ReligiousCommitment FULL WEB
ReligiousCommitment FULL WEB
RECOMMENDED CITATION
Pew Research Center, June 13, 2018, “The Age
Gap in Religion Around the World”
1
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
2
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Acknowledgments
This report was produced by Pew Research Center as part of the Pew-Templeton Global Religious
Futures project, which analyzes religious change and its impact on societies around the world.
Funding for the Global Religious Futures project comes from The Pew Charitable Trusts and the
John Templeton Foundation.
This report is a collaborative effort based on the input and analysis of the following individuals:
Research Team
Conrad Hackett, Associate Director of Research Alan Cooperman, Director of Religion Research
Anne Fengyan Shi, Senior Researcher Stephanie Kramer, Research Associate
Joey Marshall, Research Associate Juan Carlos Esparza Ochoa, Data Manager
Urooj S. Raja, Intern Patricia Tevington, Intern
Sara Hodgson, Intern
Others at Pew Research Center who provided research guidance include James Bell, Gregory A.
Smith, Neha Sahgal and Jacob Poushter. Former Pew Research Center staff member Geneive Abdo
also contributed to this report.
Pew Research Center received valuable advice on this report from: Vern Bengston, emeritus
professor of gerontology and sociology at the University of Southern California; Joseph Bulbulia,
professor in the school of humanities at the University of Auckland; Michele Dillon, professor in
the Department of Sociology at the University of New Hampshire; Helen Hardacre, professor of
Japanese religions and society in the Department of East Asian Languages and Civilization at
Harvard University; Landon Schnabel, sociology doctoral candidate at Indiana University-
Bloomington; Philip Schwadel, professor in the Department of Sociology at the University of
Nebraska-Lincoln; and Anna Sun, associate professor of sociology head of the Department of
Sociology at Kenyon College.
www.pewresearch.org
3
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
While the analysis for this report was guided by our consultations with the advisers, Pew Research
Center is solely responsible for the interpretation and reporting of the data.
www.pewresearch.org
4
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Table of contents
Overview 5
1. Why do levels of religious observance vary by age and country? 13
2. Young adults around the world are less religious by several measures 30
3. How religious commitment varies by country among people of all ages 50
Appendix A: Methodology 59
Appendix B: Detailed tables showing overall figures and age breaks by country and measure 64
Appendix C: Detailed tables showing age gaps by country, religious group and measure 68
Appendix D: Question wording from each survey 81
Appendix E: Sources 89
www.pewresearch.org
5
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
In the United States, religious congregations have been graying for decades, and young adults are
now much less religious than their elders. Recent surveys have found that younger adults are far
less likely than older generations to identify with a religion, believe in God or engage in a variety of
religious practices.
But this is not solely an American phenomenon: Lower religious observance among younger adults
is common around the world, according to a new analysis of Pew Research Center surveys
conducted in more than 100 countries and territories over the last decade.
Although the age gap in religious commitment is larger in some nations than in others, it occurs in
many different economic and social contexts – in developing countries as well as advanced
industrial economies, in Muslim-majority nations as well as predominantly Christian states, and
in societies that are, overall, highly religious as well as those that are comparatively secular.
For example, adults younger than 40 are less likely than older adults to say religion is “very
important” in their lives not only in wealthy and relatively secular countries such as Canada, Japan
and Switzerland, but also in countries that are less affluent and more religious, such as Iran,
Poland and Nigeria.
While this pattern is widespread, it is not universal. In many countries, there is no statistically
significant difference in levels of religious observance between younger and older adults. In the
places where there is a difference, however, it is almost always in the direction of younger adults
being less religious than their elders.
www.pewresearch.org
6
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Younger adults tend to be less religious than older adults in many countries
*Countries in which older people are less religious than younger people. Religious affiliation: Chad, Ghana. Importance of religion: Georgia, Ghana.
Attendance: Armenia, Liberia, Rwanda. Prayer: Chad, Liberia.
Note: The number of countries with available data varies by measure.
Source: Pew Research Center surveys, 2008-2017.
“The Age Gap in Religion Around the World”
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Similar patterns also are found using three other standard measures of religious identification and
commitment: affiliation with a religious group, daily prayer and weekly worship attendance.
In 41 countries, adults under 40 are significantly less likely than their elders to have a religious
affiliation, while in only two countries (Chad and Ghana) are younger adults more likely to identify
with a religious group. In 63 countries, there is no statistically significant difference in affiliation
rates.
www.pewresearch.org
7
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Younger adults are less likely to say they pray daily in 71 of 105 countries and territories for which
Pew Research Center survey data are available, while they are more likely to pray daily in two
countries (Chad and Liberia). And adults under 40 are less likely to attend religious services on a
weekly basis in 53 of 102 countries; the opposite is true in just three countries (Armenia, Liberia
and Rwanda).
While the number of countries with a significant age gap shows how widespread this pattern is, it
does not give a sense of the magnitude of the differences between older and younger adults on
these measures.
In many countries, the gaps are relatively small. Indeed, the average gap between younger adults
and older adults across all the countries surveyed is 5 percentage points for affiliation, 6 points for
importance of religion, 6 points for worship attendance and 9 points for prayer.
But a substantial number of countries have much bigger differences. There are gulfs of at least 10
percentage points between the shares of older and younger adults who identify with a religious
group in more than two dozen countries – mostly with predominantly Christian populations in
Europe and the Americas. For example, the share of U.S. adults under age 40 who identify with a
religious group is 17 percentage points lower than the share of older adults who are religiously
affiliated. The gap is even larger in neighboring Canada (28 points). And there are double-digit age
gaps in affiliation in countries as far flung as South Korea (24 points), Uruguay (18 points) and
Finland (17 points).
A note on averages
To help make sense of an enormous pool of data, this report sometimes cites global averages of country-
level data. In calculating the averages, each country is weighted equally, regardless of population size.
Global averages, therefore, should be interpreted as the average finding among all countries surveyed, not
as population-weighted averages representing all people around the world.
www.pewresearch.org
8
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
*These include the following countries. Christians are largest religious group: Armenia, Belarus, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Botswana, Bulgaria, Cameroon,
Colombia, Croatia, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Georgia, Greece, Guatemala, Honduras, Hungary, Kenya, Liberia, Moldova, Mozambique,
Nigeria, Paraguay, Peru, the Philippines, Romania, Rwanda, Serbia, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Ukraine and Zambia; Muslims are largest religious
group: Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, Djibouti, Egypt, Guinea-Bissau, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Kazakhstan,
Kosovo, Kyrgyzstan, Lebanon, Malaysia, Mali, Morocco, Niger, Pakistan, Palestinian territories, Senegal, Tajikistan, Tunisia, Turkey and Uzbekistan;
Unaffiliated are largest religious group: China; Folk religions are largest religious group: Vietnam.
Source: Pew Research Center surveys, 2008-2017.
“The Age Gap in Religion Around the World”
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
9
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
1 For some major world religions, data are available only in a small number of countries. For example, when it comes to importance of religion,
Pew Research Center has large enough sample sizes to distinguish between older and younger Jews only in the United States and Israel, and
among Hindus only in the U.S. and India (though there were also enough Hindus surveyed in Bangladesh to include them in statistics about
overall religious commitment). But in the survey data that are available for five major world religions (Christians, Muslims, Hindus, Buddhists
and Jews) and the religiously unaffiliated population globally, it is rare for adults under 40 to be more religious than older adults within any
religious group.
www.pewresearch.org
10
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
But even if parts of the world are secularizing, it is not necessarily the case that the world’s
population, overall, is becoming less religious. On the contrary, the most religious areas of the
world are experiencing the fastest population growth because they have high fertility rates and
relatively young populations.
