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Percentage aged under 15 in 2021 for District/Unitary Authority
Over the last 150 years, the proportion of children has dropped steadily.
In general, areas whose populations were growing fast would have contained a
lot of children, because immigrants are generally young adults who then
tend to have children.
Local concentrations of young people in 1851 and 2011 were surprisingly similar,
focused on the south midlands with most of London lacking children.
However, at the start of the 20th century high proportions of children
were found in industrial areas, reflecting their recent rapid growth,
and in some parts of outer London.
R_AGE_0_14 = (AGE_GROUP:0_14 * 100.0) / TOT_POP:now
| Data Role | Source | Method |
|---|---|---|
| AGE_GROUP:0_14 | Office for National Statistics, ONS "Create a Custom Dataset" ("Age" (23 way) by "Sex") | Exact count provided by a government statistical office for this area |
| AGE_GROUP:0_14 | National Records of Scotland, Scotland's Census (Table UV102b - Age (20) by sex) | Exact count provided by a government statistical office for this area |
| AGE_GROUP:0_14 | Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency, Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency (Flexible Table Builder: "People by Age - 86 Categories" by "Sex") | Exact count provided by a government statistical office for this area |
| TOT_POP:now | Office for National Statistics, ONS "Create a Custom Dataset" ("Age" (23 way) by "Sex") | Sum of published counts for Output Areas or E.Ds. |
| TOT_POP:now | National Records of Scotland, Scotland's Census (Table UV102b - Age (20) by sex) | Sum of published counts for Output Areas or E.Ds. |
| TOT_POP:now | Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency, Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency (Flexible Table Builder: "People by Age - 86 Categories" by "Sex") | Sum of published counts for Output Areas or E.Ds. |