Population:48,563,476 (July 2016 est.)
Arithmetic density: 91 people per sq. mile
Physiological density: 681
Agricultural density: 92.77
CBR:9.4 births/1,000 population
CDR:9.1 deaths/1,000 population
NIR: 0.5
Net Migration Rate: 8 migrant(s)/1,000 population
Population Growth Rate: 0.84%
IMR: 3.3 deaths/1,000 live births
TFR: 1.49 children born/woman
Population Ages <15: 66.7
Population Ages >15: 18.4
Dependency Rate: 85.1
Life Expectancy: 82
Males: 78.7 years
Females: 84.9 years
AIDS/HIV: 148,900
Population pyramids:
1995:
Arithmetic density: 91 people per sq. mile
Physiological density: 681
Agricultural density: 92.77
CBR:9.4 births/1,000 population
CDR:9.1 deaths/1,000 population
NIR: 0.5
Net Migration Rate: 8 migrant(s)/1,000 population
Population Growth Rate: 0.84%
IMR: 3.3 deaths/1,000 live births
TFR: 1.49 children born/woman
Population Ages <15: 66.7
Population Ages >15: 18.4
Dependency Rate: 85.1
Life Expectancy: 82
Males: 78.7 years
Females: 84.9 years
AIDS/HIV: 148,900
Population pyramids:
1995:
2015:
2025:
2050:
Demographic Transition Model (DTM)
The stage of the DTM that Spain is in is the fourth one. 9.4/1000 birth rates is low, 9.1/1000 death rates is low, and 0.49 natural increase rate is also low. It couldn't be in the first stage because the CBR in that stage is high, along with the CDR. The only thing related to the first stage is the low NIR. I also couldn't be the second stage because the CBR is high, the CDR is declining, and the NIR begins to increases. Thirdly, it couldn't be the third stage because the CBR is declining, the CDR is low, and the NIR begins to decrease. Lastly, it couldn't be the predicted fifth stage because the NIR isn't negative.