Previously published projections show that if current trends continue, countries with high levels of
religious affiliation will grow fastest. The same is true for levels of religious commitment: The
fastest population growth appears to be occurring in countries where many people say religion is
very important in their lives.
www.pewresearch.org
11
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
The fastest-growing countries are highly religious, while those with shrinking
populations tend to be less religious
Note: Graphic shows 105 of 106 countries and territories surveyed; United Nations does not report population projections for Kosovo.
Source: Pew Research Center surveys, 2008-2017. Population projections from United Nations Population Division, 2017.
“The Age Gap in Religion Around the World”
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
12
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
These are among the key findings of a new Pew Research Center analysis of surveys collected over
the last decade in 106 countries. The data analyzed in this report come from 13 different Pew
Research Center studies, including annual Global Attitudes Surveys as well as major studies on
religion in sub-Saharan Africa; the Middle East and other countries with large Muslim
populations; Latin America; the United States; Central and Eastern Europe; and Western Europe.
The number of countries analyzed varies by measure and type of comparison. While data are
available for as many as 106 countries depending on the measure, the number of countries with
reliable data on a particular religious group depends on the size of that group in each country’s
sample. For example, there are sufficient data to gauge the importance of religion among
Christians in 84 countries, and the sample sizes are large enough to compare responses among
older and younger Christians in 78 of those 84 countries.
Another limitation is that the measures of religious observance contained in many surveys around
the world and analyzed in this report may not be equally suitable for all religious groups. In
particular, rates of prayer and attendance at worship services are generally seen as reliable
indicators of religious observance within Abrahamic faiths (Christianity, Islam and Judaism), but
they may not be as applicable for Buddhism, Hinduism and other Eastern religions. Because of
these disparities, this report does not seek to compare levels of religious commitment between the
world’s major religions (e.g., to compare Christians with Buddhists or Muslims). Rather, the
primary focus is on age differences within religious groups and within countries or geographic
regions (e.g., comparing younger Christians with older Christians, or younger Indonesians with
older Indonesians).
This study, produced with funding from The Pew Charitable Trusts and the John Templeton
Foundation, is part of the Pew-Templeton Global Religious Futures project, a broader effort to
understand religious change, including the demographic patterns shaping religion around the
world. Previous reports have focused on gender and religion, religion and education and
population growth projections for major world religions.
The rest of this report looks in more detail at both age gaps in religious commitment (Chapter 2)
and overall levels of religious commitment around the world (Chapter 3), by four standard
measures: religious affiliation, importance of religion, attendance and prayer. Appendixes detail
the methodology and sources used, and include tables that show each of the four measures for
every country surveyed with data for overall levels of religious commitment, figures for adults over
and under 40, age gaps for the total population and age gaps by religious group. But, first, Chapter
1 examines theories about why levels of religious observance vary so markedly across different age
groups and different parts of the world.
www.pewresearch.org
13
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Rising education levels are often closely tied to economic development. Some theorists suggest
education could reduce religious identity and practice, although empirical findings about the
relationship between education and religion are complex.2 In societies where access to education is
spreading and the average number of years of schooling is rising, younger generations tend to
receive more education than their parents and grandparents did. Directly or indirectly, this
increase in education could be part of why younger adults are less religious.
Another theory is that differences in religious commitment reflect change during the life course.
Although young adults often start out less religious than their elders, they tend to become more
devout as they age, have children and begin to face their own mortality (or so the theory suggests).
These explanations are not mutually exclusive – it is possible that young people will become more
religious as they age, but will still be less religious than previous generations if their countries
become more affluent and stable. Pew Research Center surveys and other international data
provide some evidence for both societal and life-course influences on religious commitment.
2For example, among U.S. adults overall, more education is linked with lower levels of religious commitment. But looking solely at U.S.
Christians, those who are highly educated are, by some measures, more religious than Christians with less education. See the April 2017 Pew
Research Center report “In America, Does More Education Equal Less Religion?”
www.pewresearch.org
14
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Religion is very important to people in Africa, the Middle East, South Asia, Latin
America
% who say religion is very important in their lives
As the map above shows, the countries with the highest shares of people who say religion is very
important in their lives are in Africa, the Middle East, South Asia and Latin America, while those
with the lowest shares are in Europe, North America, East Asia and Australia.
www.pewresearch.org
15
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
This has led many researchers to observe that people in poorer parts of the world are, on average,
more religious than those in societies with advanced economies.3 Other indicators of economic
development – such as education, life expectancy and income equality – also tend to align with
measures of religious commitment.
Pew Research Center data show, for example, a clear correlation between life expectancy at birth
in a country and the percentage of its people who attend religious services weekly. That is, the
higher the life expectancy in a country, the less likely people are to attend services frequently.
Political scientists Pippa Norris and Ronald Inglehart, examining findings from the World Values
Survey, attribute the pattern of higher religious commitment in poor places to stark differences in
existential insecurity – that is, the degree of safety and security people feel as they go about their
daily lives.4
As their theory goes, in places where people face a constant threat of premature death due to
hunger, war or disease, feelings of vulnerability tend to drive people to religion, which in turn
provides hope and reduces anxiety. In countries with advanced economies, meanwhile, people are
more likely to feel safe – in part because technology and infrastructure investments in these
societies have helped people overcome many common health problems, cope with severe weather,
and deal with other types of emergencies that can cause existential anxiety. Norris and Inglehart
contend that people in these countries rely less on religion for emotional support or for
explanations of the unknown.
When new cohorts of adults grow up in societies with greater existential security than their
parents had – as may be the case in a country with improving economic conditions – young adults
may drift away from religion, producing the age differences described in this report. By the same
token, a decline in existential security within a country that falls into civil war or some other
calamity could help to explain some of the exceptions – places where younger adults are more
religious than their elders (see sidebar, page 40).
3 Diener, E., L. Tay and D.G. Myers. 2011. “The religion paradox: If religion makes people happy, why are so many dropping out?” Journal of
Personality and Social Psychology.
4 Norris, Pippa, and Ronald Inglehart. 2014. “Sacred and Secular: Religion and Politics Worldwide.”
www.pewresearch.org
16
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Note: Graphic shows 101 of 102 countries and territories surveyed; United Nations does not report life expectancy at birth for Kosovo.
Source: Pew Research Center surveys, 2008-2017. Life expectancy data from United Nations World Population Prospects (2017).
“The Age Gap in Religion Around the World”
www.pewresearch.org
17
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
The earthquake and its aftershocks struck between the 2009 and 2011 phases of the New Zealand Attitudes
and Values Study, a national longitudinal survey. This allowed researchers to compare levels of religious
affiliation before and after the quake, and they discovered that people living in the Canterbury region, where the
earthquake hit, seemed to become more religious.5
From 2009 to 2011, the Canterbury region showed a net gain in religious affiliation of 3.4%. That compares with
a 1.6% net drop in religious affiliation across the rest of New Zealand during that same period.
The researchers cautioned that explanations for conversion can be complicated; they did not directly link their
findings to a quest for comfort by the earthquake’s survivors, and they noted that some people in the affected
area turned away from religion. Still, the researchers described the “significant overall increase in religious faith”
among those affected by the earthquake as “remarkable.”
