The total fertility rate in Guatemala decreased by 0.1 children per woman (-4.17 percent) compared to the previous year. This marks the lowest fertility rate during the observed period. The total fertility rate is the average number of children that a woman of childbearing age (generally considered 15 to 44 years) can hypothetically expect to have throughout her reproductive years. As fertility rates are estimates (similar to life expectancy), they refer to a hypothetical woman or cohort, and estimates assume that current age-specific fertility trends would remain constant throughout this person's reproductive years.Find more statistics on other topics about Guatemala with key insights such as total life expectancy at birth, crude birth rate, and infant mortality rate.
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Chart and table of the Guatemala fertility rate from 1950 to 2025. United Nations projections are also included through the year 2100.
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This scatter chart displays agricultural land (km²) against fertility rate (births per woman) and is filtered where the country is Guatemala. The data is about countries per year.
The crude birth rate in Guatemala saw no significant changes in 2022 in comparison to the previous year 2021 and remained at around 20.86 live births per 1,000 inhabitants. Yet 2022 saw the lowest rate in Guatemala with 20.86 live births per 1,000 inhabitants. The crude birth rate refers to the number of live births in a given year, expressed per 1,000 population. When studied in combination with the crude death rate, the rate of natural population increase can be determined.Find more statistics on other topics about Guatemala with key insights such as total fertility rate, total life expectancy at birth, and infant mortality rate.
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This bar chart displays fertility rate (births per woman) by currency and is filtered where the country is Guatemala. The data is about countries per year.
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This scatter chart displays fertility rate (births per woman) against alternative and nuclear energy (% of total energy use) and is filtered where the country is Guatemala. The data is about countries per year.
The total life expectancy at birth in Guatemala saw no significant changes in 2022 in comparison to the previous year 2021 and remained at around 68.67 years. But still, the life expectancy at birth reached its lowest value of the observation period in 2022. Life expectancy at birth refers to the number of years the average newborn is expected to live, providing that mortality patterns at the time of birth do not change thereafter.Find more statistics on other topics about Guatemala with key insights such as death rate, crude birth rate, and total fertility rate.
The infant mortality rate in Guatemala declined to 18.8 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2022. The infant mortality rate thereby reached its lowest value in recent years. The infant mortality rate refers to the number of infants who do not survive past the first year of life, expressed as a value per 1,000 births.Find more statistics on other topics about Guatemala with key insights such as total fertility rate, death rate, and total life expectancy at birth.
The health and survival of women and their new-born babies in low income countries is a key public health priority, but basic and consistent subnational data on the number of pregnancies to support decision making has been lacking. WorldPop integrates small area data on the distribution of women of childbearing age, age-specific fertility rates, still births and abortions to map the estimated distributions of pregnancies for each 1x1km grid square across all low and middle income countries. Further details on the methods can be found in Tatem et al and James et al..
Data for earlier dates is available directly from WorldPop.
WorldPop (www.worldpop.org - School of Geography and Environmental Science, University of Southampton). 2017. Guatemala 1km pregnancies. Version 2.0 2015 estimates of numbers of pregnancies per grid square, with national totals adjusted to match national estimates on numbers of pregnancies made by the Guttmacher Institute (http://www.guttmacher.org) DOI: 10.5258/SOTON/WP00491
The health and survival of women and their new-born babies in low income countries is a key public health priority, but basic and consistent subnational data on the number of live births to support decision making has been lacking. WorldPop integrates small area data on the distribution of women of childbearing age and age-specific fertility rates to map the estimated distributions of births for each 1x1km grid square across all low and middle income countries. Further details on the methods can be found in Tatem et al. and James et al..
Data for earlier dates is available directly from WorldPop.
WorldPop (www.worldpop.org - School of Geography and Environmental Science, University of Southampton). 2017. Guatemala 1km births. Version 2.0 2015 estimates of numbers of live births per grid square, with national totals adjusted to match UN national estimates on numbers of live births (http://esa.un.org/wpp/). DOI: 10.5258/SOTON/WP00383
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License information was derived automatically
This scatter chart displays fertility rate (births per woman) against nitrous oxide emissions (Mt of CO2 equivalent) and is filtered where the country is Guatemala. The data is about countries per year.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
The annual population growth in Guatemala declined to 1.4 percent in 2023. The population growth thereby reached its lowest value in recent years. Annual population growth refers to the change in the population over time, and is affected by factors such as fertility, mortality, and migration.Find more key insights for the annual population growth in countries like Panama and Honduras.
Attribution 4.0 (CC BY 4.0)https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
License information was derived automatically
This dataset is about countries in Guatemala per year, featuring 4 columns: country, date, fertility rate, and nitrous oxide emissions. The preview is ordered by date (descending).
96,0 (por cada 100000 nacidos vivos) in 2020. Maternal mortality ratio is the number of women who die during pregnancy and childbirth, per 100,000 live births. The data are estimated with a regression model using information on fertility, birth attendants, and HIV prevalence.
0,3 (%) in 2020. Life time risk of maternal death is the probability that a 15-year-old female will die eventually from a maternal cause assuming that current levels of fertility and mortality (including maternal mortality) do not change in the future, taking into account competing causes of death.
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The total fertility rate in Guatemala decreased by 0.1 children per woman (-4.17 percent) compared to the previous year. This marks the lowest fertility rate during the observed period. The total fertility rate is the average number of children that a woman of childbearing age (generally considered 15 to 44 years) can hypothetically expect to have throughout her reproductive years. As fertility rates are estimates (similar to life expectancy), they refer to a hypothetical woman or cohort, and estimates assume that current age-specific fertility trends would remain constant throughout this person's reproductive years.Find more statistics on other topics about Guatemala with key insights such as total life expectancy at birth, crude birth rate, and infant mortality rate.