Age dependency ratio, old (% of working-age population) - Country Ranking - Central America & the Caribbean

Definition: Age dependency ratio, old, is the ratio of older dependents--people older than 64--to the working-age population--those ages 15-64. Data are shown as the proportion of dependents per 100 working-age population.

Source: World Bank staff estimates based on age distributions of United Nations Population Division's World Population Prospects: 2019 Revision.

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Puerto Rico 32.84 2020
2 Barbados 25.10 2020
3 Cuba 23.31 2020
4 Trinidad and Tobago 16.83 2020
5 Costa Rica 14.88 2020
6 Grenada 14.74 2020
7 St. Vincent and the Grenadines 14.53 2020
8 St. Lucia 14.35 2020
9 Antigua and Barbuda 13.56 2020
10 Jamaica 13.44 2020
11 El Salvador 13.36 2020
12 Panama 13.14 2020
13 Dominican Republic 11.58 2020
14 The Bahamas 10.97 2020
15 Nicaragua 8.76 2020
16 Haiti 8.30 2020
17 Guatemala 8.18 2020
18 Honduras 7.72 2020
19 Belize 7.61 2020

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Development Relevance: Patterns of development in a country are partly determined by the age composition of its population. Different age groups have different impacts on both the environment and on infrastructure needs. Therefore the age structure of a population is useful for analyzing resource use and formulating future policy and planning goals with regards infrastructure and development.

Limitations and Exceptions: Because the five-year age group is the cohort unit and five-year period data are used in the United Nations Population Division's World Population Prospects, interpolations to obtain annual data or single age structure may not reflect actual events or age composition. For more information, see the original source.

Statistical Concept and Methodology: Dependency ratios capture variations in the proportions of children, elderly people, and working-age people in the population that imply the dependency burden that the working-age population bears in relation to children and the elderly. But dependency ratios show only the age composition of a population, not economic dependency. Some children and elderly people are part of the labor force, and many working-age people are not. Age structure in the World Bank's population estimates is based on the age structure in United Nations Population Division's World Population Prospects. For more information, see the original source.

Aggregation method: Weighted average

Periodicity: Annual