In a separate study, the economist Jeanet Sinding Bentzen found that people living in places where earthquakes
and other unpredictable natural disasters, such as tsunamis and floods, recently occurred are more religious
than people living elsewhere.6 Likewise, among victims of Hurricane Katrina, which battered the Gulf Coast of the
United States in 2005, 67% reported becoming more religious as a result of the trauma. 7 Survivors whose
religious commitment increased also had lower rates of mental illness and suicidal thoughts following the
hurricane than others.
This effect is not limited to natural disasters. Some survivors who were inside or in the immediate vicinity of the
World Trade Center buildings during the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, reported having stronger religious
faith after the attacks.8 There was also a short-lived increase in worship service attendance among the U.S.
general public immediately after the attacks.9
5 Sibley, Chris, and Joseph Bulbulia, Joseph. 2012. “Faith after an Earthquake: A Longitudinal Study of Religion and Perceived Health before
and after the 2011 Christchurch New Zealand Earthquake.” Plos One.
6 Bentzen, Jeanet Sinding. 2015. “Acts of God: Religiosity and Natural Disasters Across Subnational World Districts.” Unpublished.
7 Kessler, Ronald C., Sandro Galea, Russell T. Jones and Holly A. Parker. 2006. “Mental illness and suicidality after Hurricane
2008. “Religious and Spiritual Responses to 9/11: Evidence from the Add Health Study.” Sociological Spectrum.
www.pewresearch.org
18
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Religious commitment is lower in countries with higher education, higher GDP and greater
income equality
Several measures besides life expectancy at birth can be used to measure existential security
within countries. For example, education is a common proxy for prosperity and development.
Plotting the average number of years of formal schooling adults have completed in each country
alongside the share of adults who attend religious services at least weekly shows that more
education is associated with less frequent religious service attendance. Indeed, most countries in
sub-Saharan Africa have high percentages of adults attending religious services weekly and
relatively few years of completed schooling, on average. Conversely, European countries tend to
have lower rates of weekly attendance and more years of schooling.
www.pewresearch.org
19
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
In countries where people attend school longer, they go to church less often
Note: Graphic shows 94 countries and territories for which both education and religious attendance data are available.
Source: Pew Research Center surveys, 2008-2017. Education data from Pew Research Center’s 2016 report “Religion and Education Around the World.”
“The Age Gap in Religion Around the World”
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
20
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
In a similar way, a country’s wealth – as measured by per capita gross domestic product (GDP) –is
associated with its average rate of daily prayer. Countries with higher levels of wealth typically
have lower levels of prayer, and vice versa. In every surveyed country with a GDP of more than
$30,000 per person, fewer than 40% of adults say they pray every day – except in the United
States. On this measure, the U.S. (where 55% of adults pray daily) is a major outlier; of 102
countries studied, it is the only one with higher-than-average levels of both prayer and wealth.10
Regional clustering is apparent on this measure, too. Nearly every country in sub-Saharan Africa
has a per-person GDP under $10,000 and above-average rates of daily prayer. European countries
are scattered across the full range in terms of GDP, but the only one with a rate of daily prayer at
or above the global average is Moldova, which has Europe’s lowest GDP per capita. Similarly, the
only country in the Middle East-North Africa region where fewer than 50% of adults pray every
day is Israel, which also has a markedly higher GDP than the other countries in the region for
which survey data are available.
10Pew Research Center has not collected survey data in Gulf Cooperation Council countries. Oil and gas have brought great wealth to these
countries, which may also have high levels of religious commitment.
www.pewresearch.org
21
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Daily prayer is more common in the U.S. than in many other wealthy countries
Note: Graphic shows 102 of 105 countries and territories surveyed; the International Monetary Fund does not report gross domestic product (GDP)
figures for Kosovo, Palestinian territories or Puerto Rico.
Source: Pew Research Center surveys, 2008-2017. GDP data from the International Monetary Fund World Economic Outlook Database, October 2015.
“The Age Gap in Religion Around the World”
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
22
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Finally, it also appears that economic inequality is correlated with higher levels of religious
commitment. Societies with very unequal distribution of income tend to be more religious, while
those who live in relatively egalitarian societies say religion is less important, on average. (This is
measured by a country’s Gini coefficient, the most common measure of income inequality.11)
Overall, regardless of how religious commitment or prosperity are measured, the general pattern
holds: Religious commitment is lower in places where life is easier. And in places where life is
steadily becoming easier, the theory goes, younger adults generally are less religious than their
parents’ and grandparents’ generations.
11 The Gini index is a measure of how income is distributed in a population. Each country is assigned a Gini coefficient that can range from 0
(absolute equality) to 1 (absolute inequality). For example, if every person in a country earned the same amount, Gini would take a value of 0;
inversely, if one person in a country earned all of that country’s income, Gini would take a value near 1.
www.pewresearch.org
23
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Note: Graphic shows 96 of 106 countries and territories surveyed. Income inequality measured by 2015 Gini coefficient as calculated by the World
Bank, which does not report coefficients for 10 countries.
Source: Pew Research Center surveys, 2008-2017. Gini data from the World Bank.
“The Age Gap in Religion Around the World”
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
24
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
12Bengtson, Vern L., Merril Silverstein, Norella M. Putney and Susan C. Harris. 2015.“Does Religiousness Increase with Age? Age Changes
and Generational Differences Over 35 Years.” Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion. Also see Dillon, Michele, and Paul Wink. 2007. “In
the Course of a Lifetime: Tracing Religious Belief, Practice and Change.”
www.pewresearch.org
25
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Economists have applied profit motive – the idea that most decisions are inspired by the quest for
financial gain – to this question.13 One research team concluded, based on survey data and church-
membership records, that people in early adulthood focus more on making money than on
religion, and that religiosity tends to decline during this peak earning phase. In their later years,
this team posits, most people decide to build up the “religious capital” they believe will help them
after death.
Another theory, drawn from psychology, is that people actually develop new values during life’s
later decades, distinct from the values of midlife, leading to greater spirituality and satisfaction.14
This theory of “gerotranscendence” is based on survey research showing that many older people
report being less self-centered than they were previously, as well as feeling more connected to
others and institutions beyond themselves.
13Azzi, Corry, and Ronald G. Ehrenberg. 1975. “Household Allocation of Time and Church Attendance.” Journal of Political Economy.
14Tornstam, Lars. 2011. “Maturing Into Gerotranscendence.” The Journal of Transpersonal Psychology. While Tornstam did not explicitly state
that gerotranscendence leads to religiosity, he cited a master’s thesis written by Ling Yu and Hsieh in Taiwan that purports to show a
correlation.
www.pewresearch.org
26
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
This limitation is largely unavoidable because there is a dearth of longitudinal data on this topic in
many countries. In the U.S., however, researchers have collected data on religious commitment for
decades, and an in-depth look at the results suggests that younger Americans have not always been
less religious than their elders, challenging the notion that older people are naturally more
religious.
Gallup surveys dating back nearly 80 years show that in 1939, 39% of Americans ages 40 and older
and 36% of U.S. adults younger than 40 claimed to have attended church in the last week. Both
groups saw a rise in attendance in the postwar period – the early years of the Cold War – and by
the late 1950s, the modest age gap had closed. Over the next 10 years, as the U.S. experienced
rapid economic growth, the two age groups moved apart, and that gap has persisted through
several decades. If anything, the gap has grown in recent years as attendance rates among young
adults have fallen.
www.pewresearch.org
27
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
* Gallup changed the wording of the question measuring attendance slightly over the years; some of the variations include, “Did you happen to go to
church last Sunday?” and “Did you, yourself, happen to go to church (or synagogue) in the last seven days?”
