2010 Brazilian census

(Redirected from 2010 Brazilian Census)

The Brazilian 2010 Census was the twelfth and, as of March 2022, the most recent census of Brazil, organized by the Brazilian Institute of Geography and Statistics (IBGE), with the reference date being August 1, 2010. The population was found to be a record 190,755,799, an increase of 12.5%.[1][2] The population aged, with the median age now being 29, compared to 25 in 2000. The next census is to take place on August 1, 2022, after two cancelations, one to the COVID-19 pandemic, and the other due to budgetary restraints.

Twelfth census
of Brazil

← 2000 August 1, 2010 2022 →

General information
CountryBrazil
Results
Total population190,755,799 (Increase 12.5%)
Most populous ​stateSão Paulo (41,262,199)
Least populous ​stateRoraima (450,479)

Federal units' and regions' population edit

Federal Units edit

Population and population change in Brazil by federal unit
Rank Federal Unit Population as of

2000 census

Population as of

2010 census[3]

Change Percent change Percent of Brazil
1   São Paulo 36,969,476 41,262,199 4,292,723  11.6%  21.6% 
2   Minas Gerais 17,866,402 19,597,330 1,730,928  9.7%  10.3% 
3   Rio de Janeiro 14,367,083 15,989,929 1,622,846  11.3%  8.4% 
4   Bahia 13,066,910 14,016,906 949,996  7.3%  7.4% 
5   Rio Grande do Sul 10,181,749 10,693,929 512,180  5.0%  5.6% 
6   Paraná 9,558,454 10,444,526 886,072  9.3%  5.5% 
7   Pernambuco 7,911,937 8,796,448 884,511  11.2%  4.6% 
8   Ceará 7,418,476 9,883,640 1,033,905  13.9%  4.4% 
9   Pará 6,189,550 7,581,051 1,391,501  22.5%  4.0% 
10   Maranhão 5,642,960 6,574,789 931,829  16.5%  3.5% 
11   Santa Catarina 5,349,580 6,248,436 898,856  16.8%  3.3% 
12   Goiás 4,996,439 6,003,788 1,007,349  20.1%  3.2% 
13   Paraíba 3,439,344 3,766,528 327,184  9.5%  2.0% 
14   Espírito Santo 3,094,390 3,514,952 420,562  13.6%  1.8% 
15   Amazonas 2,813,085 3,483,985 670,900  23.8%  1.8% 
16   Rio Grande do Norte 2,771,538 3,168,027 396,489  14.3%  1.7% 
17   Alagoas 2,819,172 3,120,494 301,322   10.7%  1.6% 
18   Piauí 2,841,202 3,118,360 277,158  9.7%  1.6% 
19   Mato Grosso 2,502,260 3,035,122 532,862  21.3%  1.6% 
20   Distrito Federal 2,043,169 2,570,160 526,991  25.8%  1.4% 
21   Mato Grosso do Sul 2,074,877 2,449,024 374,147  18.0%  1.3% 
22   Sergipe 1,781,714 2,068,017 286,303  16.0%  1.1% 
23   Rondônia 1,377,792 1,562,409 184,617  13.4%  0.8% 
24   Tocantins 1,155,913 1,383,445 227,532  19.7%  0.7% 
25   Acre 557,226 733,559 176,333  31.7%  0.4% 
26   Amapá 475,843 669,526 193,683  40.7%  0.4% 
27   Roraima 324,152 450,479 126,327  39.0%  0.2% 
  Brazil 169,590,693 190,755,799 27,323,632  12.5%  100% 

Regions edit

Rank Region Population (2000) Population (2010) Population change Percent Change Percent of Brazil
1 Southeast 72,297,351 80,364,410 8,067,059 11.2%  42.1% 
2 Northeast 47,693,253 53,081,950 5,388,697 11.3%  27.8% 
3 South 25,089,783 27,386,891 2,297,108 9.1%  14.4% 
4 North 12,893,561 15,864,454 2,970,893 23.0%  8.3% 
5 Central-West 11,616,745 14,058,094 2,441,349 21.0%  7.4% 

Race and religion edit

The census found that the composition of Brazil was as follows: 47.5% were White, 43.4% were Pardo (Mixed-Race), 7.5% were Black, 1.1% were East Asian (Yellow in the census), 0.4% were Indigenous and 0.01% did not answer.

The census also asked people their religion: 64.6% were Catholics, 22.2% were Protestants, 8% had no religion, 2% followed Spiritism and 3.2% followed other religions.[4]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "IBGE Censo 2010". IBGE. Archived from the original on 26 May 2023. Retrieved 2022-03-29.
  2. ^ "Censo aponta 190,7 milhões de brasileiros em 2010". G1 (in Brazilian Portuguese). 2010-11-29. Archived from the original on 27 May 2023. Retrieved 2022-03-29.
  3. ^ "Sinopse Do Censo Demográfico 2010" (PDF). IBGE. August 1, 2010. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-02-04. Retrieved March 30, 2022.
  4. ^ "Características Gerais da População, Religião e Pessoas com Deficiência" [General characteristics of the population, religion, and people with disabilities] (PDF). IBGE (in Brazilian Portuguese). Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 November 2022. Retrieved April 3, 2022.