Bulgaria - Rural population

The value for Rural population in Bulgaria was 1,685,936 as of 2020. As the graph below shows, over the past 60 years this indicator reached a maximum value of 4,948,578 in 1960 and a minimum value of 1,685,936 in 2020.

Definition: Rural population refers to people living in rural areas as defined by national statistical offices. It is calculated as the difference between total population and urban population. Aggregation of urban and rural population may not add up to total population because of different country coverages.

Source: World Bank staff estimates based on the United Nations Population Division's World Urbanization Prospects: 2018 Revision.

See also:

Year Value
1960 4,948,578
1961 4,862,618
1962 4,768,184
1963 4,666,744
1964 4,561,889
1965 4,450,351
1966 4,357,529
1967 4,279,849
1968 4,204,219
1969 4,129,877
1970 4,049,527
1971 3,981,375
1972 3,909,118
1973 3,838,830
1974 3,773,605
1975 3,700,908
1976 3,632,541
1977 3,572,033
1978 3,496,879
1979 3,423,053
1980 3,358,522
1981 3,325,011
1982 3,290,185
1983 3,253,796
1984 3,216,973
1985 3,172,930
1986 3,135,449
1987 3,108,935
1988 3,081,354
1989 3,015,064
1990 2,931,350
1991 2,873,111
1992 2,813,472
1993 2,767,905
1994 2,739,354
1995 2,708,267
1996 2,675,519
1997 2,640,661
1998 2,604,686
1999 2,571,814
2000 2,541,005
2001 2,469,539
2002 2,388,453
2003 2,342,006
2004 2,297,078
2005 2,252,963
2006 2,209,465
2007 2,167,172
2008 2,126,239
2009 2,087,198
2010 2,048,433
2011 2,010,650
2012 1,974,416
2013 1,938,841
2014 1,903,435
2015 1,866,995
2016 1,829,783
2017 1,792,408
2018 1,755,697
2019 1,719,734
2020 1,685,936

Development Relevance: The rural population is calculated using the urban share reported by the United Nations Population Division. There is no universal standard for distinguishing rural from urban areas, and any urban-rural dichotomy is an oversimplification. The two distinct images - isolated farm, thriving metropolis - represent poles on a continuum. Life changes along a variety of dimensions, moving from the most remote forest outpost through fields and pastures, past tiny hamlets, through small towns with weekly farm markets, into intensively cultivated areas near large towns and small cities, eventually reaching the center of a megacity. Along the way access to infrastructure, social services, and nonfarm employment increase, and with them population density and income. A 2005 World Bank Policy Research Paper proposes an operational definition of rurality based on population density and distance to large cities (Chomitz, Buys, and Thomas 2005). The report argues that these criteria are important gradients along which economic behavior and appropriate development interventions vary substantially. Where population densities are low, markets of all kinds are thin, and the unit cost of delivering most social services and many types of infrastructure is high. Where large urban areas are distant, farm-gate or factory-gate prices of outputs will be low and input prices will be high, and it will be difficult to recruit skilled people to public service or private enterprises. Thus, low population density and remoteness together define a set of rural areas that face special development challenges. Countries differ in the way they classify population as "urban" or "rural." Most countries use an urban classification related to the size or characteristics of settlements. Some define urban areas based on the presence of certain infrastructure and services. And other countries designate urban areas based on administrative arrangements. Because of national differences in the characteristics that distinguish urban from rural areas, the distinction between urban and rural population is not amenable to a single definition that would be applicable to all countries. Rural population methodology is defined by various national statistical offices. In the United States, for example, the US Census Bureau's urban-rural classification is fundamentally a delineation of geographical areas, identifying both individual urban areas and the rural areas of the nation. "Rural" encompasses all population, housing, and territory not included within an urban area.

Limitations and Exceptions: Aggregation of urban and rural population may not add up to total population because of different country coverage. There is no consistent and universally accepted standard for distinguishing urban from rural areas, in part because of the wide variety of situations across countries. Estimates of the world's urban population would change significantly if China, India, and a few other populous nations were to change their definition of urban centers. Because the estimates of city and metropolitan area are based on national definitions of what constitutes a city or metropolitan area, cross-country comparisons should be made with caution. To estimate urban populations, UN ratios of urban to total population were applied to the World Bank's estimates of total population.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Rural population is calculated as the difference between the total population and the urban population. Rural population is approximated as the midyear nonurban population. While a practical means of identifying the rural population, it is not a precise measure. The United Nations Population Division and other agencies provide current population estimates for developing countries that lack recent census data and pre- and post-census estimates for countries with census data.

Aggregation method: Sum

Periodicity: Annual

Classification

Topic: Environment Indicators

Sub-Topic: Density & urbanization