Source: Pew Research Center analysis of 189 Gallup surveys conducted between 1939 and 2015. These surveys are archived at the Roper Center.
“The Age Gap in Religion Around the World”
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
28
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Looking at four age groups (rather than two) reveals even more clearly that religious service
attendance and age have not always correlated perfectly in the United States. From the early 1940s
through the 1960s, people in their 40s and 50s reported attending at least as frequently as those
over 60. And adults in their 30s saw a spike in attendance in the late 1950s, briefly matching or
exceeding the other groups. By the mid-1970s, the age groups had split into the pattern seen today:
Older adults are more religiously committed than younger adults.
Older Americans were not always the most frequent worship attenders
% of those ages ____ who attended religious services weekly by age group
Note: Gallup changed the wording of the question measuring attendance slightly over the years; some of the variations include, “Did you happen to go to
church last Sunday?” and “Did you, yourself, happen to go to church (or synagogue) in the last seven days?” Bold points represent years with available
data. For years with no data, values were imputed using linear interpolation. Lines were smoothed by taking three-year moving averages.
Source: Pew Research Center analysis of 189 Gallup surveys conducted between 1939 and 2015. These surveys are archived at the Roper Center.
“The Age Gap in Religion Around the World"
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
29
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Although these data do not rule out life cycle effects, they show that Americans of all ages
experienced a boom in religious attendance in the post-World War II years, and younger
Americans in the late 1950s reported attending at least as often as their elders. More recently,
younger Americans have reported less frequent religious service attendance than older adults.
Religious trends in the United States may be different from those in the rest of the world. Like
many of their peer nations, Americans enjoy a high standard of living, high rates of literacy and
education, a developed economy, and a representative democracy. However, compared with other
similarly developed countries, the U.S. has relatively high levels of economic inequality, infant
mortality and imprisonment rates.15 Americans also are more religious by most measures than
others in similarly developed economies.
15See Alexander, Michelle. 2012. “The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness.” See also Singh, Gopal K., and
Michael D. Kogan. 2007. “Persistent Socioeconomic Disparities in Infant, Neonatal, and Post-neonatal Mortality Rates in the United States,
1969–2001.” Pediatrics. Regarding income inequality: In 2015, the United States held the fourth-highest Gini coefficient of income inequality
among OECD countries. See the OECD Income Distribution Database for more information.
www.pewresearch.org
30
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
The vast majority of people Source: Pew Research Center surveys, 2008-2017.
around the world claim a “The Age Gap in Religion Around the World”
www.pewresearch.org
31
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Looked at another way, young adults are more likely to be religiously unaffiliated. This is
especially true in North America, where in both the U.S. and Canada younger people are less likely
to claim a religious identity. (These findings are in line with the rise of the religious “nones” in the
U.S., which is being driven largely by high levels of disaffiliation among young generations.) The
gap is also prevalent in Europe – in 22 out of 35 countries – and in Latin America, where it applies
in 14 out of 19 countries (including Mexico).
www.pewresearch.org
32
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
*These include the following countries. Christians are largest religious group: Armenia, Belarus, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Botswana, Bulgaria, Cameroon,
Colombia, Croatia, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ethiopia, Georgia, Greece, Guatemala, Honduras, Hungary, Kenya, Liberia, Moldova, Mozambique,
Nigeria, Paraguay, Peru, the Philippines, Romania, Rwanda, Serbia, South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, Ukraine and Zambia; Muslims are largest religious
group: Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, Djibouti, Egypt, Guinea-Bissau, Indonesia, Iran, Iraq, Jordan, Kazakhstan,
Kosovo, Kyrgyzstan, Lebanon, Malaysia, Mali, Morocco, Niger, Pakistan, Palestinian territories, Senegal, Tajikistan, Tunisia, Turkey and Uzbekistan;
Unaffiliated are largest religious group : China; Folk religions are largest religious group: Vietnam.
Source: Pew Research Center surveys, 2008-2017.
“The Age Gap in Religion Around the World”
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
33
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
There is a particularly large gap in religious affiliation – 28 percentage points – in Canada (49% of
adults under 40 and 77% of older adults are affiliated). The U.S. differential is smaller, though still
considerable at 17 points (66%
vs. 83%).
Younger adults are less likely to identify with a religion
In the average country out of in North America, Europe and Latin America
35 in Europe, there is a 10- In the average country surveyed, % of adults who are affiliated with a
point difference between the religious group, among those living in …
Averaging the national percentages in each of the 106 countries surveyed yields a global picture
that clearly reinforces the regional patterns: The share of younger adults in the average country
worldwide who claim a religion is 85%, compared with 90% among people ages 40 or older.16
16 To help make sense of an enormous pool of data, this report sometimes cites global averages of country-level data. In calculating the
averages, each country is weighted equally, regardless of population size. Global averages, therefore, should be interpreted as the average
finding among all countries surveyed, not as population-weighted averages representing all people around the world.
www.pewresearch.org
34
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Asking people about their Younger adults are less likely than older adults to
affiliation is a basic way to consider religion very important in 46 countries
measure a society’s overall In just two countries — Georgia and Ghana — older adults (ages 40+) are
attachment to religion. Asking less likely to say religion is very important in their daily lives
respondents how important
religion is in their lives goes
one step further, and may be
the most direct way to gauge
the intensity of that
connection. While this
question does not directly
measure any particular
religious practice, it correlates
well with more concrete
measures – and also has an
advantage in that it works
equally well across many Source: Pew Research Center surveys, 2008-2017.
“The Age Gap in Religion Around the World”
different religious groups,
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
which is not the case for some
specific measures of belief and
practice.
Younger adults in many different parts of the world are less likely than their elders to say that
religion is “very important” to them. This is a particularly prevalent theme in Latin America, where
age gaps appear in 14 out of 19 countries. It is also common in Europe, where 19 out of 35
countries show significant gaps. The United States and Canada also post larger-than-average
differences.
There are even significant age gaps in four out of nine countries surveyed in the Middle East-North
Africa region, where younger and older adults are almost universally affiliated.
In the Asia-Pacific region, there is no significant difference between age groups in 15 out of 20
countries surveyed, although – as on the affiliation question – South Korea and Japan again are
among the countries where the young are less religious. And in sub-Saharan Africa, younger and
www.pewresearch.org
35
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Note: Black bars indicate a difference greater than 5 percentage points. Differences are calculated
based on unrounded numbers.
Source: Pew Research Center surveys, 2008-2017.
“The Age Gap in Religion Around the World”
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
36
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
In a couple of countries (Georgia and Ghana), the age gap goes against the global pattern; in these
places, young adults are more religious than their elders by this measure. For example, in Ghana –
where young adults are also more likely to be affiliated – 91% of younger adults say religion is very
important in their lives, compared with 85% of older adults.
www.pewresearch.org
37
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
*These include the following countries. Christians are largest religious group: Armenia, Australia, Belarus, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Botswana, Brazil,
Bulgaria, Cameroon, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Denmark, Ethiopia, Finland, France, Guatemala, Honduras, Kenya, Liberia, Moldova,
Mozambique, Nicaragua, Norway, the Philippines, Russia, Rwanda, Serbia, Sweden, Tanzania, Uganda, United Kingdom, Venezuela and Zambia;
Muslims are largest religious group: Afghanistan, Albania, Azerbaijan, Bangladesh, Burkina Faso, Chad, Djibouti, Egypt, Guinea-Bissau, Indonesia, Iraq,
Jordan, Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Kyrgyzstan, Malaysia, Morocco, Niger, Pakistan, Senegal and Turkey; Unaffiliated are largest religious group: China, Czech
Republic and Estonia; Folk religions are largest religious group: Vietnam.
