Gulf News

Dubai population exceeds 3.1m

Emirate’s total active daytime population jumps to 4,291,400

- Staff Report

Dubai’s population has risen 261 times from 12,000 in 1881 to 3.13 million now, Dubai Statistics Centre (DSC) revealed yesterrday.

Dubai’s population now stands at 3,136,400, jumping from 2,904,000 last year.

Registerin­g a growith of 1.1 per cent since the third quarter of last year, Dubai’s resident population grew by 232,400 till the third quarter of this year.

However, the city’s total active daytime population has jumped to 4,291,400, revealing that more than a million people enter Dubai daily from other emirates and countries to work and visit.

“The rise in population reflects Dubai’s growth as a dynamic economic and tourism hub. The population of non-resident workers and temporary residents in Dubai is currently 1,155,000, while the total active daytime population of the emirate is 4,291,400. As much as 37 per cent of Dubai’s active daytime population comes from outside the emirate,” said Arif Al Mehairi, DSC Executive Director.

According to the DSC data, the net increase in the number of temporary residents in Dubai in the third quarter of 2018 was 6.6 per cent compared to the same period in 2017.

The total active population in the third quarter of this year increased by 7.7 per cent from the same period in 2017.

In the total resident population, males account for 2,195,480 while females account for 940,920.

The updated DSC population data also shows that the 20-44 age group accounts for 66.45 per cent of the population.

Dubai’s population has crossed three million, registerin­g 7.7 per cent growth since last year, Dubai Statistics Centre (DSC) revealed yesterday.

The emirate’s population grew by 232,400 to reach 3,136,400 at the end of the third quarter of 2018, the DSC announced.

“The rise in population reflects Dubai’s growth as a dynamic economic and tourism hub. The population of nonresiden­t workers and temporary residents in Dubai is currently 1,155,000, while the total active daytime population of the emirate is 4,291,400. As much as 37 per cent of Dubai’s active daytime population comes from outside the emirate,” said Arif Al Muhairi, DSC Executive Director.

Al Muhairi added that the DSC adopts internatio­nal standards and methodolog­ies to monitor Dubai’s rapidly changing population profile.

“Data of both the resident and transient population of Dubai is crucial to identify infrastruc­tural, social and economic needs. It is necessary to provide planners, decisionma­kers and investors an integrated and holistic picture of the demographi­c realities and movement of people within the emirate,” he said.

According to the DSC data, the net increase in the number of temporary residents in Dubai in the third quarter of 2018 was 6.6 per cent compared to the same period in 2017.

Meanwhile, the increase in the total resident population was 1.1 per cent. The total active population in the third quarter of 2018 increased by 7.7 per cent from the same period in 2017.

Al Muhairi attributed this growth to the fact that Dubai is an internatio­nal commercial hub that attracts investors and talent from across the world in a wide diversity of sectors.

He noted that the exceptiona­lly high population growth rate is contrary to trends in any other parts of the world where growth is usually driven by natural population increase (births and deaths). Growth in Dubai’s Emirati population, in contrast, is driven by natural factors.

The population data from DSC also shows that males constitute 49.5 per cent of the Emirati population while females account for 50.5 per cent (89 males to 100 females).

In the total resident population of Dubai, males account for 2,195,480 while females account for 940,920. The vastly higher proportion of males in Dubai’s population (233 males to 100 females) is attributed to the fact that a majority of expatriate workers are males who live in Dubai without their families.

The updated DSC population data also shows that the 20-44 age group accounts for 66.45 per cent of the population. Of this, the 30-34 age group accounts for the largest share with 563,525 individual­s representi­ng 17.97 per cent of the total, followed by the 25-29 age group with 521,747 individual­s representi­ng 16.63 per cent of the total.

The 35-39 age group is third with 419,642 people or 13.38 per cent of the population of the 20-44 age group.

For the record

In the 19th century, specifical­ly in 1881, the Dubai population was estimated at 12,000. This number has grown 261 times in 137 years to cross three million in 2018.

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