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PEOPLE


In 2003 Poland's population stood at 38,111,000. This figure makes it the 29th most populated country in the world and the 8th in Europe. Before, it ranked seventh, but was surpassed by the independent Ukraine. It is forecast to regain the seventh place position roughly by 2030, surpassing Spain.
The first post-war census, held in February 1946, showed that 23.9 million people lived within the new Polish borders; in 1939, just before the war broke out, Poland's population was estimated at about 35 million. The country's losses due to military operations, fighting, extermination in death camps and forced deportations were among the highest in the world. An important factor was the dramatic shift of Poland's borders in 1945, as a result of which some one-fourth of the pre-war territory was lost to the Soviet Union.
Population density rose from nearly 80 people per sq km in 1946 to almost 124 in 2001. In Europe, this is the same density as Denmark's.
The first post-war years (1945-1950) saw intensive migrations. The new authorities pursued a program of populating the west and north territories. Most of the resettled people came from central and south-east Poland; others were repatriates from the terrains annexed by the Soviet Union or war emigrants returning from all over the world. It was a virtual exodus - between 1945 and 1947 about 5 million people settled in west and north Poland. While Poles returned to their country, Germans, Ukrainians and Belorussians emigrated or were deported - of the 23.9 million people who lived in Poland in 1946, non-Polish nationality was declared by 3.4 million.
In later decades (1950-1980) migrations were of an entirely different character. Following large-scale industrial investments undertaken by successive communist governments, people from industrially undeveloped regions moved to areas where extensive construction works were carried out (mainly the cities of Warsaw, Cracow, Katowice, Lodz and Poznan). This was accompanied by the migration of the rural population to urban centres (in the 1950s, 700,000 people moved to towns every year), which led to a dramatic change of the ratio of urban to rural population. While in 1946 about 68 percent of residents lived in rural areas and about 32 percent in towns, today the figures are respectively 38 and 62 percent.
The main population concentrations are the industrial agglomerations of Katowice (about 4 million people), Warsaw (about 2.5 million), Gdansk and Poznan (about 1.5 million each). The least populated areas are the north-east and north-west farmlands.


Facts

Poles account for 5.3 percent of all Europeans and for 0.65 percent of the world's population. Norway, whose area is nearly the same as Poland's (323,900 sq km), has 8.5 times fewer residents. The Opole province, Poland's smallest, is four times more populated than Iceland.

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