Source: Pew Research Center surveys, 2008-2017.
“The Age Gap in Religion Around the World”
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
38
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Muslims’ responses about the importance of religion in their lives show less of a consistent age
gap. Young Muslims in 10 countries surveyed
are less likely than their elders to ascribe a high Younger adults are rarely more religious
level of importance to religion, while in 32 other than older adults, regardless of faith
countries, there is no significant difference. Number of countries with each outcome, by religion
Religion less Religion less No
important to important to significant
younger adults older adults difference
Overall 46 2 58
Christians 37 1 40
Muslims 10 0 32
Unaffiliated 8 2 19
Hindus 0 0 2
Buddhists 1 0 4
Jews 0 0 2
Note: Younger adults are those ages 18 to 39; older adults are those 40
and older.
Source: Pew Research Center surveys, 2008-2017.
“The Age Gap in Religion Around the World”
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
39
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Globally, younger adults are less likely to attend prayer services than their elders in 53 out of 102
countries surveyed, while the opposite is true in just three – Liberia, Rwanda and Armenia. Liberia
is a major outlier by this measure; younger Liberians are much more likely than their older
compatriots to say they worship at least weekly (85% vs. 66%). One reason for this could be that
recent civil wars in Liberia may have affected levels of religious commitment differently among
older and younger Liberians (for more on this theory, see sidebar on page 40).
www.pewresearch.org
40
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Any number of possible factors may explain these exceptional cases, and each country has its own set of unique
circumstances. But it may be that conditions in these places were at least somewhat more stable when older
adults were coming of age, and the existential insecurity experienced by younger adults explains why they are
more religious. Indeed, research has found that religious identity is more likely to be influenced by events in early
adulthood than later.18
In Liberia, younger adults are more likely than older adults to pray every day and attend weekly religious services.
These age groups also differ in their affiliations: Younger Liberians are almost exclusively Christian or Muslim
(96%), but a considerable minority of Liberians ages 40 and older (29%) identify with an ancestral, animist, tribal
or other traditional African religion.19 Liberia has experienced two civil wars within the lifetimes of younger adults,
one from 1989 to 1997 and the other from 1999 to 2003. The survey in Liberia was conducted in 2009; all
adults under 40 in the survey would have been born after 1969, with most coming of age during wartime.
In addition, younger adults in Ghana – where clan-based violence over royal succession killed more than 2,000
people in the early 1990s – are more likely to be affiliated and to say that religion is very important. In Rwanda,
where government forces and militias killed over 500,000 people and displaced millions in 1994, younger adults
attend religious services more frequently than older adults. And in Chad, which has experienced violent conflicts
involving the government, rebel groups and neighboring countries for decades, younger adults are more likely to
identify with a religion and pray every day.
Not all of the examples are in Africa: Younger adults in Georgia say religion is very important to them more often
than older adults do. Georgia has experienced a secessionist war in Abkhazia and a conflict with Russia in the
past three decades, although the fall of the Soviet Union may also be a factor in religious differences by age.
Older adults in Georgia mostly came of age during the Soviet period, when religion was repressed – including by
Georgian-born leader Joseph Stalin.
At the same time, other countries have experienced conflict during the same period and do not show these types
of patterns. In Bosnia-Herzegovina and Israel, for example, any differences in which younger adults may appear
more religious are not statistically significant. And, in the Palestinian territories and the Democratic Republic of
Congo, younger adults have experienced a great deal of armed conflict but still follow the prevailing global pattern
of being less religious than their elders.
17 Sundberg, Ralph, and Erik Melander. 2013. “Introducing the UCDP Georeferenced Event Dataset.” Journal of Peace Research. See also
Croicu, Mihai, and Ralph Sundberg. 2017. “UCDP GED Codebook version 17.2.” Department of Peace and Conflict Research, Uppsala
University.
18 Kroger, Jane, Monica Martinussen and James E. Marcia. 2010. “Identity status change during adolescence and young adulthood: A meta-
Center survey, which offered respondents the explicit option to identify with folk religions, found a more substantial share (12% total) in the
folk religion category.
www.pewresearch.org
41
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
country’s age gap in worship attendance in this Note: Younger adults are those ages 18 to 39; older adults are those 40
and older.
overwhelmingly Muslim region is similar to the Source: Pew Research Center surveys, 2008-2017.
one in the predominantly Christian Latin “The Age Gap in Religion Around the World”
America region (38% vs. 48%) There also is a 6- PEW RESEARCH CENTER
point gap in the average country in the
religiously diverse Asia-Pacific
region (31% vs. 37%). Age gaps in worship attendance are largest in the
Middle East and Latin America, smallest in sub-
In Europe, weekly attendance Saharan Africa
is less common overall, but In the average country surveyed, % of adults who attend worship weekly,
among those living in …
there is still an age gap (10%
Ages Ages % point difference
vs. 16%). And Poland stands Region 18-39 40+ Younger less religious ◄
out as having by far the largest All 36% 42% 6 pts.
gap among all countries Middle East-North Africa 44 55 11
www.pewresearch.org
42
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Poland’s communist period; younger Poles did not experience this period firsthand, but it may
have had a lasting impact among the older generation.20
Adults under 40 in Colombia, another predominantly Catholic country, also are much less likely
than their elders to go to church regularly. And there are similar patterns in different religious
contexts in the Muslim-majority countries of Iran, Jordan and Tunisia.
20Mandes, Sławomir, and Maria Rogaczewska. 2013. “‘I don't reject the Catholic Church—the Catholic Church rejects me’: How Twenty- and
Thirty-somethings in Poland Re-evaluate their Religion.” Journal of Contemporary Religion.
www.pewresearch.org
43
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
*These include the following countries. Christians are largest religious group: Australia, Belarus, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Botswana, Bulgaria, Cameroon,
Croatia, Denmark, Ethiopia, Finland, Georgia, Ghana, Kenya, Moldova, Mozambique, Nigeria, Norway, Panama, Paraguay, the Philippines, Russia, Serbia,
Sweden, Tanzania, Uganda, United Kingdom and Zambia; Muslims are largest religious group: Afghanistan, Albania, Algeria, Azerbaijan, Chad, Iraq,
Kazakhstan, Kosovo, Kyrgyzstan, Malaysia, Niger, Pakistan, Palestinian territories, Turkey and Uzbekistan; Unaffiliated are largest religious group: China.
Czech Republic and Estonia.
Source: Pew Research Center surveys, 2008-2017.
