POPULATION
Population Distribution by
Age and Sex, 1982
Source: Based on information from
République d'Haïti, Santé et Population en Haiti, Port-au- Prince, Institut
Haïtien de Statistique et d'Informatique, 1986, 8.
Demographic Profile
The estimated population of Haiti
in 1989 was 6.1 million, with an average population density of 182 people per
square kilometer. Some 75 percent of the population lived in rural areas, while
only 25 percent remained in urban areas; this was one of the lowest
urban-to-rural population ratios in Latin America and the Caribbean. The
estimated annual population growth rate between 1971 and 1982 was 1.4 percent.
The crude mortality rate in 1982 was estimated to be16.5 percent, with a crude
birth rate of 36 percent (see table 11, Appendix A). A profile of the population
reveals that the majority of Haitians are young (see fig. 12).
Haiti has conducted only a few
censuses throughout its history. A survey taken during 1918 and 1919 indicated
that there were about 1.9 million people in the country. The first formal
census, taken in 1950, showed that the population had reached 3.1 million. The
second census, in 1971, indicated a population of 4.2 million. Critics have
argued that these censuses, along with one taken in 1982 (the final results of
which were still unavailable as of 1989), were deficient and that they seriously
undercounted the population.
Urban areas, particularly
Port-au-Prince, grew significantly in the 1970s and the 1980s. The annual
population growth rate of metropolitan Port-au-Prince was estimated to be 3.5
percent between 1971 and 1982, substantially above the 1.4 percent national rate
for that period. The growth rate for other urban areas was estimated at 2.4
percent. Metropolitan Port-au-Prince, which includes the capital and the suburbs
of Delmas and Carrefour, was by far the largest urban area, in 1982, with a
population of 763,188, or about 61 percent of the total urban population.
The population of the second largest city, CapHaïtien , was estimated to be
64,400 in 1982. The next two largest towns, Gonaïves and Les Cayes, had
estimated populations of slightly more than 34,000. Six other towns had
populations greater than 10,000.
The rural population, which grew
about 1 percent a year between 1971 and 1982, was estimated to be 3.8 million in
1982, 3.4 million in 1971, and 2.7 million in 1950. In 1982 there were about 464
people per square kilometer in rural areas, one of the highest population
densities in the Western Hemisphere.
Data as of December 1989