1. Main points

  • The latest mid-year population estimates show that in the year to mid-2020 there were 700,700 live births and 669,200 deaths in the UK; this means that in mid-2020, natural change (the difference between the number of births and the number of deaths) was around 31,500.

  • In the calendar year of 2020, there were 90,173 deaths registered involving coronavirus (COVID-19) across the UK, taking the total number of deaths to 689,629 – an increase of 84,922 from 2019.

  • The number of births decreased in 2020, to 683,191, which was a fall of 29,489 from 2019; this means that natural change in the UK in 2020 was negative 6,438, the first time deaths have exceeded births in 44 years.

  • There were more deaths than births in Scotland and Wales in 2020, while there were more births than deaths in England and Northern Ireland.

  • In Scotland, there were more deaths than births each year since 2015, and for Wales this was the case each year since 2016; There were more births than deaths in England and Northern Ireland up to and including 2020.

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2. Latest official estimates of the UK population and natural change

Annual population change is driven by the number of live births and deaths, and the migration that takes place each year. Collectively, these are referred to as the components of change. The difference between the number of live births and the number of deaths is known as natural change. If the number of deaths exceeds the number of live births, then negative natural change occurs. This might not mean the total size of the population decreases, because migration can still lead to overall population growth through more people moving into an area than leaving it.

The latest official estimates of the UK population relate to the year ending June 2020 (referred to as mid-2020). They are based on 2011 Census data and rolled forward each year to take account of the births, deaths and migration that took place since the previous mid-year estimates. The data show that in the year to mid-2020 there were approximately 700,700 live births and 669,200 deaths in the UK. This means that in mid-2020, natural change (the difference between the number of births and the number of deaths) was approximately 31,500.

The year to mid-2020 includes the early part of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, so the number of deaths that occurred in this period was influenced by COVID-19 deaths from March to June 2020. The number of births that occurred in the year to mid-2020 is not affected by coronavirus because babies born in the year ending June 2020 were conceived before the start of the pandemic. However, birth registrations were suspended during the early part of the pandemic, and this affected how we collated the data. We estimate that the data in the mid-year population estimates cover at least 99.7% of births in the reference period.

The first eight months of the period covered by the latest mid-year population estimates relate to before the pandemic, so these estimates do not show the full extent of its impact on births and deaths in the UK. However, more recent data on births, and data on deaths based on the date the death was registered, are now available.

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4. Latest data on births and deaths in the UK

Publication of statistics on births and deaths in England and Wales, Northern Ireland and Scotland is the responsibility of the Office for National Statistics (ONS), the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency (NISRA) and National Records of Scotland (NRS) respectively. The data are comparable across the UK countries but the latest statistics from them are available at different times. In addition, the time it can take between a birth or death occurring and it being registered and subsequently recorded in the statistics can also differ. To provide timely statistics, provisional data are first made available, which can be revised later as more data are collected.

The 2020 births figures in this release are provisional and subject to change, except for data for Scotland, which are final. The deaths data for Northern Ireland are provisional and will be finalised in October 2021. However, we do not expect the provisional figures to change substantially when the final figures are released.

Table 1 shows the number of births, deaths, and natural change in the UK and its constituent countries in 2020. The table shows that there were more deaths than births in Scotland and Wales in 2020, while there were more births than deaths in England and Northern Ireland.

Figure 1 shows the steady decline in the number of births in the UK over recent years, and the marked increase in the number of deaths in 2020. It shows that there were more deaths registered in 2020 than in any year since the First World War. The increase in the number of deaths in 2020, combined with decreasing numbers of births, caused the rate of natural change to be negative for the first time in 44 years.

Figure 2 shows the ratio of births to deaths in each UK country over recent years, where a negative value denotes more deaths than births (negative natural change). It shows that in Scotland, there were more deaths than births each year since 2015, and for Wales, this was the case each year since 2016. There were more births than deaths in England and Northern Ireland up to and including 2020, although the difference between the numbers of births and deaths has been decreasing.

Our recent blog, How many people live in the UK? explains how best to interpret the latest statistics on the population and how we have been addressing the data collection issues the pandemic imposed.

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Contact details for this Article

Nigel Henretty
Health.Data@ons.gov.uk
Telephone: +44 (0)1329 447934