“The Age Gap in Religion Around the World”
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
44
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
21 Within the Abrahamic faiths, there are gender patterns of religious commitment. Generally speaking, among Christians, women are more
likely to worship weekly; among Muslims and Israeli Jews, men are more likely to worship weekly, reflecting gender norms in each religion. See
Pew Research Center’s 2016 report “The Gender Gap in Religion Around the World.”
www.pewresearch.org
45
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
46
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
In sub-Saharan Africa, again, the average country’s gap is negligible at 3 percentage points, with
high rates of daily prayer among both younger and older adults (74% vs. 77%). Similar to religious
service attendance, Liberia bucks the global pattern – young Liberians are more likely than older
Liberians to pray daily. This is also the case in Chad, where young adults also are more likely to be
religiously affiliated.
www.pewresearch.org
47
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
22All percentages are rounded to the nearest integer. However, the gaps are calculated from unrounded figures. For example, an average of
44.4% of younger adults pray daily, compared with 53.6% of older adults, a difference of 9.2 points.
www.pewresearch.org
48
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
49
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
There is a similar age gap among Hindus in India (74% vs. 81%) – where more than 90% of the
world’s Hindus live – and an even larger one among Hindus in the U.S. (39% vs. 62%). (India and
the U.S. are the only countries with a sufficient
number of Hindu respondents to enable
Younger Christians pray less than their
comparisons between age groups.)
elders in 48 of 77 countries
Number of countries with each outcome, by religion
Among Jews in both the U.S. and Israel, there
Younger No
is no significant age gap in daily prayer, adults pray Older adults significant
less pray less difference
perhaps in part because Orthodox Jews – who Overall 71 2 32
tend to have more children – make up a
growing share of both Jewish populations, and Christians 48 1 28
thus a larger percentage of young Jewish Muslims 16 0 25
adults. Unaffiliated 10 1 18
Hindus 2 0 0
Buddhists 3 0 2
Jews 0 0 2
Note: Younger adults are those ages 18 to 39; older adults are those 40
and older.
Source: Pew Research Center surveys, 2008-2017.
“The Age Gap in Religion Around the World”
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
50
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
The four standard measures of religious commitment (affiliation, importance of religion, worship
attendance and frequency of prayer) used in this report may not be equally suitable for all religious
groups. In particular, rates of prayer and attendance at worship services generally are seen as
reliable indicators of observance within Abrahamic faiths – Christianity, Islam and Judaism – but
they may not be as applicable for Buddhism, Hinduism and other Eastern religions. In fact,
religious identity itself is often conceived of differently in East Asia, where observance is more a
matter of culture and tradition as opposed to membership in a particular group. (For more on
religious affiliation around the world, see the Pew Research Center’s 2015 report “The Future of
World Religions: Population Growth Projections, 2010-2050.”)
Nevertheless, by these measures, some global patterns are clear: The most religious countries are
in Africa, the Middle East, South Asia and Latin America, while people generally are less religious
in Europe, North America, East Asia and Australia. For a discussion of theories that attempt to
explain these regional variations, see Chapter 1.
www.pewresearch.org
51
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Overall, in the average country surveyed, 54% of adults say religion is very important in their lives.
However, levels of religious commitment vary widely around the world, as well as between
countries within the same geographic area. In the Asia-Pacific region, for instance, the share of
those who say religion is very important in their daily lives is highest in Muslim-majority countries
such as Pakistan, Indonesia and Afghanistan; in these countries, more than 90% say religion is
very important. Meanwhile, Japan (10%) and China (3%), where majorities of the population are
religiously unaffiliated, have the lowest shares of people who say this.
People in Europe and East Asia say religion is not very important to them
% who say religion is very important in their lives
www.pewresearch.org
52
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
There is also wide variation in Latin America, with the share of those who say religion is very
important ranging from 90% in Honduras to 29% in Uruguay. In general, religion is more
important to people in Central America and less important moving south toward Argentina and
Chile and north to Mexico.
Further to the north, U.S. respondents (53%) are about twice as likely as Canadians (27%) to say
that religion is very important.
The share of adults who consider religion to be very important in their lives is generally low in
Europe, where 23% of survey respondents in the average country say this. Bosnia-Herzegovina,
Georgia and Romania, where at least half of people say religion is very important, are above the
regional average on this measure, while in most countries in the Baltics, Scandinavia and Western
Europe, fewer than one-in-five say religion is very important in their lives.
In sub-Saharan Africa, on the other hand, the share of respondents who consider religion very
important in their daily lives is much larger, ranging from a high of 98% in Ethiopia to a low of
71% in Botswana. In all but two countries in the region (South Africa and Botswana), more than
80% of adults say religion is very important to them, yielding a regional average of 89% who say
this.
In the Middle East and North Africa, at least 70% of people say religion is very important to them
in all countries surveyed except Lebanon (57%) and Israel (36%).
www.pewresearch.org
53
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
How the importance of religion varies geographically among Christians and Muslims
Christians and Muslims – the two largest religious groups in the world – have substantial
populations in several regions, and Pew Research Center data permit analysis of how religious
commitment varies among members of these two groups in different parts of the world.
Christians in sub-Saharan Africa are most likely to say religion is very important in their lives,
while those in Russia and Western Europe are least likely to say this. Muslims, meanwhile, widely
rate religion as very important in their lives in Africa, the Middle East and South and Southeast
Asia; religion is less important to Muslims in Europe and the post-Soviet republics of Central Asia.
U.S. Muslims fall somewhere in between.
www.pewresearch.org
54
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Among Muslims, religion most important in Africa, Middle East, South Asia
% of Muslims who say religion is very important in their lives
www.pewresearch.org
55
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
About four-in-ten adults in the average country surveyed say they attend religious services at least
weekly. But this figure varies widely in different parts of the world, in part due to geographic
differences in religious commitment and in part due to religious norms. For example, unlike those
who practice Abrahamic faiths, Buddhists and Hindus do not observe weekly holy days, and
weekly communal worship services are not necessarily a part of their religious traditions.
Countries in sub-Saharan Africa with predominantly Christian or Muslim populations tend to have
the world’s highest levels of regular worship attendance; in the average country in that region, 79%
of adults say they attend services weekly. In 12 sub-Saharan African countries surveyed, eight-in-
ten or more adults are weekly attenders; no country surveyed in any other region reaches this
level.
www.pewresearch.org
56
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Attendance across Europe is at the other end of the spectrum. Aside from Poland, where 42% of
respondents attend weekly, every other European country in this analysis has rates of attendance
at or below 25%. Several countries in Scandinavia and Western Europe are in the single digits.
The other major regions fall somewhere in between these two extremes, with wide variation within
each region. In the Americas, weekly attendance ranges from 75% in Guatemala to 14% in
Uruguay. Slightly more than one-third of U.S. adults report attending weekly, compared with 20%
of Canadians.
In Asia and the Pacific, weekly attendance is highest in Indonesia (72%) and lowest in Uzbekistan,
Azerbaijan and China, all of which have rates of weekly attendance in the single digits. (In China,
just 1% of adults report attending religious services weekly.) And in the Middle East-North Africa
region, most Jordanians (64%) and Egyptians (62%) attend services weekly, while only 30% of
Israelis do.
www.pewresearch.org
57
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Compared with weekly worship attendance, daily prayer is somewhat more common around the
world. In the average country across 105 surveyed, about half of adults (49%) say they pray every
day, including majorities in sub-Saharan Africa (75%), the Middle East and North Africa (70%)
and Latin America (62%).
Prayer frequency varies widely across Asia. Fully 96% of Afghans and 87% of Iranians – both
overwhelmingly Muslim populations – report praying daily, reflecting a global pattern of high
levels of prayer in Muslim-majority countries (prayer is one of the Five Pillars of Islam). Daily
prayer is also very common in Hindu-majority India, where 75% pray daily, but it is much less
common in some other parts of Asia, such as Vietnam (14%) and China (1%).
