miércoles, 6 de abril de 2011

2010 Population census: demographic changes in Mexico

Published in Plaza de Armas (www.plazadearmas.com.mx), March 28th 2011.

In November last year, INEGI published the preliminary results of the 2010 Population and Housing Census. In the beginning of this month, they published the definitive results, and we have known a huge amount of information about our population, educational, economic and housing profiles.

From this huge amount of data, that will need a lot of study and analysis, I extracted some pieces that help us to identify interesting social trends and groups with specific needs.

We are more than 112 million Mexicans (11th place in the world). The population growth kept its decreasing rate that started in 1980. This trend has already changed our population pyramid profile, since we are reducing the base and slightly widening the top:


1990 Census
2010 Census
0-14 years population
38.6%
29.3%
More than 65 years population
4.2%
6.3%

However, Mexico is still a country of young people. Half of the population has 26 years or less, and we are living what is known as the “demographic bonus”; it means the period in which the change in the population pyramid creates the biggest working force (people from 14 to 64 years). This period is supposed to be a historic opportunity in terms of productivity, but the slow rate of employment recovery we are having is turning it into an important social risk due to the amount of young people without labor opportunities.

Half of our population concentrates in 7 States out of 32: Mexico, Distrito Federal, Veracruz, Jalisco, Puebla, Guanajuato and Chiapas. In the country, one of five Mexicans live in a State different to the one they were born, with such different behaviors as Quintana Roo (the state where Cancun is), where half of its inhabitants was born in other states, or Chiapas, where more than 96% of its inhabitants was born there.

This result is explained by our internal migratory movements. In the last 5 years, the 5 states that have proportionally received more people from other states are: Baja California Sur, Quintana Roo evidently, Colima, Nayarit and Querétaro. In the opposite situation is Distrito Federal (Mexico City), since it is the state from which more Mexicans emigrate, mainly to neighbor states, and within them, especially to the state of Mexico.

This produces very different population dynamics in our states. On one side, the states that have the biggest growth rate in the last 10 years are Baja California Sur, Quintana Roo and Querétaro. This implies big challenges in the creation of housing, infrastructure and employment; but it also creates opportunities in the growth of local markets for goods and services.

In the opposite situation we have Distrito Federal, Guerrero, Sinaloa, Zacatecas and Michoacán, since they have the slowest growth rate in the same period. This is a consequence of different structural situations in infrastructure, quality of life and economic perspectives, and their challenge is to break these dynamics that are not healthy in the long term.

In 20 years, the population in urban zones (more than 100,000 inhabitants) went from 44.4% to 47.8%. This is consistent with the world dynamic, where 51% of the population lives in urban environments. This has advantages considering the cost for developing the required infrastructure, but represents huge challenges regarding quality of life.

In a different perspective, another group that had an intensive growth in the last 10 years is the population born in another country, which duplicated and is currently close to one million inhabitants. This shows important changes in economic, social and cultural dynamics, and represents a social group that is growing at an unprecedented pace.

Another social group important to watch and to pay attention to is the handicapped population. It is true that in recent years we have gained a lot of consciousness and sensitivity about their conditions and needs, but we still have a lot of work to do referring to respect and equality. There are 5.8 million people in the country, where the most common disability is for moving or walking (58%), followed by seeing (27%) and hearing (12%). Obviously, each group has different needs.

Finally, there are 28.6 million homes in the country. Two important changes are the increase of homes with computers (went from 9.3% to 29.4% in the last 10 years), and in the ownership of cars (from 32.5% to 44.2%). This shows needs that people will keep satisfying and the creation of new opportunities.

Censuses definitely have valuable information, but it is our responsibility to analyze them, not only as a “still frame”, but as a movie when we compare different years. This will help us to understand the different dynamics and therefore identify risks and opportunities for business development.

Data for Querétaro
Variable
Value
Population
1,830,000 people (2.6% annual growth in 10 years)
Population born in other state or country
23.8%
Population that lived in another state 5 years ago
5.9%
Handicapped population
67,000 people
Homes
450,000 (4.2% annual growth in 10 years)
Homes with Computers
34% (above national average)

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario