In 2050, 7,9 percent fewer people will live in Montenegro than today.
Ovi not encouraging data at all they come from the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA).
According to the same report, Serbia will lose 33 percent of its population, Latvia 2 percent, Lithuania 35,8, and Moldova 37,6.
The population is expected to decrease by 21,9 percent in Bulgaria, 12,6 percent in Hungary, 10 percent in Greece, 8,2 in Bosnia and Herzegovina, 8,2 in Romania, 7,7 in Croatia and 4,4 in Macedonia.
Although the assumption that the "disappearance" of the population is due to the fact that more people die than are born, emigration and old age, this trend is not only characteristic of Central and Eastern Europe, as some of the most developed countries have also succumbed to it, such as Germany, where estimate that 12,8 percent of the population will live less in this country by 2050. The same case, only smaller percentages, apply to Finland and Denmark, as well as Portugal, the Czech Republic, Poland, Slovenia...
The only place in the Balkans where the population will increase in the next 30 years is Kosovo. According to projections, 17 percent more people will live there than today.
The "record holder" for the increase in the number of people will be Luxembourg, where, according to projections, by 2050, 48,3 percent more inhabitants will live than today.
The Top 5 countries whose population will increase include Ireland, Iceland, Sweden and Norway.
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