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What was the population of the Soviet Union in 1990?

What was the population of the Soviet Union in 1990?

In 1990 in the Soviet Union lived 287.728 million people. In 2012 in the former republics lived 290.587 million people, which is 0.98% increase. A pretty small increase for 22 years. The thing is, not all former Soviet republics have developed equally in next 22 years, since the collapse of Soviet Union.

What was Soviet Union population?

208,826,650
Results. The new census announced the Soviet Union’s population to be 208,826,650, an increase of almost forty million from the results of the last (disputed) census from 1939.

What was the population of the Soviet Union in 1939?

170,500,000
The last reliable population figure was that of the census of January 17, 1939, which showed a population of 170,500,000. Since that date, both before and after the war, there have been incorporated into the Soviet Union territories with a prewar population of about 24,000,000.

What was the population of the Soviet Union in 1970?

241,720,134 people
The Soviet population in 1970 was recorded as being 241,720,134 people, an increase of over 15% from the 208,826,650 people recorded in the Soviet Union in the 1959 Soviet census.

What was the population of the USSR in 1960?

214,062
Data

1950 181,077
1957 203,524
1958 207,035
1959 210,548
1960 214,062

What was the population of the Soviet Union in 1988?

An estimated 800,000 to 1,200,000 people died during the purges of the 1930s. According to the Russian Academy of Sciences the Soviet Union suffered 26.6 million deaths (1941-1945) during World War II, including an increase in infant mortality of 1.3 million.

What was the population of Russia before Stalin?

In January 1934, at the Seventeenth Congress, Stalin mentioned: ‘the growth of population in the USSR, which rose from 160 million at the end of 1930 to 168 million at the end of 1933’, thus forcing the figure from 8 to 10 million. His famous ‘We live better…’ is also dedicated to a powerful demographic increase.

What was the population of Yugoslavia?

23,528,230 people
This article is about the demographics of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia during its existence from 1945 until 1991. During its last census in 1991, Yugoslavia enumerated 23,528,230 people….Yugoslavia.

Republic/Province Yugoslavia
Population 23,528,230
Area (km2) 255,804
Density 92.6

What was the population of the USSR before ww2?

170.5 million
Change in the Soviet population and its trajectory 1941-1946, by age and gender. Russian estimates suggest that the total population of the Soviet Union in 1941 was 195.4 million people, before it fell to 170.5 million in 1946 due to the devastation of the Second World War.

What was the population of Russia in 1945?

170,000,000
(The population decline during the war years themselves was more drastic, from almost 200,000,000 on July 1, 1941, to some 170,000,000 in 1945.)

What was the population of the USSR in 1961?

217,563
Data

1950 181,077
1959 210,548
1960 214,062
1961 217,563
1962 221,016

What was the population of the Soviet Union in 1985?

Population Date Population 1982 270,000,000 1985 277,800,000 1990 290,938,469 1991 293,047,571

What’s the average population density in the USSR?

Population distribution. The average population density in the USSR is 12 persons per square kilometer. In the European part of the country it is 35 (early 1981), and there is considerable variation among the Union republics and various regions (see Table 7).

What was the population of the Russian Empire?

Number of inhabitants in thousands. Russia lost former territories of the Russian Empire with about 30 million inhabitants after the Russian Revolution of 1917 ( Poland: 18 million; Finland: 3 million; Romania: 3 million; the Baltic states: 5 million and Kars to Turkey: 400 thousand).

How many people died in the Soviet Union during World War 2?

The Soviet Union suffered greatly in the war, losing around 27 million people. Approximately 2.8 million Soviet POWs died of starvation, mistreatment, or executions in just eight months of 1941–42.

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Ruth Doyle