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David Werdiger
thinker; writer; Jew

The other important Jewish population statistic

The Jewish Agency have released their world Jewish population survey, and the results are hardly surprising, when you look at the raw figures. There are no prizes for guessing the “top ten“, and the top (Diaspora) countries remain USA, France, Canada, and UK by a long margin. There have been some small changes, but no significant movement over the last few years.

The mathematicians among us look deeper than raw figures, and it’s far more interesting to look at the relative Jewish population in various countries, and rank them that way. The proportion of Jews in a country can correlate with things like profile, influence and safety within that country.

As a starting point, consider that there are 7.5 billion people in the world, and Jews represent  0.2% of that vast total. If we exclude Asia and Africa, which have very low Jewish populations, the Jewish percentage jumps to 0.8%. So we might consider that figure a more meaningful global rate.

In that context, it’s no surprise that the US and Canada still dominate, with 1.5% and 1.0% respectively. But some of the others high on the list will surprise you:

Country Jewish Population Total Population % Jewish
USA 5,700,000 372,200,000 1.53%
Canada 390,500 37,060,000 1.05%
France 453,000 66,990,000 0.68%
Hungary 47,400 9,798,000 0.48%
Australia 113,400 24,600,000 0.46%
UK 290,000 66,040,000 0.44%
Argentina 180,300 44,270,000 0.41%
Belgium 29,200 11,350,000 0.26%
Netherlands 29,800 17,080,000 0.17%
Germany 116,000 82,790,000 0.14%
South Africa 69,000 56,720,000 0.12%
Russia 172,000 144,500,000 0.12%
Italy 27,500 60,590,000 0.05%
Brazil 93,200 209,300,000 0.04%
Mexico 40,000 129,200,000 0.03%

 

This is clearly a far more interesting story. I’m proud to see my home country of Australia up there, given it was a key destination for Jews following the Holocaust, and for South Africans over the last few decades. I’m puzzled by the ranking of Hungary (but I’m sure some locals will be able to provide the answer). Put a million or so Jews back into Russia, and it would have close to 1%.

There is so much more we can do with the figures when we look at them more creatively, such as quantifying large global immigration trends (e.g. aliya from Russia & Europe, exodus from South Africa), and the changes in relative Jewish and Muslim populations in these countries over the last decade or so.

Numbers can tell whatever story we want them to – it all comes down to how we look at them. At a given point in time, Jews are among the smallest of all peoples. But if we look back over thousands of years, we have lasted the longest.

About the Author
David is a public speaker and author, an experienced technology entrepreneur, strategic thinker and advisor, family office principal, philanthropist and not-for-profit innovator. Based in Melbourne Australia, David consults on high net worth family and business issues helping people establish succession plans, overcome family conflict, and find better work/life balance. He is an adjunct industry fellow at Swinburne University, with a focus on entrepreneurship. David incorporates his diverse background into his thinking and speaking, which cuts across succession planning, wealth transition, legacy, Jewish identity and continuity. He is passionate about leadership, good governance, and sports. David is married with five children.
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