Case Study: South Africa's Population Distribution
Background
- The Republic of South Africa is the southernmost country of the African continent
- It has a land area of 1.22 million km2, with a population density of 50 per km2
- It is the 2nd most populous country south of the equator, after Tanzania, with 60.6 million people and the 24th most populous country in the world
- Approximately, 69.0 % of the population is urban
- The median age in South Africa is 27.6 years
- Average life expectancy is 60 years (men) and 66 years (women)
- A large plateau dominates the centre of the country, with rolling hills falling to plains and the coast
- The climate is mostly semiarid; subtropical along the east coast; with sunny days and cool nights
- South Africa has 3 capitals
- Pretoria (administrative capital)
- Cape Town (legislative capital)
- Bloemfontein (judicial capital) and 9 provinces
Distribution of population
- The main ethnic groups in South Africa are:
- Black African 81.4%,
- Coloured 8.2%
- White 7.3%
- Indian/Asian 2.7%,
- Other 0.4%
- The eastern half of the country is more densely populated than the west
- The province of Gauteng, has the highest concentration of people with 830 people per km2 (20% of South Africa’s population)
- With concentrations of people inland around and along the southern and south-eastern coast
Distribution of South Africa's population
- South Africa’s total GDP for 2022 was R6.6 trillion ($358 billion US) roughly US$6,776 per capita
- Gauteng province is the centre for economy, contributing 33.1% to national GDP in 2022
- Gauteng is the smallest province with the highest density and is the core region
- Northern Cape province has the lowest density of less than 4 people per km2
Population Density per Province in South Africa
Province |
Density (person per km2) |
Gauteng | 830.6 |
KwaZulu-Natal | 131.7 |
Mpumalanga | 67.24 |
Western Cape | 57.41 |
Limpopo | 52.27 |
Eastern Cape | 42.79 |
North West | 36.27 |
Free State | 22.83 |
Northern Cape | 3.636 |
Data from 2022 South Africa Census
Economic distribution
- Finance is the biggest industry in Gauteng and the Western Cape
- Mining dominates in Limpopo, Mpumalanga, North West and the Northern Cape
- KwaZulu-Natal’s major industry is manufacturing, although it has the country’s largest farming sector
- Government services - such as health, education and administrative spending - are focused in the Eastern Cape and Free State
Core-periphery
- Population size correlates with each province’s contribution to the national economy
- Gauteng has the largest and therefore, is the core of South Africa and dominates with finance
- The northeastern provinces dominate in secondary and tertiary economic activities of mining, manufacturing and government services
- The Western Cape is mostly tertiary economic activities with finance and tourism
- The economic periphery is to the north-west of South Africa:
- Includes the Northern Cape and Free State
- The Free State is mostly maize and Northern Cape is an emerging renewable energy hub
- South Africa has some of the highest levels of inequality and the development gap can be seen in a range of areas:
- 18.2 million people are living in extreme poverty of less than $2.15 a day
- 20% of the population holds over 68% of income, with 40% seeing just 7% of income
- Unemployment remains high, at around 35% and nearly 60% of the country’s youth (15-24 yrs) are unemployed
- Income per capita in Gauteng is twice that of rural provinces such as the Eastern Cape and Limpopo
- Electricity supply is regularly cut (reaching 9 hours a day in 2023), this impacts economic activity and increases operating costs for businesses, particularly those that rely on diesel generators
- 88.5% of the population live in formal housing and just 59.7% have access to piped water in their homes
- Poverty was an estimated 62.6% in 2022; the Eastern Cape is the poorest region
- Only 24% of rural households have access to piped water
- Literacy rates is 95.3% with Gauteng and Western Cape seeing literacy rates of 98.9%
- In some areas, the unemployment rate in rural areas is over 30%. This leads to:
- Increased poverty
- Difficulty attracting businesses to these regions
- The periphery is becoming even more dependent on primary economic activities to survive
- Regional inequality has led to significant rural-urban migration in South Africa