0.1
Japan 126,540,000 1.6 0.2 57.0 < 0.1 36.2 0.4 4.7 < 0.1
Jordan 6,190,000 2.2 97.2 < 0.1 0.1 0.4 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Kazakhstan 16,030,000 24.8 70.4 4.2 < 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.1 < 0.1
Kenya 40,510,000 84.8 9.7 2.5 0.1 < 0.1 1.7 1.2 < 0.1
Kiribati 100,000 97.0 < 0.1 0.8 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 2.2 < 0.1
Kosovo 2,080,000 11.4 87.0 1.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Kuwait 2,740,000 14.3 74.1 < 0.1 8.5 2.8 < 0.1 0.3 < 0.1
Kyrgyzstan 5,330,000 11.4 88.0 0.4 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Laos 6,200,000 1.5 < 0.1 0.9 < 0.1 66.0 30.7 0.7 < 0.1
Latvia 2,250,000 55.8 0.1 43.8 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.2 < 0.1
Lebanon 4,230,000 38.3 61.3 0.3 < 0.1 0.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Lesotho 2,170,000 96.8 < 0.1 3.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Liberia 3,990,000 85.9 12.0 1.4 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.5 0.1 < 0.1
Libya 6,360,000 2.7 96.6 0.2 < 0.1 0.3 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Liechtenstein 40,000 91.9 5.0 2.9 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.1
Lithuania 3,320,000 89.8 < 0.1 10.0 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Luxembourg 510,000 70.4 2.3 26.8 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.3 0.1
Macau 540,000 7.2 0.2 15.4 < 0.1 17.3 58.9 1.0 < 0.1
Madagascar 20,710,000 85.3 3.0 6.9 < 0.1 < 0.1 4.5 < 0.1 < 0.1
Malawi 14,900,000 82.7 13.0 2.5 < 0.1 < 0.1 1.7 < 0.1 < 0.1
Malaysia 28,400,000 9.4 63.7 0.7 6.0 17.7 2.3 0.2 < 0.1
Maldives 320,000 0.4 98.4 < 0.1 0.3 0.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Mali 15,370,000 3.2 92.4 2.7 < 0.1 < 0.1 1.6 < 0.1 < 0.1
Malta 420,000 97.0 0.2 2.5 0.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Marshall Islands 50,000 97.5 < 0.1 1.5 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.3 0.8 < 0.1
Martinique 410,000 96.5 0.2 2.3 0.2 < 0.1 0.2 0.6 < 0.1
Mauritania 3,460,000 0.3 99.1 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.5 < 0.1 < 0.1
Mauritius 1,300,000 25.3 16.7 0.6 56.4 < 0.1 0.7 0.3 < 0.1
Mayotte 200,000 0.7 98.6 0.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.5 < 0.1 < 0.1
Mexico 113,420,000 95.1 < 0.1 4.7 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Moldova 3,570,000 97.4 0.6 1.4 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.6
Monaco 40,000 86.0 0.4 11.7 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.2 1.7
Mongolia 2,760,000 2.3 3.2 35.9 < 0.1 55.1 3.5 < 0.1 < 0.1
Montenegro 630,000 78.1 18.7 3.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Montserrat < 10,000 93.5 < 0.1 4.8 0.1 < 0.1 0.2 1.5 < 0.1
Morocco 31,950,000 < 0.1 99.9 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Mozambique 23,390,000 56.7 18.0 17.9 < 0.1 < 0.1 7.4 < 0.1 < 0.1
Namibia 2,280,000 97.5 0.3 1.9 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.2 < 0.1 < 0.1
Nauru 10,000 79.0 < 0.1 4.5 < 0.1 1.1 8.1 7.4 < 0.1
Nepal 29,960,000 0.5 4.6 0.3 80.7 10.3 3.7 < 0.1 < 0.1
Netherlands 16,610,000 50.6 6.0 42.1 0.5 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2
Netherlands Antilles 200,000 93.9 0.2 3.3 0.2 0.5 1.2 0.3 0.3
New Caledonia 250,000 85.2 2.8 10.4 < 0.1 0.6 0.2 0.8 < 0.1
New Zealand 4,370,000 57.0 1.2 36.6 2.1 1.6 0.5 0.7 0.2
Nicaragua 5,790,000 85.8 < 0.1 12.5 < 0.1 < 0.1 1.4 0.1 < 0.1
Niger 15,510,000 0.8 98.4 0.7 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Nigeria 158,420,000 49.3 48.8 0.4 < 0.1 < 0.1 1.4 < 0.1 < 0.1
Niue < 10,000 96.4 < 0.1 3.3 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.2 < 0.1
North Korea 24,350,000 2.0 < 0.1 71.3 < 0.1 1.5 12.3 12.9 < 0.1
Northern Mariana Is. 60,000 81.3 0.7 1.0 < 0.1 10.6 5.3 1.1 < 0.1
Norway 4,880,000 84.7 3.7 10.1 0.5 0.6 < 0.1 0.2 < 0.1
Oman 2,780,000 6.5 85.9 0.2 5.5 0.8 < 0.1 1.0 < 0.1
Pakistan 173,590,000 1.6 96.4 < 0.1 1.9 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Palau 20,000 86.7 < 0.1 1.2 < 0.1 0.8 0.8 10.4 < 0.1
Palestinian territories 4,040,000 2.4 97.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Panama 3,520,000 93.0 0.7 4.8 < 0.1 0.2 0.4 0.4 0.4
Papua New Guinea 6,860,000 99.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.4 0.2 < 0.1
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Paraguay 6,450,000 96.9 < 0.1 1.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 1.7 0.2 < 0.1
Peru 29,080,000 95.5 < 0.1 3.0 < 0.1 0.2 1.0 0.3 < 0.1
Philippines 93,260,000 92.6 5.5 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 1.5 0.1 < 0.1
Poland 38,280,000 94.3 < 0.1 5.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Portugal 10,680,000 93.8 0.6 4.4 0.1 0.6 0.5 < 0.1 < 0.1
Puerto Rico 3,750,000 96.7 < 0.1 1.9 < 0.1 0.3 0.8 0.1 < 0.1
Qatar 1,760,000 13.8 67.7 0.9 13.8 3.1 < 0.1 0.7 < 0.1
Republic of Macedonia 2,060,000 59.3 39.3 1.4 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Republic of the Congo 4,040,000 85.9 1.2 9.0 < 0.1 < 0.1 2.8 1.1 < 0.1
Reunion 850,000 87.6 4.2 2.0 4.5 0.2 0.4 1.1 < 0.1
Romania 21,490,000 99.5 0.3 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Russia 142,960,000 73.3 10.0 16.2 < 0.1 0.1 0.2 < 0.1 0.2
Rwanda 10,620,000 93.4 1.8 3.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 1.0 0.2 < 0.1
Samoa 180,000 96.8 < 0.1 2.5 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.4 < 0.1
San Marino 30,000 91.6 < 0.1 7.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.9 0.3
Sao Tome and Principe 170,000 82.2 < 0.1 12.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 2.9 2.4 < 0.1
Saudi Arabia 27,450,000 4.4 93.0 0.7 1.1 0.3 0.3 0.3 < 0.1
Senegal 12,430,000 3.6 96.4 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Serbia 7,770,000 92.5 4.2 3.3 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Seychelles 90,000 94.0 1.1 2.1 2.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.6 < 0.1
Sierra Leone 5,870,000 20.9 78.0 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.8 < 0.1 < 0.1
Singapore 5,090,000 18.2 14.3 16.4 5.2 33.9 2.3 9.7 < 0.1
Slovakia 5,460,000 85.3 0.2 14.3 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Slovenia 2,030,000 78.4 3.6 18.0 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Solomon Islands 540,000 97.4 < 0.1 0.2 < 0.1 0.3 1.3 0.7 < 0.1
Somalia 9,330,000 < 0.1 99.8 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
South Africa 50,130,000 81.2 1.7 14.9 1.1 0.2 0.4 0.3 0.1
South Korea 48,180,000 29.4 0.2 46.4 < 0.1 22.9 0.8 0.2 < 0.1