Low levels of prayer can also be found across Europe, where, in the average country, fewer than
one-in-four respondents pray daily. In North America, meanwhile, Canadian respondents are less
than half as likely as their U.S. counterparts to pray daily (25% vs. 55%).
www.pewresearch.org
58
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
59
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Appendix A: Methodology
This appendix provides an overview of the data sources and analytic approaches used in the
report.
The general population data underlying this study come from 106 countries for religious identity,
106 countries for the importance of religion, 105 countries for prayer frequency and 102 countries
for religious service attendance. The countries where religious service attendance was measured
are home to 70% of the world’s
population (data on religious
service attendance were not Countries with Pew Research Center data on religious
collected in India, Japan or commitment
South Korea).23 The countries 106 countries are included in this study
23 Data on worship attendance by religious group are available for national populations that represent 85% of the world’s Christians, 84% of
the religiously unaffiliated, 82% of Jews, 74% of Muslims, 54% of Buddhists and 1% of Hindus (service attendance data were not collected in
India, where 94% of Hindus live).
24 Data on prayer frequency and the importance of religion by religious group are available for the national populations that represent 96% of
the world’s Hindus, 93% of the religiously unaffiliated, 85% of Christians and Muslims, 82% of Jews and 66% of Buddhists.
www.pewresearch.org
60
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Figures on various measures of religious commitment presented in this report come from a variety
of surveys carried out by the Pew Research Center between 2008 and 2017. These surveys use
consistent wording in questionnaires to measure religious commitment across years and
geographical areas:
Sub-Saharan Africa Survey (2008-2009). Results and methods reported in the 2010 report
“Tolerance and Tension: Islam and Christianity in Sub-Saharan Africa.”
Global Survey of Islam (2010-2011). Results and methods reported in the 2012 report “The
World’s Muslims: Unity and Diversity.” This report also used data gathered as part of the
sub-Saharan Africa survey.
Latin America Survey (2013-2014). Results and methods reported in the 2014 report
“Religion in Latin America: Widespread Change in a Historically Catholic Region.”
Asian Americans Survey (2012). Results and methods reported in 2012 report “Asian
Americans: A Mosaic of Faiths.”
Jewish Americans Survey (2013). Results and methods reported in 2013 report “A Portrait
of Jewish Americans.”
Religious Landscape Study (2014). Results and methods reported in 2015 report
“America’s Changing Religious Landscape.”
Religion in Israel Survey (2014-2015). Results and methods reported in 2016 report
“Israel’s Religiously Divided Society.”
Central and Eastern Europe Survey (2015-2016). Results and methods reported in 2017
report “Religious Belief and National Belonging in Central and Eastern Europe.”
Western Europe Survey (2017). Results and methods reported in 2018 report “Being
Christian in Western Europe.”
Muslim Americans Survey (2017). Results and methods reported in 2017 report “U.S.
Muslims Concerned About Their Place in Society, but Continue to Believe in the American
Dream.”
www.pewresearch.org
61
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Pew Research Center’s annual spring surveys that measure global attitudes in 25 to 40 countries
also collect some data on religion. They measure up to four indicators of religious commitment:
religious affiliation, prayer frequency, attendance frequency and how important religion is to a
person. This report uses data on these indicators collected during the 2013, 2015 and 2017 global
attitudes surveys for countries not covered in surveys that focus on religion. Details about methods
used in the 2013, 2015 and 2017 Global Attitudes surveys are available online.
Using all the above sources, researchers measured differences between younger and older adults in
religious affiliation in 106 countries as well as by other religious commitment measures in 102 to
106 countries. (The number of countries varies slightly for each indicator of religious commitment
because data on some measures were not collected in all countries.) Together, results from these
sources provide a comprehensive and up-to-date portrait of global age-related differences in
religious commitment.
In order to have sufficient statistical power to make comparisons, this report examines differences
between younger (under age 40) and older adults (ages 40 and older) only if the sample size for a
particular religious group within a country is at least 250 survey respondents. This report presents
as statistically significant those differences between younger and older adults for which we can
reject the null hypothesis of no differences between the two age groups with a 95% level of
confidence. These calculations also take into consideration the survey design effects, which make
estimates of significance more conservative. All differences at the country level have been tested
for statistical significance, and the country-level differences presented in this report are
statistically significant unless noted otherwise.
In this report, data from each country are weighted equally without taking population size into
account when calculating averages across all countries globally and in each region.
Tests of whether age gaps in this report are statistically significant rely on weights constructed for
each country that account for the design effects of clustered sampling units. However, appropriate
weights are not available to evaluate the statistical significance of age gaps aggregated at the level
of region, religion, or all countries combined. Therefore, to describe the statistical significance of
results aggregated beyond the country level, the report relies on tallies of the number of countries
in which there are statistically significant differences and countries in which there are no
statistically significant differences.
www.pewresearch.org
62
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
63
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Comparing counts of countries that follow each pattern under different age-group thresholds also
shows broad consistency. In the vast majority of countries where there is a significant difference,
younger adults typically affiliate less, attend religious services less, pray less and are less likely to
say that religion is very important, whether “younger” is defined as everyone under 30, 35, 40, 45,
50, or the country’s median age.
www.pewresearch.org
64
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Appendix B: Detailed tables showing overall figures and age breaks by country and measure
% indicating each type of religious commitment by country and age group. Global and regional averages represent
values for the average country surveyed (countries are weighted equally, not by population size).
www.pewresearch.org
65
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
66
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
67
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
68
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Appendix C: Detailed tables showing age gaps by country, religious group and
measure
The following table shows percentage point differences between older and younger adults on each measure of religious
commitment. Gray cells indicate that younger people are more religious than older people. Otherwise, the direction of
the number displayed shows percentage points by which older adults are more religious than younger adults.
Statistically significant differences are bolded. Average values for Hindus, Buddhists and Jews are not shown at the
global or regional levels because data are only available for a small number of countries. Regional averages are not
provided for North America because this region consists of only two countries, the U.S. and Canada (Mexico is
included in the Latin America-Caribbean region). Global and regional averages represent values for the average
country surveyed (countries are weighted equally, not by population size).
Appendix C: continued
Percentage point differences between older and younger adults on each measure of religiosity. Gray cells indicate that
younger people are more religious than older people. Otherwise, the direction of the number displayed shows
percentage points by which older adults are more religious than younger adults. Statistically significant differences
are bolded.
Appendix C: continued
Percentage point differences between older and younger adults on each measure of religiosity. Gray cells indicate that
younger people are more religious than older people. Otherwise, the direction of the number displayed shows
percentage points by which older adults are more religious than younger adults. Statistically significant differences
are bolded.
Appendix C: continued
Percentage point differences between older and younger adults on each measure of religiosity. Gray cells indicate that
younger people are more religious than older people. Otherwise, the direction of the number displayed shows
percentage points by which older adults are more religious than younger adults. Statistically significant differences
are bolded.
Appendix C: continued
Percentage point differences between older and younger adults on each measure of religiosity. Gray cells indicate that
younger people are more religious than older people. Otherwise, the direction of the number displayed shows
percentage points by which older adults are more religious than younger adults. Statistically significant differences
are bolded.
Appendix C: continued
Percentage point differences between older and younger adults on each measure of religiosity. Gray cells indicate that
younger people are more religious than older people. Otherwise, the direction of the number displayed shows
percentage points by which older adults are more religious than younger adults. Statistically significant differences
are bolded.
