The changing religious profile of Asia:
Hindus, Buddhists and Chinese Religionists
But number of Buddhists in East Asia is higher
Hindus, Buddhists and Chinese Religionists
We have described the changing share and distribution
of Christians and Muslims in different parts of Asia in our previous two notes,
XLII
and XLIII.
In this note, we present a similar analysis for the other major and older
religions of Asia—Hinduism, Buddhism and Chinese Religions. In the following note, we graphically depict these changes through maps of the distribution
and percentage share of these three religions in different regions and
countries of Asia.
During the last 110 years, Christians and Muslims
together have improved their share in the population of Asia from 18.6 to 34.1
percent. On the other hand, share of the three major religions that we describe
in this note has declined from nearly 80 percent to less than half of the
population, while 15 percent of the population has turned irreligious.
The three religions that we describe here are largely
confined to South Asia, Southeast Asia and East Asia. Total population of these
regions has grown considerable slower than that of the Muslim dominant regions
of Central and West Asia. East Asia, which has almost no Muslims, has grown the
slowest of all and at a rate that is far below other regions of Asia. This
differential growth of population, which also we describe in this note, has
partly determined the relative growth of different religious communities of
Asia.
Hindus (including Sikhs and Jains), who form about a
quarter of the population of Asia, are confined almost entirely to South Asia.
During the last 110 years, they have lost about 10 percentage points off their
share in South Asia and by a similar amount in India according to the Census
data. They have suffered a loss of about 10 percentage points in Sri Lanka and
Nepal also. The loss has been much bigger in Pakistan, where their share has
declined from nearly 17 to merely 1.3 percent, and in Bangladesh, where they
have declined from 33 to 9.5 percent of the population.
With these losses, Hindus have been contracting to the
boundaries of what currently constitutes India and they are losing their share
even within those shrunken boundaries.
Buddhists are concentrated in East Asia and in some of
the countries of Southeast Asia. Their share in East Asia had declined
considerably from around the middle of the twentieth century. But they have
recovered much of their share during the last decade. In 2010, they form 19
percent of the population of East Asia, which is somewhat more than their share
of 18.3 percent in 1900. Within East Asia, their share has improved in all
countries except Japan. The improvement is considerable in South Korea and
Mongolia.
Thus Buddhists in East Asia have not only maintained
their share in China, but they also seem to have expanded to newer regions and
groups in South Korea and Mongolia.
In Southeast Asia, where the Muslim share has
undergone a considerable rise, the share of Buddhists has declined from 31.7 to
26.8 percent. The decline is the most precipitous in Vietnam, where they formed
69.3 percent of the population in 1900 and are reduced to 49.2 percent now. In
Myanmar, their share has declined from nearly 87 percent to less than 75
percent and in Laos from 60.3 to 52.2 percent. There has been some decline in
Singapore and also in Malaysia during the last decade. But they have more or
less retained their share in the predominantly Buddhist countries of Thailand
and Cambodia, where they now form 87 and 85 percent of the population,
respectively.
Share of Buddhists in South Asia has improved
everywhere except in Nepal. In India, their share has gone up from nearly zero
in 1900 to 0.7 percent now. In Sri Lanka, they have improved from 59.2 to 68.9
percent. In Nepal, their share declined from 20.0 percent in 1900 to 8.2
percent in 2000 but has improved to 11.5 percent in the last decade. In Bhutan
also there was a decline from 79 percent in 1900 to 74 percent in 2000 and
there has been a sudden rise to 84 percent during the last decade. This rise in
Buddhist share in Nepal and Bhutan during the last decade and in Sri Lanka over
a longer period has been almost entirely at the cost of Hindus.
Share of Chinese Religionists in East Asia has
declined from 71.3 to 27.7 percent. This decline is mainly because of their
share in China declining from nearly 80 to just 31 percent with the strong rise
of irreligion there. That phase of expanding share of the Irreligious has now
passed and share of Chinese Religionists has begun to improve during the last
decade though not as strongly as that of the Buddhists.
In Taiwan also, there has been a decline in the share
of Chinese Religionists from 78 to 56 percent. But their share in South Korea
has improved from 8 to 11 percent.
Thus Buddhists have retained their presence in the
countries where they had a significant presence at the beginning of the
twentieth century and have expanded to newer countries. Share of Chinese
Religionists has declined in China. But it is mainly because of the rise of
irreligion there; that phenomenon has now begun to reverse. Share of Hindus has
declined in India, as well as in all other countries of South Asia. Their
decline is qualitative different from that of the Chinese Religionists in East
Asia. Decline of Hindus is driven by the rise of Muslims in India, Pakistan and
Bangladesh, of Buddhists in Sri Lanka and Bhutan, and of Buddhists and others
in Nepal. This decline, therefore, is unlikely to be reversed soon.