South Sudan 9,950,000 60.5 6.2 0.5 < 0.1 < 0.1 32.9 < 0.1 < 0.1
Spain 46,080,000 78.6 2.1 19.0 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.1
Sri Lanka 20,860,000 7.3 9.8 < 0.1 13.6 69.3 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
St. Helena < 10,000 96.5 < 0.1 3.3 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.2 < 0.1
St. Kitts and Nevis 50,000 94.6 0.3 1.6 1.5 < 0.1 1.3 0.8 < 0.1
St. Lucia 170,000 91.1 0.1 6.0 0.3 < 0.1 0.5 2.0 < 0.1
St. Pierre and Miquelon < 10,000 94.7 0.2 3.8 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 1.3 < 0.1
St. Vincent and the Gren. 110,000 88.7 1.5 2.5 3.4 < 0.1 2.0 2.0 < 0.1
Sudan 33,600,000 5.4 90.7 1.0 < 0.1 < 0.1 2.8 < 0.1 < 0.1
Suriname 520,000 51.6 15.2 5.4 19.8 0.6 5.3 1.8 0.2
Swaziland 1,190,000 88.1 0.2 10.1 0.1 < 0.1 1.0 0.4 < 0.1
Sweden 9,380,000 67.2 4.6 27.0 0.2 0.4 0.2 0.2 0.1
Switzerland 7,660,000 81.3 5.5 11.9 0.4 0.4 < 0.1 0.1 0.3
Syria 20,410,000 5.2 92.8 2.0 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Taiwan 23,220,000 5.5 < 0.1 12.7 < 0.1 21.3 44.2 16.2 < 0.1
Tajikistan 6,880,000 1.6 96.7 1.5 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Tanzania 44,840,000 61.4 35.2 1.4 0.1 < 0.1 1.8 < 0.1 < 0.1
Thailand 69,120,000 0.9 5.5 0.3 0.1 93.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Timor-Leste 1,120,000 99.6 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Togo 6,030,000 43.7 14.0 6.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 35.6 0.6 < 0.1
Tokelau < 10,000 99.8 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.2 < 0.1
Tonga 100,000 98.9 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.9 < 0.1
Trinidad and Tobago 1,340,000 65.9 5.9 1.9 22.7 0.3 1.9 1.4 < 0.1
Tunisia 10,480,000 0.2 99.5 0.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Turkey 72,750,000 0.4 98.0 1.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.2 < 0.1
Turkmenistan 5,040,000 6.4 93.0 0.5 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Turks and Caicos Islands 40,000 92.1 < 0.1 4.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 2.7 0.6 < 0.1
Tuvalu < 10,000 96.7 0.1 1.3 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 1.9 < 0.1
Uganda 33,420,000 86.7 11.5 0.5 0.3 < 0.1 0.9 0.1 < 0.1
Ukraine 45,450,000 83.8 1.2 14.7 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.1
United Arab Emirates 7,510,000 12.6 76.9 1.1 6.6 2.0 < 0.1 0.8 < 0.1
United Kingdom 62,040,000 71.1 4.4 21.3 1.3 0.4 0.3 0.8 0.5
United States 310,380,000 78.3 0.9 16.4 0.6 1.2 0.2 0.6 1.8
Uruguay 3,370,000 57.9 < 0.1 40.7 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.8 0.3 0.3
U.S. Virgin Islands 110,000 94.8 0.1 3.7 0.4 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.6 0.3
Uzbekistan 27,440,000 2.3 96.7 0.8 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Vanuatu 240,000 93.3 < 0.1 1.2 < 0.1 < 0.1 4.1 1.4 < 0.1
Vatican City < 10,000 >99.0 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Venezuela 28,980,000 89.3 0.3 10.0 < 0.1 < 0.1 0.2 < 0.1 < 0.1
Vietnam 87,850,000 8.2 0.2 29.6 < 0.1 16.4 45.3 0.4 < 0.1
Wallis and Futuna 10,000 97.4 < 0.1 0.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 1.2 0.8 < 0.1
Western Sahara 530,000 0.2 99.4 0.4 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Yemen 24,050,000 0.2 99.1 0.1 0.6 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1 < 0.1
Zambia 13,090,000 97.6 0.5 0.5 0.1 < 0.1 0.3 0.9 < 0.1
Zimbabwe 12,570,000 87.0 0.9 7.9 < 0.1 < 0.1 3.8 0.3 < 0.1
Asia-Pacific 4,054,990,000 7.1 24.3 21.2 25.3 11.9 9.0 1.3 < 0.1
Europe 742,550,000 75.2 5.9 18.2 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.2
Latin America-Caribbean 590,080,000 90.0 0.1 7.7 0.1 < 0.1 1.7 0.2 < 0.1
Middle East-North Africa 341,020,000 3.7 93.0 0.6 0.5 0.1 0.3 < 0.1 1.6
North America 344,530,000 77.4 1.0 17.1 0.7 1.1 0.3 0.6 1.8
Sub-Saharan Africa 822,720,000 62.9 30.2 3.2 0.2 < 0.1 3.3 0.2 < 0.1
World 6,895,890,000 31.5 23.2 16.3 15.0 7.1 5.9 0.8 0.2
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Appendix A: Methodology
This study provides comprehensive demographic estimates of the size and distribution of
eight major religious groups in the countries and territories for which the United Nations
Population Division provides general population estimates as of .6 It includes estimates
for Christians, Muslims, the religiously unaf¿liated, +indus, %uddhists, folk religionists, ad-
herents of other religions and Jews. This study also provides estimates for the median ages of
these religious groups at the regional and global level.
This appendix describes various stages of the work that led to this study. First, it describes the
data and procedures used to derive estimates of the overall religious composition of each coun-
try. Second, it describes the procedures used to estimate religious composition in each country
by age and sex (e.g., males between the ages -, or females ages ). (This data was needed
to help calculate the median ages of the religious groups.) Third, this appendix describes how
additional data on fertility, migration and religious switching were collected. (This informa-
tion was used to project the religious composition of countries to when the primary data
on religious composition for a country was collected prior to .) The appendix ends with a
discussion about measuring religion in China, notes about estimates that vary from previously
published Pew Forum reports and a list of the countries included within each of the six regions
used in this report.
16 Population sizes in this study are based on the U.N.’s 2010 population estimate for each country and territory. The U.N. provided special estimates for
Sudan and the new nation of South Sudan. The population estimate for Kosovo is based on the figure from the World Religion Database, which is deducted
from the U.N.’s Serbia estimate.
17 Census data were among the sources considered for many other countries. For example, Pew Forum researchers studied 2001 census round data in
Canada and in the United Kingdom, but they ultimately relied on more recent demographic surveys collected by the census agencies in each country. This
enabled the researchers to capture substantial changes in religious populations since 2001. In some countries that collect ethnic group data but not religion
data on their census, the census was an important secondary resource. For example, in Russia and China, certain ethnic populations are predominantly
Muslim, so the size of these groups is a useful indicator of the size of the Muslim population in each country.