Appendix C: continued
Percentage point differences between older and younger adults on each measure of religiosity. Gray cells indicate that
younger people are more religious than older people. Otherwise, the direction of the number displayed shows
percentage points by which older adults are more religious than younger adults. Statistically significant differences
are bolded.
Appendix C: continued
Percentage point differences between older and younger adults on each measure of religiosity. Gray cells indicate that
younger people are more religious than older people. Otherwise, the direction of the number displayed shows
percentage points by which older adults are more religious than younger adults. Statistically significant differences
are bolded.
Appendix C: continued
Percentage point differences between older and younger adults on each measure of religiosity. Gray cells indicate that
younger people are more religious than older people. Otherwise, the direction of the number displayed shows
percentage points by which older adults are more religious than younger adults. Statistically significant differences
are bolded.
Appendix C: continued
Percentage point differences between older and younger adults on each measure of religiosity. Gray cells indicate that
younger people are more religious than older people. Otherwise, the direction of the number displayed shows
percentage points by which older adults are more religious than younger adults. Statistically significant differences
are bolded.
Appendix C: continued
Percentage point differences between older and younger adults on each measure of religiosity. Gray cells indicate that
younger people are more religious than older people. Otherwise, the direction of the number displayed shows
percentage points by which older adults are more religious than younger adults. Statistically significant differences
are bolded.
Appendix C: continued
Percentage point differences between older and younger adults on each measure of religiosity. Gray cells indicate that
younger people are more religious than older people. Otherwise, the direction of the number displayed shows
percentage points by which older adults are more religious than younger adults. Statistically significant differences
are bolded.
Appendix C: continued
Percentage point differences between older and younger adults on each measure of religiosity. Gray cells indicate that
younger people are more religious than older people. Otherwise, the direction of the number displayed shows
percentage points by which older adults are more religious than younger adults. Statistically significant differences
are bolded.
The analysis of religious identity in this report distinguished between those who identify with a
religion and those who do not. Pew Research Center surveys around the world allow respondents
to choose an identity from a list of common options or to name another identity. Those not
classified as identifying with a religion include those who say they are atheist, agnostic, have no
religion in particular, refuse to answer the religion question or say they don’t know. Below are
examples of the religious affiliation questions asked in various surveys.
Religious Belief and National Belonging in Central and Eastern Europe (CEEU)
What is your present religion, if any?
Christian
Muslim
Jewish
Buddhist
Baha’i
Hindu
Ancient religion/ancient religion or traditional religion/ancient Greek religion or Hellenistic
religion
Traditional or folk religion/Folk religion/Spiritist
Atheist
Agnostic
Old Believer
Something else (SPECIFY_____)
Nothing in particular
Don’t know
Refused
www.pewresearch.org
82
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Muslim
Sikh
Hindu
Buddhist
Atheist (do not believe in God)
Agnostic (not sure if there is a God)
Something else (SPECIFY____), or
Nothing in particular
Just a Christian
Don't know
Refused
www.pewresearch.org
83
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Buddhist
Hindu
Atheist (do not believe in God)
Agnostic (not sure if there is a God)
Something else (SPECIFY:______)
Or nothing in particular
Christian
Jewish and Christian (including Protestant, Catholic, Baptist, etc.; also includes “Messianic Jew,”
“Jews for Jesus,” and “Completed Jew”) (SPECIFY CHRISTIAN IDENTITY:_____)
Jewish and something else (SPECIFY WHAT SOMETHING ELSE IS:_____)
Don’t Know/Refused
www.pewresearch.org
84
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Hindu
Buddhist
Something else [SPECIFY:_______]
No religion, not a believer, atheist, agnostic
Don’t know/refused
www.pewresearch.org
85
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Jehovah’s Witness
Don't Know/Refused
www.pewresearch.org
86
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
(AAS) Aside from weddings and funerals, how often do you [IF NOT BUDDHIST OR HINDU
INSERT “ATTEND RELIGIOUS SERVICES”; IF BUDDHIST OR HINDU OR INSERT “GO TO
YOUR HOUSE OF WORSHIP”]... more than once a week, once a week, once or twice a month, a
few times a year, seldom, or never?
(RIS) Aside from special occasions like weddings, funerals and bar mitzvahs, how often do you
attend religious services at a synagogue, minyan or Havurah, more than once a week, once a week,
once or twice a month, a few times a year, such as for high holidays, seldom, or never?
(GSI) On average, how often do you attend the mosque for salat and Jumah Prayer, more than
once a week, once a week for Jumah prayer, once or twice a month, a few times a year especially
for Eid, seldom, or never?
(MAS, SSAS) On average, how often do you attend a (the) mosque or Islamic Center for salah and
Jum’ah Prayer, more than once a week, once a week for Jum’ah Prayer, once or twice a month, a
few times a year especially for the Eid, seldom, or never?
www.pewresearch.org
87
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
(WEUP) On average, how often do you attend a mosque or Islamic Center for salah or Friday
Prayer? More than once a week, once a week for Friday Prayer, once or twice a month, a few times
a year especially for Eid, seldom or never?
(CEEU, WEUP) Aside from religious services, do you pray several times a day, once a day, a few
times a week, once a week, a few times a month, seldom, or never?
(GA) People practice their religion in different ways. Outside of attending religious services, do you
pray several times a day, once a day, a few times a week, once a week or less, or never?
ASK IF MUSLIM AND PRAYS SEVERAL TIMES A DAY: Do you pray all five salah every day, or
not?
(GA) How often, if at all, do you pray: hardly ever, only during religious holidays, only on Fridays,
only on Fridays and religious holidays, more than once a week, every day at least once, or every
day five times?
(GSI, SSAS) People practice their religion in different ways. Outside of attending religious services,
do you pray several times a day, once a day, a few times a week, once a week, a few times a month,
seldom, or never?
ASK IF MUSLIM AND PRAYS SEVERAL TIMES A DAY: Do you pray all five salat every day, or
not?
(MAS, WEUP) Concerning daily salah or prayer, do you, in general, pray all five salah daily, make
some of the five salah daily, occasionally make salah, only make Eid prayers, or do you never pray?
www.pewresearch.org
88
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
(Identical wording across surveys: AAS, CEEU, GA, GSI, JAS, LAS, MAS, RLS, RIS, SSAS, WEUP)
How important is religion in your life – very important, somewhat important, not too important,
or not at all important?
www.pewresearch.org
89
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
Appendix E: Sources
This appendix lists the survey sources for estimates of the gender gap by country and religious
group for each of the four measures of religious commitment. Surveys used in the report include
Pew Research Center’s Sub-Saharan Africa Survey (SSAS), Global Survey of Islam (GSI), Latin
America Survey (LAS), Religion in Israel Survey (RIS), Muslim Americans Survey (MAS), Asian
Americans Survey (AAS), Jewish Americans Survey (JAS), the 2014 Religious Landscape Study
(RLS), Central and Eastern Europe Survey (CEEU), Western Europe Survey (WEUP), and the
spring 2013, 2015 and 2017 Global Attitudes surveys (GA2013, GA2015, GA2017). Due to data
limitations, it was necessary to use different sources for different measures of religious
commitment.
Source surveys
Survey abbreviation for each country, religion and measure combination
www.pewresearch.org
90
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
91
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
92
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
93
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
94
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
95
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org
96
PEW RESEARCH CENTER
www.pewresearch.org