Demographics of Cameroon | |
---|---|
Population | 29,321,637 (2022 est.) |
Growth rate | 2.75% (2022 est.) |
Birth rate | 35.53 births/1,000 population (2022 est.) |
Death rate | 7.73 deaths/1,000 population (2022 est.) |
Life expectancy | 63.27 years |
• male | 61.49 years |
• female | 65.09 years |
Fertility rate | 4.55 children born/woman (2022 est.) |
Infant mortality rate | 48.73 deaths/1,000 live births |
Net migration rate | -0.31 migrant(s)/1,000 population (2022 est.) |
Age structure | |
0–14 years | 42.34% |
65 and over | 3.11% |
Sex ratio | |
Total | 0.99 male(s)/female (2022 est.) |
At birth | 1.03 male(s)/female |
Under 15 | 1.02 male(s)/female |
65 and over | 0.74 male(s)/female |
Nationality | |
Nationality | Cameroonian |
Language | |
Official | English, French |
The demographic profile of Cameroon is complex for a country of its population. Cameroon comprises an estimated 250 distinct ethnic groups, which may be formed into five large regional-cultural divisions:
113,000[1] Igbo people live in Cameroon. The Cameroon government held two national censuses during the country's first 44 years as an independent country, in 1976 and again in 1987. Results from the second head count were never published. A third census, expected to take years to produce results, began on November 11, 2005, with a three-week interviewing phase. It is one of a series of projects and reforms required by the International Monetary Fund as prerequisites for foreign debt relief. The first results were published in 2010.[2]