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population. Together, censuses or surveys provided estimates for countries representing
of the world’s population. In the remaining countries, representing of the world’s
population, the primary sources for the religious-composition estimates include population
registers and institutional membership statistics reported in the :orld Religion Database and
other sources. A list of the primary sources used to estimate the overall religious composition
of each country is provided in Appendix %.
Censuses and nationally representative surveys can provide valid and reliable measures of
religious landscapes when they are conducted following the best practices of social science
research. Valid measurement in censuses and surveys also requires that respondents are free
to provide information without fear of negative governmental or social consequences. +owever,
variation in methods among censuses and surveys (including sampling, question wording, re-
sponse categories and period of data collection) can lead to variation in results. Social, cultural
or political factors also may affect how answers to census and survey questions are provided
and recorded.
Pew Forum researchers standardized religion categories in all available censuses and surveys
for each country. Censuses and surveys collect religious identity at different levels of speci¿city.
For example, depending on the source, the most speci¿c level of af¿liation measured could be
Christian, Protestant, %aptist or Southern %aptist. Researchers coded religious identities into
standard categories that aggregate into the eight major religious categories used in this report.
The measure of religious identity in this study is sociological rather than theological. In order
to have statistics that are comparable across countries, the study attempts to count individuals
who self-identify with each religion. This includes people who hold beliefs that may be viewed
as unorthodox or heretical by others who claim the same religion. It also includes people who
do not regularly practice the behaviors prescribed by their religion, such as those who seldom
pray or attend worship services.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
measured with a single question that permitted respondents to identify speci¿c af¿liations or
no af¿liation at all.
Nationally representative surveys were occasionally chosen as a primary source rather than a
census or demographic survey due to limitations in the measurement of religion in the latter
sources. In Vietnam, for example, the census and the Demographic and +ealth
Survey did not adequately measure folk religion identities. Researchers instead relied on the
Asian %arometer survey, which measured a wider range of religious identities, including
identi¿cation with folk religions.
In cases where censuses and surveys lacked suf¿cient detail on minority groups, the estimates
also drew on estimates provided by the :orld Religion Database, which takes into account
other sources of information on religious af¿liation, including statistical reports from religious
groups themselves.
In India, for instance, there is evidence of a Christian undercount in the census; some
Christians who belong to Scheduled Castes (historically referred to as Untouchables or Dalits)
choose to identify as +indu when completing of¿cial forms such as the census. This is due to
a mandate in the Indian constitution that speci¿es that only +indus, Sikhs and %uddhists can
18 The wording of religious identity questions varies across censuses and surveys, but the ideal measure is a direct one-step question, such as “What is
your religion?” In contrast, many European surveys use a two-step question, such as, “Are you religious? If yes, what is your religion?” Two-step questions do
not correspond well with census religion questions, which are usually one-step, direct measures. Furthermore, in many countries two-step questions seem
to filter out many respondents who might otherwise claim a religious identity but who do not consider themselves as having a significant level of religious
commitment.
19 This phenomenon is discussed in Kumar M, Ashok and Rowena Robinson. 2010. “Legally Hindu: Dalit Lutheran Christians of Coastal Andhra Pradesh” in
“Margins of Faith: Dalit and Tribal Christianity in India,” edited by Rowena Robinson and Joseph Marianus Kujur. Sage Publications.
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In this study, researchers sought to ensure that primary sources were representative of the
entire country. :hen this was not the case, it was usually due to concerns about the safety of
interviewers and census takers or disputes about political boundaries. In such cases, research-
ers attempted to make appropriate adjustments or ¿nd an alternative data source that was
nationally representative.
For example, the Sri Lankan census was not conducted in a handful of northern and east-
ern districts because of perilous conditions due to armed conÀict. After analyzing religion data
from earlier censuses, Pew Forum researchers determined that the areas that were not covered
by the census historically had a different makeup than the rest of the country. Pew Forum
researchers adjusted the census data for Sri Lanka based on census data about re-
gions omitted in the census.
Religious identity is sometimes linked to ethnic identity, particularly for religious minorities.
In a small number of countries where the census did not measure religious af¿liation or where
survey data on religious af¿liation had sampling limitations, researchers used ethnicity data
to estimate the religious af¿liation of small groups. For example, ethnicity data from the
Russian census was used together with Generations and Gender Survey data to estimate
the proportion of Muslims in Russia. The survey did not adequately sample the country’s pre-
dominantly Muslim areas but it did provide information on the share of Muslims within ethnic
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
groups associated with Islam. This information, combined with census ethnicity data, was
used to adjust the Muslim composition estimate in regions the survey sampled inadequately.
This is evident when comparing census numbers over multiple years. In %razil, for example,
the census reported that of those ages - were unaf¿liated. %y the time of the
census, only of the same birth cohort (who were then to years old) was unaf¿liated.
:hile some of this change may be explained by mortality and migration, it is at least partly
due to parents being more willing to describe their older children as Christians.
In order to compensate for this measurement bias in %razil and a few other countries where
there was considerable evidence of this phenomenon, Pew Forum researchers applied the
religious composition of older children (those - years old) to infants and young children
(those - years old). This adjustment was made only where there was a substantial difference
between the religious composition of the youngest age group and children ages -. (For coun-
tries in which this adjustment was made, there is a corresponding note in the list of sources by
country in Appendix %.)
The likelihood that religion data will be missing increases when religion questions are labeled as
optional, as is the case in censuses in countries such as Australia, the United Kingdom and the
Czech Republic. Census agencies in countries where religion is labeled as an optional question
often report “religion not stated” results alongside standard categories of af¿liation and non-
22 Ethnicities with close links to Muslim identity include Tatars, Bashkirs, Chechens, Avars, Azeris, Kazakhs, Kabardian, Ossetians, Dargins, Kumyks, Ingush,
Lezgins, Karachays, Adyghe, Balkar and Circassian.
23 The religion question became optional in the 2011 Czech Republic census. In that census, nearly half (45%) of Czech respondents did not state their reli-
gion. In other cases, non-response rates were more modest. For example, religion was not stated for about 8% of respondents in the 2011 Australian census.
APPENDIX A: METHODOLOGY
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PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
af¿liation. This strategy allows the census agencies to demonstrate that answering their reli-
gion question was indeed optional. +owever, for purposes of this study, the “religion not stated”
category is not a meaningful religious identity. Therefore, after making any necessary adjust-
ments for undercounted groups, religious shares were re-calculated based on the population of
all people who gave valid responses to the census or survey. The effect of this approach was to
proportionately raise the shares of all religious groups, including the religiously unaf¿liated.
Researchers from the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA) in Laxen-
burg, Austria, collaborated with Pew Forum researchers on data collection and religious com-
position estimates for Europe; Pew Forum researchers gathered data outside Europe. IIASA
researchers also collaborated on development of the procedures described below, which were
used to standardize information across countries for age breakdowns, childbearing patterns,
migration Àows and religious switching patterns. Researchers from the Vienna Institute of
Demography provided initial estimates of country-to-country migrant Àows by age and sex.
Age structures were compiled in three steps. First, census or survey data were used to capture
the religious af¿liation of each available age group. Second, survey data on religion by age
24 Some data sources report figures for 2011. The religious distributions from these sources have also been applied to the U.N.’s 2010 population esti-
mates.
