Death rate, crude (per 1,000 people) - Country Ranking - Africa

Definition: Crude death rate indicates the number of deaths occurring during the year, per 1,000 population estimated at midyear. Subtracting the crude death rate from the crude birth rate provides the rate of natural increase, which is equal to the rate of population change in the absence of migration.

Source: (1) United Nations Population Division. World Population Prospects: 2019 Revision. (2) Census reports and other statistical publications from national statistical offices, (3) Eurostat: Demographic Statistics, (4) United Nations Statistical Division. Popu

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Lesotho 13.69 2020
2 Central African Republic 11.72 2020
3 Chad 11.72 2020
4 Nigeria 11.42 2020
5 Sierra Leone 11.30 2020
6 Somalia 10.50 2020
7 Côte d'Ivoire 9.71 2020
8 South Africa 9.38 2020
9 Guinea-Bissau 9.27 2020
10 Mali 9.16 2020
11 Dem. Rep. Congo 9.12 2020
12 Equatorial Guinea 8.91 2020
13 Cameroon 8.88 2020
14 Eswatini 8.88 2020
15 Mauritius 8.70 2020
16 Benin 8.57 2020
17 Togo 8.20 2020
18 Guinea 8.03 2020
19 Mozambique 7.95 2020
20 Niger 7.82 2020
21 Angola 7.80 2020
22 Namibia 7.73 2020
23 Burkina Faso 7.71 2020
24 Zimbabwe 7.69 2020
25 Burundi 7.61 2020
26 The Gambia 7.55 2020
27 Liberia 7.26 2020
28 Ghana 7.15 2020
29 Comoros 7.06 2020
30 Sudan 7.05 2020
31 Mauritania 7.03 2020
32 Djibouti 6.92 2020
33 Eritrea 6.87 2020
34 Seychelles 6.80 2020
35 Gabon 6.60 2020
36 Congo 6.55 2020
37 Ethiopia 6.29 2020
38 Malawi 6.26 2020
39 Tunisia 6.26 2020
40 Uganda 6.24 2020
41 Zambia 6.22 2020
42 Tanzania 6.12 2020
43 Madagascar 5.82 2020
44 Egypt 5.75 2020
45 Botswana 5.72 2020
46 Cabo Verde 5.54 2020
47 Senegal 5.48 2020
48 Kenya 5.35 2020
49 Libya 5.12 2020
50 Morocco 5.06 2020
51 Rwanda 5.05 2020
52 Algeria 4.72 2020
53 São Tomé and Principe 4.71 2020

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Development Relevance: The crude mortality rate is a good indicator of the general health status of a geographic area or population. The crude death rate is not appropriate for comparison of different populations or areas with large differences in age-distributions. Higher crude death rates can be found in some developed countries, despite high life expectancy, because typically these countries have a much higher proportion of older people, due to lower recent birth rates and lower age-specific mortality rates.

Limitations and Exceptions: Vital registers are the preferred source for these data, but in many developing countries systems for registering births and deaths are absent or incomplete because of deficiencies in the coverage of events or geographic areas. Many developing countries carry out special household surveys that ask respondents about recent births and deaths. Estimates derived in this way are subject to sampling errors and recall errors.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: The crude death rate is calculated as the number of deaths in a given period divided by the population exposed to risk of death in that period. For human populations the period is usually one year and, if the population changes in size over the year, the divisor is taken as the population at the mid-year. The rate is usually expressed in terms of 1,000 people: for example, a crude death rate of 9.5 (per 1000 people) in a population of 1 million would imply 9500 deaths per year in the entire population. Subtracting the crude death rate from the crude birth rate provides the rate of natural increase, which is equal to the rate of population change in the absence of migration. Vital rates are based on data from birth and death registration systems, censuses, and sample surveys by national statistical offices and other organizations, or on demographic analysis. Data for the most recent year for some high-income countries are provisional estimates based on vital registers. The estimates for many countries are projections based on extrapolations of levels and trends from earlier years or interpolations of population estimates and projections from the United Nations Population Division.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual