Key Insights:
- The Low Mortality scenario (LMRT) projects the highest population for Slovakia, maintaining around 4.65 million throughout 2096-2100.
- The Low Fertility scenario (LFRT) shows the most dramatic population decline, dropping from 3.76 million in 2096 to 3.71 million by 2100.
- The Baseline scenario (BSL) projects a gradual population decline from 4.56 million to 4.55 million over the period.
- Migration scenarios show significant variation: High Migration (HMIGR) maintains stable population around 4.66 million, while Low Migration (LMIGR) shows decline from 4.46 million to 4.45 million.
- The No Migration scenario (NMIGR) projects the steepest decline, falling from 3.84 million to 3.76 million by 2100.
Projection Scenarios:
- BSL (Baseline): Main projection scenario with current demographic trends
- HMIGR (High Migration): Scenario with higher migration rates
- LFRT (Low Fertility): Scenario with lower fertility rates
- LMIGR (Low Migration): Scenario with lower migration rates
- LMRT (Low Mortality): Scenario with lower mortality rates
- NMIGR (No Migration): Scenario with zero net migration
Demographic Indicator Forecast (NUTS0)
SK (Slovakia)Data-Level: SK Source: Eurostat - Demographic Indicator Forecast (NUTS0), Dataset: proj_23ndbi
Need more information?
Project manager:
Franziska Görmar
IfL - Leibniz Institute for Regional Geography, Germany
Email
This project is supported by the Interreg CENTRAL EUROPE Programme with co-financing from the European Regional Development Fund.
Find more information about the x-Inno Radar project on the Interreg CE projectwebsite.
x-Inno Radar is a project of:
Creative Region Linz & Upper Austria Gmbh,
The Regional Chamber of Commerce of the Karlovy Vary Region,
Padova Chamber of Commerce, Industry, Crafts and Agriculture,
Creative Industry Košice, n. o.,
BSC, Business support centre, ltd., Kranj,
Regional Development Agency in Bielsko-Biała,
Stebo Competence Centre Community Developmentm,
Association of Cultural and Creative Industries Chemnitz and Region (Creative Chemnitz),
Leibniz Institute for Regional Geography – Germany,
Otelo Cooperative