25 The religious affiliation of young people often differs from the affiliation of the older population due to religious switching, migration and variation in
childbearing patterns by religion.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
were adjusted to account for small sample sizes. And third, results were adjusted to match the
religious breakdown by age and sex to each country’s overall religious composition. These steps
are described in detail below.
For many countries, reliable age data were not available for all eight religious groups. Some-
times a survey indicated the overall size of a small religious group yet lacked suf¿cient num-
bers to reliably estimate the group’s age breakdown. In such cases, the age breakdowns of
minority religious groups were based on the country’s overall age distribution or the combined
age distribution of respondents from all minority religions in a survey.
26 Some demographic surveys, such as the Demographic and Health Surveys, ask the religious affiliation question only to members of the household who
are in their reproductive years (usually between 15 and 49 years of age for women). Procedures used to assign religious affiliations to individuals in the
Demographic and Health Surveys were validated against census data that enumerated all individuals in the country. Results of this validation exercise from
Brazil, Ghana and Mozambique – countries that had both census data and data from Demographic and Health Surveys were presented at the 2011 annual
meeting of the Population Association of America (Andrew Gully and Noble Kuriakose. “Can DHS Household Files be Used to Provide an Accurate Estimate of
the Market Share and Age Structure of Large Religious Groups?”).
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PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
tween highs and lows for consecutive age groups. To eliminate unlikely variation, researchers
smoothed data using statistical procedures intended to reveal the general underlying pattern.
Census data are not smoothed because census data represent a complete enumeration of all
individuals living in a country. +owever, in some cases, the age categories reported by census
agencies are in -year age groups or aggregated for all adults above a certain age, such as 6.
Researchers used statistical modeling techniques to distribute the composition of these aggre-
gated age groups across the more speci¿c ¿ve-year age categories used in this study.
Matching Religion by Age and Sex to Overall Population by Age and Sex
The overall religious af¿liation resulting from the age structure procedures sometimes varies
from the religious composition estimated for the country using the procedures described in
the ¿rst section of this appendix. This difference exists for two reasons. First, the data sources
used for the age-structure procedure may be different from the data sources used for the reli-
gious composition. Second, overall religious compositions were adjusted manually to account
for undercounts and sampling issues.
In order to match the overall religious composition ¿gures to the data on religion by age and
sex, the age structure was adjusted. The adjustment procedure used is often referred to as
Iterative Proportional Fitting (IPF), or raking. Raking makes adjustments to the percentages
of religious af¿liation for each age group without signi¿cantly altering the underlying religious
af¿liation patterns by age group. Additionally, raking is used to match each country’s counts of
males and females in particular age groups to the U.N.’s estimate of the country’s overall age
distribution.
:hen survey or census data on the differential religious composition of age-sex groups was not
available, each age-sex group was assigned the same religious composition. Lack of differential
religious composition data by age-sex group was most common in countries with very small
populations.
27 Most smoothing methods rely on using multiple points on the x-axis that are below and above the current point (in this case, points refer to religious
shares within age groups) to produce a new value. For example, the religious affiliation shares of those ages 80-84 and 90-94 were taken into account in
order to smooth the affiliation shares of those ages 85-89.
28 Forthcoming Pew Forum reports will provide country-by-country bibliographic information for sources used to construct age structures.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
sex is not released by the census bureau; another source must therefore be used to generate
the age structure. Sources are also different when multiple waves of a survey series have to be
combined in order to have a sample size large enough to construct reliable age structures.
Age structures were further adjusted in countries where the age structure data source is much
older than the source used for the religious composition of the country. In order to harmonize
the data on overall religious af¿liation with the age structure, the age structure data is aged in
¿ve-year projections while holding the religious composition constant.
In a small number of countries, age structures were estimated based in part on ethnicity or cit-
izenship data. For example, all six Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries release informa-
tion on the age distribution of citizens and non-citizens, but only %ahrain further breaks this
information down by Muslims and non-Muslims. For this reason, age-distribution estimates
for citizens and non-citizens in other GCC countries are modeled on %ahrain, where almost all
citizens are Muslim but a substantial share of the non-citizen population is non-Muslim due to
the inÀux of migrant workers.
Since people can also move between religious groups within a given country, religious switch-
ing was also taken into account for some countries.
%elow is a description of the projection approach, as well as the procedures used to estimate
differential fertility rates, the Àow of religious migrants between countries and patterns of
religious switching.
29 The six Gulf Cooperation Council countries are Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates.
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PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
Cohorts are groups of people that had an experience in a particular time. A birth cohort, the type
of cohort referenced in this context, comprises people born in a certain period. %irth cohorts can
also be described as males or females (or males and females) who have reached a certain age in a
particular year. For example, the cohorts of females ages - in the year and males ages
- in the year shared the experience of being born between and .
Components are the three ways in which populations grow or shrink: new entrants via births,
exits via deaths and net changes from migration. Each cohort of the population is projected
into the future by adding likely gains – births and people moving into the country (immi-
grants) – and subtracting likely losses – deaths and people moving out (emigrants) – year-by-
year. The very youngest cohorts, those ages -, are created by applying age-speci¿c fertility
rates to each female cohort in the childbearing years (ages -).
The cohort-component method has been in existence for more than a century. First suggested
by the English economist Edwin Cannan in , then further improved by demographers in
the s and ’s, it has been widely adopted since :orld :ar II. It is used by the United Na-
tions Population Division, the U.S. Census %ureau, other national statistical of¿ces and numer-
ous academic and research institutions.
The advanced variant of this approach, multistate cohort component projection, was developed
at IIASA by the American geographer Andrei Rogers in the s. The multistate approach
permits simultaneous projection of the eight religious groups in this study, taking into account
variation by religion in age, sex, childbearing patterns, and propensity and direction of migra-
tion. This approach also enables modeling of religious switching as a transition between reli-
gious “states.”
The country-by-country source list in Appendix % acknowledges when the religious composi-
tion of a country has been projected. Projections have been carried out for all countries with
populations greater than , for which the primary source data used for composition
estimates were collected prior to . For countries with populations below ,, and in
30 The number of children age 0-4 projected to join a population is also influenced by infant and child mortality rates and migration rates incorporated in the
projection model.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
larger countries with data collected from or afterward, the population shares estimated
for the year of the primary source have been applied to the country’s population as of .
Estimating Fertility
In many countries, there are substantial differences in the number of children born to women
across religions. Furthermore, religious groups often vary in the share of women in their popula-
tion who are of childbearing age. Differences in childbearing and age-structure patterns combine
to produce differences in the rates at which babies are born to adult members across religions.
Fertility data was gathered from censuses and surveys, and fertility rates were estimated via
direct and indirect measures. Some censuses and surveys directly measure recent births or the
count of children a woman has ever given birth to by the time of the survey. In other cases, fer-
tility data were gathered indirectly, for example, by using data on the age of a mother’s children
to estimate her past birth patterns. These various sources of fertility data were used to esti-
mate age speci¿c and total fertility rates for religious groups in each country.
In many countries, data on differential fertility is available for the largest religious groups but
suf¿cient detail is not available for all minority religious groups. In Nigeria, for example, more
than of women of reproductive age are either Christian or Muslim, and there is suf¿cient
data for estimating fertility for these two groups. For other groups in Nigeria, however, re-
searchers had to base estimates on more limited data. Similarly, there are many countries in
which one religious group makes up or more of the women of reproductive age, resulting
in a relatively small number of women of other religions providing fertility data.
