The statistics
published yesterday by the Registrar General for Scotland on the
Scotland’s Census website (http://www.scotlandscensus.gov.uk ) present further details on
population and households (Release 3D), from national to local level.
Key points
- Release 3D
Marital
and civil partnership status by sex by age
- In 2011,
most (98 per cent) people aged 16 to 24 in Scotland were single (never married
or never registered a same sex civil partnership). This proportion decreased
with age: it was 78 per cent for those aged 25 to 29, 54 per cent for those
aged 30 to 34, 28 per cent for those aged 35 to 49 and 9 per cent for those
aged 50 and over.
- Over half
of people aged 40 to 79 were married or in a registered same sex civil
partnership, with this proportion being highest for those aged 60 to 64, at 68
per cent. The 40 to 49 age group had the highest proportion of people who were
separated (6 per cent) and the 45 to 59 age group the highest proportion who
were divorced (15 per cent).
- 14 per
cent of people aged 65 to 69 were widowed, with that proportion increasing to
58 per cent for those aged 80 and over.
- Females
aged 16 to 39 were more likely to be married than males, with the largest
difference being in the 25 to 29 age group: 23 per cent of females were married
compared with 16 per of males. Of those aged 40 and over, males were more
likely to be married than females, with the gap being largest for those aged 80
and over: 54 per cent of males were married compared with 18 per cent of
females. There were higher proportions of widowed females than males in all age
groups, with the largest difference being in the 80 to 84 age group: 47 per
cent of females were widowed compared with 29 per cent of males.
Living
arrangements by sex by age
- Of the
4.3 million people aged 16 and over who lived in a household in Scotland at the
time of the 2011 Census, 56 per cent lived in a couple, including 45 per cent
living in a married or registered same-sex civil partnership and 11 per cent in
a cohabiting couple. The proportion of people living in a married or registered
same-sex civil partnership couple was higher than the proportion living in a
cohabiting couple for those aged 30 and over. 17 per cent of those aged 20 to
24 and 28 per cent of those aged 25 to 29 lived in a cohabiting couple,
compared with 3 per cent and 18 per cent respectively who were living in a
married couple.
Household
composition by sex by age
- Of the
5.2 million people who lived in a household in 2011, 76 per cent lived in a
“one family” household, 16 per cent lived in a one person household
and the remaining 8 per cent (423,905) lived in another type of household, for
example households comprising all full-time students or other unrelated adults
living together.
- Of those
aged 25 to 49, males (19 per cent) were more likely to live on their own than
females (11 per cent). For those aged 65 and over, 46 per cent of females lived
on their own compared with 25 per cent of males.
Household
composition by ethnic group of Household Reference Person
- In 2011,
35 per cent of the 2.4 million households in Scotland comprised one person
living alone. The proportion of households comprising one person living alone
varied from 16 per cent where the ethnic group of the household reference
person (HRP)[1] was ‘White: Polish’ to 54 per cent where it was
‘Black, Black Scottish or Black British’.
- The
proportion of households comprising married couples was highest for those where
the ethnic group of the HRP was ‘Indian, Indian Scottish or Indian
British’ (48 per cent, including 30 per cent with dependent children) and
‘Pakistani, Pakistani Scottish or Pakistani British’ (47 per cent,
including 35 per cent with dependent children). These compared with a Scotland
average of 32 per cent of households, including 14 per cent with dependent
children.
- While 9
per cent of all households in Scotland comprised cohabiting couples, this
proportion ranged from 2 per cent where the ethnic group of the HRP was
‘Pakistani, Pakistani Scottish or Pakistani British’ to 19 per cent
where it was ‘White: Polish’.
- Overall,
11 per cent of households in Scotland were lone parent households. This
proportion ranged from 4 per cent where the ethnic group of the HRP was
‘Indian, Indian Scottish or Indian British’ to 15 per cent where it
was ‘African, African Scottish or African British’.
Age of
youngest dependent child by household composition
- In 2011,
26 per cent (616,000) of households in Scotland contained one or more dependent
children, including 10 per cent where the youngest dependent child was aged
under 5. Of the 263,000 lone parent households, 65 per cent contained dependent
children, including 21 per cent where the youngest dependent child was aged
under 5.
Length of
residence in the UK by household size
- In 2011,
11 per cent of the household population in Scotland lived in households of five
or more people; for people who were born outside the UK this proportion was 15
per cent.
Length of
residence in the UK by household type
- While
just over 1 per cent of the household population in Scotland lived in
households comprising all full-time students, this proportion was 21 per cent
for those born outside the UK who had been resident in the UK for less than two
years.
Schoolchildren and full-time students Iiving
away from home during term time by sex by age
- In
Scotland, of the 42,000 schoolchildren and full-time students living away from
home during term time at the time of the 2011 Census, 14 per cent were aged
under 18, 68 per cent were aged 18 to 21 and 18 per cent were aged over
21.
- Females
comprised over half (55 per cent) of the schoolchildren and full-time students
living away from home during term time aged 18 to 21 but less than half of
those aged under 18 (48 per cent) or aged over 21 (48 per cent).
The other tables
included in Release 3D are mainly “Local Characteristics” (LC)
versions of tables that have already been published as “Detailed
Characteristics” (DC) tables in this or previous releases. They provide
information down to census output area (the lowest level of geography for which
census tables are produced) but generally include less detailed categories than
the DC version of the tables as a statistical disclosure control measure. The
tables are on:
- Marital
and civil partnership status by sex by age – Household Reference
Persons
- Marital
and civil partnership status by age
- Living
arrangements by age
- Household
composition by sex by age
- Age of
youngest dependent child by household type
- Household
composition by ethnic group of Household Reference Person
- Country
of birth by English language skills
- Length of
residence in the UK by household size
- Length of
residence in the UK by household type
All the data
contained in this release can be accessed on the Scotland’s Census
website (http://www.scotlandscensus.gov.uk ).
[1] The Household Reference Person (HRP) is chosen to act as a
reference point for producing further derived statistics and for characterising
a whole household according to the characteristics of the chosen reference
person.
Notes To
Editors
1. Remaining data
on other census topics will be released on a rolling basis during 2014. More
information on the census release timetable can be found in the Outputs
Prospectus linked from our website at http://www.scotlandscensus.gov.uk.
2. The
Scotland’s Census website (http://www.scotlandscensus.gov.uk) provides access to all the data
contained in Release 3D. The website also provides visualisation tools to aid
interpretation of the statistics.
3. Further
explanatory information on the 2011 Census can be found on thehttp://www.scotlandscensus.gov.uk website. Information on other
demographic statistics published by National Records of Scotland (NRS) can be
found on the NRS website (www.nrscotland.gov.uk)
4. Information on
the census results in England & Wales can be found on the Office for
National Statistics website at http://www.ons.gov.uk/ and information on the Northern Irish
Census results can be found on their website at http://www.nisra.gov.uk.
5. For further
information on the availability of more detailed data and tables, please
contact Statistics Customer Services using the contact details below.
Further
information about the statistics is available from:
Customer
Services
National Records
of Scotland
Ladywell
House
Ladywell
Road
Edinburgh EH12
7TF
Tel: 0131 314
4299
E-mail: customer@gro-scotland.gsi.gov.uk