In some countries, differential fertility data by religion were not available. In these cases, re-
searchers applied prevailing national fertility rates to all religious groups equally.
31 Results from the analysis of fertility differences by religion will be presented in a future Pew Forum report that will project the future growth of major
religious groups. In this report, information on differential fertility is used in projections to the year 2010.
32 The total fertility rate (TFR) is the total number of children an average woman would have in her lifetime if fertility patterns did not change. The TFR is
calculated by adding the birth rates among women in each age group in a particular country during a given period; in other words, it is a kind of snapshot of
fertility patterns at one place and time.
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PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
Data describing the size and religious composition of migrant Àows were pieced together in
two steps. The ¿rst step was to estimate the size of migrant Àows for males and females to
and from every country in the world since the year . This was carried out using immi-
grant stock data from the :orld %ank and the Pew Forum’s Global Religion and Migration
Database. The plausibility of this data was checked against U.N. net migration estimates
and available Àow data from countries. Slight adjustments were made to Àow estimates where
underlying data were less reliable.
The second step was to identify the religious composition of migrants moving from one country
to another. Sometimes researchers assumed migrants leaving a country had the religious com-
position of the country they were leaving. +owever, in many cases researchers had evidence
to challenge this assumption. Speci¿cally, religious minorities in a sending country may be
disproportionately likely to migrate to a country in which their religion is in the majority. For
example, in the Middle East, Christians are more likely than Muslims to move to the United
States. The Pew Forum’s Global Religion and Migration Database captures such dynamics for
many of the world’s large migrant pathways. It was therefore used to improve estimates of the
religious breakdown of large migrant Àows between a series of key countries.
Researchers have identi¿ed general age and sex patterns of cross-national migration. Using em-
pirical data and research-based observations about the age and sex structures of migrant Àows,
researchers were able to model Àows of migrants by ¿ve year age-sex cohorts and religion.
The input data for the analysis of religious switching in this report is a comparison of reports
of religious origins and current religion for adults ages - in recent general population
surveys. %y comparing reports of respondents’ childhood and current religion, researchers
estimated transition rates between all religious groups. These switching rates were calculated
33 A detailed methodology for estimating global flows can be found at Abel, Guy J. 2012. “Estimating Global Migration Flow Tables Using Place of Birth Data.”
Vienna Institute of Demography. http://www.oeaw.ac.at/vid/download/WP2012_01.pdf.
34 A detailed methodology for the Pew Forum’s Global Religion and Migration Database and sources can be found athttp://www.pewforum.org/faith-on-the-
move.aspx.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
separately for males and females. The overall rate of religious change was then applied to co-
horts ages - in population projections. For projection purposes, each person was allowed
one switch, which is all that is directly measured in the surveys this method draws upon.
Religious switching results and elaboration of this approach will be described in greater detail
in future Pew Forum reports.
Other Topics
China
For most countries, estimates for the size of the eight religious groups are based on one or two
primary sources. In China, however, they come from several sources because, as described in
detail in a previous Pew Forum demographic study, data on religion in China are de¿cient.
The following description summarizes the various sources used to estimate the size of each
religious group in China.
Muslims. Most Chinese Muslims belong to one of several ethnic groups that are overwhelm-
ingly Muslim. The Chinese census included a measure on ethnicity. :hile not all mem-
bers of these ethnic groups would necessarily identify as Muslim, the census ¿gures provide a
reasonable and generally accepted approximation of the size of China’s Muslim population.
Christians. %ecause there is some evidence that on public opinion surveys Christians may
underreport their religious identity, the Pew Forum reviewed multiple sources to arrive at an
approximation of the size of China’s Christian population. For details, see Appendix C: Meth-
odology for China, in the Pew Forum’s December report “Global Christianity.”
Hindus and Jews. Members of these two religious groups are predominantly expatriates and
are relatively few in number.6 The Pew Forum’s estimates for +indus and Jews in China rely
primarily on the :orld Religion Database.
%uddhists, other world religions, folN religionists and the religiously unaf¿liated. Estimates for
these four religious groups are based on an analysis by Pew Forum staff of the Spiritual Life
35 For a discussion of data challenges in China, see Appendix C: Methodology for China, in the Pew Forum’s 2011 report, “Global Christianity: A Report on
the Size and Distribution of the World’s Christian Population.”
36 See Leslie, Donald. 1972. “The Survival of the Chinese Jews: The Jewish Community of Kaifeng.” Brill.
APPENDIX A: METHODOLOGY
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PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
Study of Chinese Residents. Estimates of the size of the %uddhist population and the number of
members of other world religions – the largest being Taoism – come directly from the survey.
Folk religion. The Spiritual Life Study of Chinese Residents did not offer respondents the
same opportunity to choose folk religion as a religious category as it did to choose the ¿ve re-
ligions of¿cially recognized by the Chinese government – %uddhism, Catholicism, Daoism, Is-
lam and Protestantism. Therefore, the estimate of folk religionists needed to be computed by
considering the beliefs and practices reported by the survey participants. This study’s estimate
of the share of the Chinese population af¿liated with folk religion () is based on conserva-
tive criteria that focused primarily on worshiping or believing in gods or spirits associated with
Chinese folk religion. If a broader range of beliefs and practices, such as fengshui practices,
were included in the criteria, the estimate would be higher. Other estimates range from by
the :orld Religion Database to by scholars Fenggeng Yang and Anning +u.
Religiously unaf¿liated. The unaf¿liated are all who do not identify with one of the other religions.
Differences reÀect the availability of more recent or higher-quality data on religious af¿lia-
tion. In %runei, the Czech Republic and Kazakhstan, for example, newer census data became
available. In the Gulf Cooperation Council countries, such as %ahrain, Kuwait and 4atar, Pew
37 The 2007 Spiritual Life Study of Chinese Residents (data archived at the Association of Religion Data Archives, http://www.thearda.com/Archive/Files/
Descriptions/SPRTCHNA.asp) was a multi-stage random survey of mainland China administered in three municipalities (Beijing, Shanghai and Chongqing),
six provincial capitals (Guangzhou, Nanjing, Wuhan, Hefei, Xi`an and Chengdu), 11 regional cities, 16 small towns and 20 administrative villages. No major
cities in the west, the far northeast or on the south-central coast were surveyed. The study was conducted with face-to-face interviews of 7,021 Chinese
adults ages 16 and older and had an American Association of Public Opinion Researchers response rate of 28.1%.
38 The 2010 Chinese General Social Survey conducted by Renmin University reportedly included a battery of questions on religion. The data for that survey
were not publically available at the time of this analysis.
39 Scholars inside and outside of China clearly recognize Chinese folk religion as an important category. For instance, the authors of the “Blue Book of
Religions” (2010), a publication of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, argue that folk beliefs constitute a part of Chinese religious culture that should
be held in the same regard as the five officially recognized religions – Buddhism, Catholicism, Daoism, Islam and Protestantism. See Chinese Academy of
Social Sciences. 2010. “Blue Book on Religions.” Pages 170-171 and 175. The Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, the highest academic research orga-
nization in the fields of philosophy and social sciences, is directly under the State Council of the People’s Republic of China – the highest executive organ of
state power as well as the highest organ of state administration. For a fuller discussion of Chinese folk religions, see Yang, Fenggang and Hu, Anning. 2012.
“Mapping Chinese Folk Religion in Mainland China and Taiwan.” Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, volume 51, number 3, pages 505-521; Wong, Wai
Yip. 2007. “Defining Chinese Folk Religion: A Methodological Interpretation.” Asian Philosophy, volume 21; Li, Y. Y. 1998. “Zong Jiao Yu Shen Hua Lun Ji [A
Treatise on Religion and Myth].” New Century Publishing; and Feng, Z. Z. and Li, F. H. 1994. “History of Chinese Folk Religion.” Wenchin.
40 Respondents from the 2007 Spiritual Life Study of Chinese Residents survey were classified as a folk religionist if they did not identify with one of the
other religious groups and they did report that they worshiped gods or spirits at conventional religious sites, at home or in the workplace; or if they attended
formal temple services or prayed or burned incense in temples; or if they believed in the existence of gods or spirits, evil forces or demons, heaven, hell, the
afterlife or reincarnation.
41 Yang, Fenggang and Hu, Anning. 2012. “Mapping Chinese Folk Religion in Mainland China and Taiwan.” Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion, vol-
ume 51, number 3, pages 505-521.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
Forum researchers adjusted earlier estimates to reÀect the religious af¿liation of large migrant
populations. Data on the size and religious af¿liation of migrant populations were gathered as
part of a Forum project on international migration.
:hile the Pew Forum’s report “The Future of the Global Muslim Population” found that
India had the third-largest Muslim population, after Indonesia and Pakistan, this report ¿nds
that India has the second-largest Muslim population. That report used country population
estimates from the revision of the United Nation’s :orld Population Prospects, which
estimated Pakistan’s total population to be . million. This report relies on the
revision of :orld Population Prospects data, in which Pakistan’s total population is esti-
mated to be .6 million. In addition to lowering its estimate for Pakistan, the U.N. Population
Division also raised its estimate of India’s total population between the and :orld
Population Prospects. Meanwhile, the current round of Pakistan’s population census has expe-
rienced many delays. Preliminary population estimates from Pakistan’s housing census
suggest the population could be substantially greater than estimated in the :orld Popula-
tion Prospects data (. million, according to a report in the Times of India: http://articles.
timeso¿ndia.indiatimes.com/--/pakistan/BBpopulation-gilgit-baltistan-
balochistan). The reliability of the preliminary estimates has been publicly contested, but if
the preliminary estimates are correct, then Pakistan’s Muslim population may exceed India’s
Muslim population.
In the Pew Forum’s report “Global Christianity,” the Americas was identi¿ed as the region
with the largest Christian population. +owever, as described in the region note below, this
report divides the Americas into two regions. :hile the combined regions would still have
the largest Christian population in the world, with the six regions used in this report, Europe
becomes the region with the largest Christian population.
A Note on Regions
This report groups countries and territories into six major regions: Asia and the Paci¿c,
Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean, the Middle East and North Africa, North America
and sub-Saharan Africa. Some previous Pew Forum reports including “Global Christianity: A
Report on the Size and Distribution of the :orld’s Christian Population” and “The Future of
the Global Muslim Population” grouped the world into ¿ve regions, with an Americas region
that included both North America and Latin America and the Caribbean.
42 For more information, see the Pew Forum’s March 2012 report “Faith on the Move: The Religious Affiliation of International Migrants.”
43 See Rana, Shahbaz. Jan. 11, 2012. “2011 Housing Census results: Over-counting in Sindh, undercounting in Punjab.” The Express Tribune. http://tribune.
com.pk/story/319617/2011-housing-census-results-over-counting-in-sindh-undercounting-in-punjab/.
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PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
The 6 countries and territories in the Asia and the Paci¿c region are: Afghanistan, Ameri-
can Samoa, Armenia, Australia, Azerbaijan, %angladesh, %hutan, %runei, %urma (Myanmar),
Cambodia, China, Cook Islands, Cyprus, Federated States of Micronesia, Fiji, French Polynesia,
Guam, +ong Kong, India, Indonesia, Iran, Japan, Kazakhstan, Kiribati, Kyrgyzstan, Laos, Ma-
cau, Malaysia, Maldives, Marshall Islands, Mongolia, Nauru, Nepal, New Caledonia, New =ea-
land, Niue, North Korea, Northern Mariana Islands, Pakistan, Palau, Papua New Guinea, the
Philippines, Samoa, Singapore, Solomon Islands, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, Tajikistan,
Thailand, Timor-Leste, Tokelau, Tonga, Turkey, Turkmenistan, Tuvalu, Uzbekistan, Vanuatu,
Vietnam and :allis and Futuna.
The countries and territories in Europe are: Albania, Andorra, Austria, %elarus, %elgium,
%osnia-+erzegovina, %ulgaria, Channel Islands, Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Estonia,
Faeroe Islands, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Gibraltar, Greece, +ungary, Iceland, Ire-
land, Isle of Man, Italy, Kosovo, Latvia, Liechtenstein, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Malta, Moldova,
Monaco, Montenegro, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Portugal, Republic of Macedonia, Ro-
mania, Russia, San Marino, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Ukraine,
United Kingdom and Vatican City.
The 6 countries and territories in Latin America and the Caribbean are: Anguilla, Antigua
and %arbuda, Argentina, Aruba, %ahamas, %arbados, %elize, %olivia, %razil, %ritish Virgin
Islands, Cayman Islands, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Cuba, Dominica, Dominican Repub-
lic, Ecuador, El Salvador, Falkland Islands (Malvinas), French Guiana, Grenada, Guadeloupe,
Guatemala, Guyana, +aiti, +onduras, Jamaica, Martinique, Mexico, Montserrat, Netherlands
Antilles, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, St. Kitts and Nevis, St. Lucia, St.
Vincent and the Grenadines, Suriname, Trinidad and Tobago, Turks and Caicos Islands, U.S.
Virgin Islands, Uruguay and Venezuela.
The countries and territories of the Middle East and North Africa are: Algeria, %ahrain, Egypt,
Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Morocco, Oman, the Palestinian territories, 4atar,
Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Syria, Tunisia, United Arab Emirates, :estern Sahara and Yemen.
The ¿ve countries and territories of North America are: %ermuda, Canada, Greenland, St.
Pierre and Miquelon and the United States.
The countries and territories of sub-Saharan Africa are: Angola, %enin, %otswana, %urkina
Faso, %urundi, Cameroon, Cape Verde, Central African Republic, Chad, Comoros, Democratic
Republic of the Congo, Djibouti, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, Gambia, Gha-
na, Guinea, Guinea %issau, Ivory Coast, Kenya, Lesotho, Liberia, Madagascar, Malawi, Mali,
Mauritania, Mauritius, Mayotte, Mozambique, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria, Republic of the Congo,
Reunion, Rwanda, Sao Tome and Principe, Senegal, Seychelles, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South
Africa, South Sudan, St. +elena, Swaziland, Tanzania, Togo, Uganda, =ambia and =imbabwe.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
A Note on Rounding
In this report, estimates of , persons or less are identi¿ed as “,.” All other count
estimates in tables are rounded to the nearest ,. In the narrative of the report, many
estimates are rounded to the nearest million or percentage point.
APPENDIX A: METHODOLOGY
68
PEW FORUM ON RELIGION & PUBLIC LIFE
General Sources
Afrobarometer. Led by the Centre for Democratic Development, the Institute for Democracy in South Africa and the
Institute for Empirical Research in Political Economy, -. http://www.afrobarometer.org/.
Americas%arometer. Administered by the Latin American Public Opinion Project at Vanderbilt University, -
. http://www.lapopsurveys.org/.
Asia%arometer Project. Inoguchi, Takashi, et al. Asia%arometer Survey Data . http://www.asiabarometer.org/
Asian %arometer. The Institute for the Advanced Studies of +umanities and Social Sciences, National Taiwan Uni-
versity, -. http://www.asianbarometer.org/.
Demographic and +ealth Surveys. MEASURE D+S. Administered by Macro International, -, http://www.
measuredhs.com/.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
European Social Survey. Led by Centre for Comparative Social Surveys, City University, , , . http://
www.europeansocialsurvey.org/.
European Values Study. Administered by the European Values Study Foundation at Tilburg University, -.
http://www.europeanvaluesstudy.eu/.
International Social Survey Programme. ISSP Research Group , Religion III (ISSP ), GESIS Data Archive,
Cologne. =A Data ¿le Version .., doi:./., .
Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey. United Nations Children’s Fund, -6. http://www.childinfo.org/mics.html.
Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life. Tolerance and Tension: Islam and Christianity in Sub-Saharan
Africa, survey conducted -, report published . http://pewforum.org/Datasets/Dataset-Download.aspx.
United Nations Demographic Yearbook. Special Census Topics Volume - Social characteristics, Table 6: Popula-
tion by religion, sex, urban/rural residence and percentage: each census, -, United Nations Statistics Divi-
sion, 6. http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/sconcerns/popchar/popchar.htm.
:orld Population Prospects: The Revision. United Nations Population Division. http://esa.un.org/wpp/Excel-
Data/population.htm.
:orld Religion Database: International Religious Demographic Statistics and Sources. Todd M. Johnson and %rian
J. Grim, editors, %rill. Estimates for , accessed in . http://www.worldreligiondatabase.org.
:orld Values Survey. Values Survey Database, :orld Values Survey Association, -6. http://www.worldval-
uessurvey.org/.
Data Archives
Association of Religion Data Archives (ARDA). Pennsylvania State University. http://www.thearda.com/.
Integrated Public Use Microdata Series International (IPUMS). Minnesota Population Center, University of Min-
nesota, . https://international.ipums.org/international/.
=ACAT Data Archive for the Social Sciences. GESIS – Leibniz Institute for the Social Sciences. http://zacat.gesis.org/
Sources by Country
Afghanistan: Estimates based on :orld Religion Database.
Albania: Estimates based on - Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented
religious groups.
Andorra: Estimates based on :orld Religion Database and :orld Values Survey.
Angola: Estimates based on Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups.
Anguilla: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Argentina: Estimates based on Latinobarometro, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Armenia: Estimates based on Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented
religious groups and projected to .
Aruba: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Australia: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underreporting of religious
af¿liation for infants.
Austria: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious groups;
projected to , accounting for religious switching based on International Social Survey Programme survey.
Azerbaijan: Estimates based on 6 Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented
religious groups and projected to .
%ahamas: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and projected to .
%ahrain: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented migrant populations.
%angladesh: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and pro-
jected to .
%elarus: Estimates based on European Values Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
%elgium: Estimates based on European Values Survey and Annuario Ponti¿cio, adjusted to account for
underrepresented religious groups.
%elize: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data, and to account for underrepresented religious
groups and underreporting of religious af¿liation for infants; projected to .
%enin: Estimates based on 6 Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups and projected to .
%ermuda: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious groups.
%hutan: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and projected to .
%olivia: Estimates based on Americas%arometer, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
%osnia-+erzegovina: Estimates based on 6 Gallup :orld Poll, adjusted to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups and projected to .
%otswana: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and projected
to .
%razil: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and underre-
porting of religious af¿liation for infants.
%runei: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and projected to .
%ulgaria: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious
groups; projected to .
%urkina Faso: Estimates based on 6 Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and
projected to .
%urundi: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Cambodia: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Cameroon: Estimates based on Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented
religious groups and projected to .
Canada: Estimates based on Statistics Canada General Social Survey, adjusted for missing data and to account
for underrepresented religious groups.
Cape Verde: Estimates based on Afrobarometer, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepre-
sented religious groups.
Cayman Islands: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Central African Republic: Estimates based on 6 Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey, adjusted to account for un-
derrepresented religious groups and projected to .
Chad: Estimates based on Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups and projected to .
Chile: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious
groups; projected to .
China: Estimates based on analysis by the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life of multiple
sources, including the Chinese Census, public opinion surveys, church membership reports and estimates from the
Chinese government, projected to ; see the Methodology for details.
Colombia: Estimates based on Americas%arometer, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Cook Islands: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups.
Costa Rica: Estimates based on Latinobarometro, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepre-
sented religious groups.
Croatia: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious
groups; projected to .
Cyprus: Estimates based on weighted average of European Values Study in Cyprus and European Values
Study in Northern Cyprus, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Czech Republic: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented
religious groups.
Democratic Republic of the Congo: Estimates based on Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account
for underrepresented religious groups and projected to .
Denmark: Estimates based on Centre for Contemporary Religion’s “Religion in Denmark ” report, adjusted to
account for underrepresented religious groups and migrant populations.
Djibouti: Estimates based on - survey by the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life,
adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Dominican Republic: Estimates based on Americas%arometer, adjusted to account for underrepresented
religious groups.
Ecuador: Estimates based on Americas%arometer, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Egypt: Estimates based on 6 Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and projected
to .
El Salvador: Estimates based on Americas%arometer, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Eritrea: Estimates based on Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups and projected to .
Estonia: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious
groups, and projected to .
Ethiopia: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious
groups; projected to .
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
Federated States of Micronesia: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups and projected to .
Fiji: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and projected to .
Finland: Estimates based on Statistics Finland report, “Population Structure , Annual Review,” adjusted
to account for underrepresented religious groups and migrant populations.
France: Estimates based on analysis by Anne Goujon (IIASA) of Generations and Gender Survey, -
Trajectories and Origins Survey conducted by Institut National de la Statistique et des Études Économiques and the
Institut National d’ptudes Dpmographiques, and multiple surveys between and by the French Institute
of Public Opinion, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and migrant populations.
Gabon: Estimates based on Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups and projected to .
Gambia: Estimates based on Intermedia survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups
and projected to .
Georgia: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and projected
to .
Germany: Estimates based on Generations and Gender Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented
religious groups; projected to , accounting for religious switching based on International Social Survey
Programme survey.
Ghana: Estimates based on Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented
religious groups.
Gibraltar: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented
religious groups.
Greece: Estimates based on and European Social Surveys, adjusted to account for underrepresented
religious groups and migrant populations; projected to .
Guatemala: Estimates based on Americas%arometer, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepre-
sented religious groups.
Guinea: Estimates based on Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups and projected to .
Guinea %issau: Estimates based on 6 Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey, adjusted to account for underrepre-
sented religious groups and projected to .
Guyana: Estimates based on Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented
religious groups.
+aiti: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious
groups; projected to .
+onduras: Estimates based on Americas%arometer, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepre-
sented religious groups.
+ong Kong: Estimates based on Asian %arometer, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
+ungary: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious
groups; projected to .
Iceland: Estimates based on Ministry of Interior National Register of Persons, adjusted for missing data and to
account for underrepresented religious groups.
India: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and projected to .
Indonesia: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Iran: Estimates based on 6 Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and projected to .
Iraq: Estimates based on 6 :orld Values Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and
projected to .
Ireland: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Israel: Estimates based on Central %ureau of Statistics Statistical Abstract of Israel, adjusted to account for
underrepresented religious groups.
Italy: Estimates based on :orld Values Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and
migrant populations; projected to , accounting for religious switching based on International Social Survey Pro-
gramme survey.
Ivory Coast: Estimates based on Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented
religious groups and projected to .
Jamaica: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious
groups; projected to .
Japan: Estimates based on Asian %arometer, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and
projected to .
Jordan: Estimates based on average of and Demographic and +ealth Surveys, adjusted to account for
underrepresented religious groups and projected to .
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
Kazakhstan: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Kenya: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Kiribati: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Kosovo: Estimates based on :orld %ank Living Standards Measurement Study, adjusted to account for un-
derrepresented religious groups and migrant populations; projected to .
Kuwait: Estimates based on analysis by the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life of the U.S.
State Department International Religious Freedom report.
Kyrgyzstan: Estimates based on Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented
religious groups and projected to .
Laos: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and projected to .
Latvia: Estimates based on Ministry of Justice report on Latvian religious organizations, adjusted to account
for underrepresented religious groups.
Lebanon: Estimates based on survey by the Pew Research Center’s Global Attitudes Project, adjusted to ac-
count for underrepresented religious groups.
Lesotho: Estimates based on Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented
religious groups and projected to .
Liberia: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Liechtenstein: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented
religious groups.
Lithuania: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups; projected to .
Luxembourg: Estimates based on European Values Study, adjusted for missing data.
Madagascar: Estimates based on Afrobarometer, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Malawi: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Malaysia: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Mali: Estimates based on 6 Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious
groups and projected to .
Malta: Estimates based on European Values Study, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Marshall Islands: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Mauritius: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and
projected to .
Mexico: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data, and to account for underrepresented religious
groups and underreporting of religious af¿liation for infants.
Moldova: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious
groups; projected to .
Mongolia: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Montenegro: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented
religious groups.
Morocco: Estimates based on survey by the Pew Research Center’s Global Attitudes Project, adjusted to ac-
count for underrepresented religious groups and projected to .
Mozambique: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and
projected to .
Namibia: Estimates based on 6- Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresent-
ed religious groups and projected to .
Nauru: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Nepal: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and projected to .
Netherlands: Estimates based on Generations and Gender Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented
religious groups and migrant populations; projected to .
New =ealand: Estimates based on 6 Census, adjusted to account for underreporting of religious af¿liation for
infants and underrepresented religious groups and migrant populations; projected to .
Nicaragua: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and
projected to .
Niger: Estimates based on 6 Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups and projected to .
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GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
Nigeria: Estimates based on Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups.
Niue: Estimates based on 6 Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups.
Norway: Estimates based on Generations and Gender Survey, adjusted for missing data and to account for
underrepresented and migrant populations; projected to .
Pakistan: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and pro-
jected to .
Palau: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Palestinian territories: Estimates based on survey by the Pew Research Center’s Global Attitudes Project,
adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Panama: Estimates based on Latinobarometro, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Papua New Guinea: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups
and projected to .
Paraguay: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and projected to .
Peru: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and projected to .
Philippines: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data, and to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups and underreporting of religious af¿liation for infants; projected to .
Poland: Estimates based on analysis by Marcin Stonawski (IIASA) of Central Statistical Of¿ce report on de-
nominations, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Portugal: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious
groups; projected to .
Puerto Rico: Estimates based on 6 Gallup :orld Poll, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepre-
sented religious groups; projected to .
4atar: Estimates based on citizenship data from Census and study “Faith on the Move: The Religious Af-
¿liation of International Migrants” by the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life.
Republic of Macedonia: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious
groups and projected to .
Republic of the Congo: Estimates based on AIDS Indicator Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented
religious groups.
Romania: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious
groups; projected to .
Russia: Estimates based on Generations and Gender Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented reli-
gious and projected to .
Rwanda: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and projected to .
Samoa: Estimates based on 6 Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and projected to .
San Marino: Estimates based on :orld Religion Database, supplemented by statistics from religious organizations.
Sao Tome and Principe: Estimates based on - Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted for missing data
and to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Senegal: Estimates based on - Malaria Indicator Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Serbia: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious
groups; projected to .
Seychelles: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Sierra Leone: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and
underreporting of religious af¿liation for infants; projected to .
Singapore: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Slovakia: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious
groups; projected to .
Slovenia: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious
groups; projected to .
Solomon Islands: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and
projected to .
South Africa: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups; projected to .
South Korea: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and un-
derreporting of religious af¿liation for infants; projected to .
Spain: Estimates based on Centro de Investigaciones Sociologicas %arometro Autonomico, adjusted to account
for underrepresented religious groups and migrant populations.
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79
GLOBAL RELIGIOUS LANDSCAPE
Sri Lanka: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and to esti-
mate religious composition for northern and eastern districts using the Census; projected to .
St. +elena: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
St. Kitts and Nevis: Estimates based on :orld Religion Database.
St. Lucia: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious groups.
St. Pierre and Miquelon: Estimates based on :orld Religion Database.
St. Vincent and the Grenadines: Estimates based on :orld Religion Database.
Swaziland: Estimates based on 6- Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepre-
sented religious groups and projected to .
Sweden: Estimates based on multiple waves (-) of the International Social Survey Programme, adjusted
to account for underrepresented religious groups and migrant populations.
Switzerland: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups; projected to .
Taiwan: Estimates based on Taiwan Social Change Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Tajikistan: Estimates based on Asia%arometer, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and
projected to .
Tanzania: Estimates based on - survey by the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion & Public Life,
adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Thailand: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and projected to .
Timor-Leste: Estimates based on - Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepre-
sented religious groups.
Togo: Estimates based on 6 Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups and projected to .
Tokelau: Estimates based on 6 Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Tonga: Estimates based on 6 Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious
groups; projected to .
Trinidad and Tobago: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepre-
sented religious groups; projected to .
Turkey: Estimates based on survey by the Pew Research Center’s Global Attitudes Project, adjusted to account
for underrepresented religious groups.
Turkmenistan: Estimates based on Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresent-
ed religious groups and projected to .
Turks and Caicos Islands: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrep-
resented religious groups.
Tuvalu: Estimates based on Census, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Uganda: Estimates based on 6 Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups and projected to .
Ukraine: Estimates based on Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented
religious groups and projected to .
United Kingdom: Estimates based on Of¿ce for National Statistics Annual Population Survey and Census
for Northern Ireland, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious groups.
United States: Estimates based on combined Pew Research Center surveys for adults and four waves (-
) of the National Opinion Research Center’s General Social Survey for children (age -), adjusted for missing
data and to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Uruguay: Estimates based on 6 Instituto Nacional de Estadica National Survey of +ouseholds, adjusted to ac-
count for underrepresented religious groups and projected to .
Uzbekistan: Estimates based on Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented
religious groups and projected to .
Vanuatu: Estimates based on Census, adjusted for missing data and to account for underrepresented religious
groups; projected to .
Vatican City: Estimates based on reports from the Ponti¿cal Council of Culture.
Venezuela: Estimates based on Americas%arometer, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
Vietnam: Estimates based on Asian %arometer, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups and
projected to .
=ambia: Estimates based on Demographic and +ealth Survey, adjusted to account for underrepresented reli-
gious groups and projected to .
=imbabwe: Estimates based on Afrobarometer, adjusted to account for underrepresented religious groups.
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PewResearchCenter A PE: FORUM ON RELIGION & PU%LIC LIFE REPORT
Global
Christianity
A Report on the Size and Distribution
of the World’s Christian Population
pew –templeton
global
project
religious
December futures