It would be instructive to read this note in conjunction
with the maps of the distribution and share of these three religions in
different regions and countries of Asia given in the following note.
Religious
profile of Asia
Population (in thousands) of
different religions in Asia
|
|||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
|
Total
|
956,145
|
2,146,877
|
3,180,422
|
3,682,366
|
4,164,252
|
Christians
|
21,897
|
101,384
|
248,713
|
312,833
|
342,011
|
Muslims
|
156,089
|
391,274
|
676,523
|
832,712
|
1,078,855
|
Hindus*
|
206,827
|
473,463
|
703,283
|
831,685
|
969,267
|
Buddhists
|
126,620
|
232,239
|
318,862
|
354,650
|
487,037
|
Chinese R**
|
380,930
|
238,082
|
354,637
|
392,315
|
449,385
|
Ethnic R
|
50,564
|
90,872
|
117,696
|
128,298
|
146,779
|
New Religionists
|
5,910
|
77,449
|
91,098
|
100,639
|
58,971
|
Non R/Atheists
|
54
|
537,963
|
670,327
|
730,538
|
619,610
|
Percent share of different
religions in the population of Asia
|
|||||
Christians
|
2.29
|
4.72
|
7.82
|
8.50
|
8.21
|
Muslims
|
16.32
|
18.23
|
21.27
|
22.61
|
25.91
|
Hindus*
|
21.63
|
22.05
|
22.11
|
22.59
|
23.28
|
Buddhists
|
13.24
|
10.82
|
10.03
|
9.63
|
11.70
|
Chinese R**
|
39.84
|
11.09
|
11.15
|
10.65
|
10.79
|
Ethnic R
|
5.29
|
4.23
|
3.70
|
3.48
|
3.52
|
New Religionists
|
0.62
|
3.61
|
2.86
|
2.73
|
1.42
|
Non R/Atheists
|
0.01
|
25.06
|
21.08
|
19.84
|
14.88
|
*Includes Jains and
Sikhs. **Includes Daoists and Confucians.
|
Another look at the religious profile of
Asia
In our previous two notes, we have given details of the changing
religious profile of Asia and the changing share and distribution of Christians
and Muslims in different regions and countries of the continent along with the
relevant Maps. In this note, we give details of the share and distribution of other
major religions of Asia, namely Hinduism, Buddhism and Chinese Religions. We
also give details of the growth and distribution of the Irreligious, whose
numbers have ballooned since the middle of the twentieth century. Before going
into these details, however, we once again present an overview of the changing
religious profile of Asia in the Table above.
Sharp decline in the share of religions
other than Christianity and Islam
As we have mentioned in our previous notes XLII
and XLIII,
Christianity and Islam have considerably increased their share in the course of
the twentieth century. The two together claimed adherence of 18.6 percent of
the population in 1900; that share in 2010 has risen to 34.1 percent. Share of the
other older religions of Asia has declined from more than 80 percent to less
than half of the population with another 15 percent having turned Irreligious.
Share of Chinese Religionists has
declined the most precipitously
The decline has been the most precipitous in the share of Chinese
Religionists. There are multiple reasons for that decline: There has been a
rise in the share of Christianity in East Asia; there has been an even greater
rise in the share of the Irreligious; and, total population of East Asia,
particularly of China, has grown much more slowly than other parts of Asia. In
the following, we shall discuss this decline of the Chinese Religionists in
detail, as we present the changing share and distribution of religions other
than Christianity and Islam in different regions and countries of Asia. But we
begin with a description of the relative growth of the total populations of
different regions of Asia.
Population of different regions of Asia
Total Population (in thousands) of
different regions of Asia
|
||||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
MF
|
|
Asia
|
956,145
|
2,146,877
|
3,180,422
|
3,682,366
|
4,164,252
|
4.36
|
South Asia
|
292,409
|
712,308
|
1,117,134
|
1,344,467
|
1,598,760
|
5.47
|
Southeast Asia
|
80,629
|
286,708
|
440,965
|
518,541
|
593,414
|
7.36
|
East Asia
|
532,545
|
986,644
|
1,350,465
|
1,485,217
|
1,573,970
|
2.96
|
Central Asia
|
20,921
|
75,229
|
121,687
|
146,309
|
166,112
|
7.94
|
West Asia
|
29,641
|
85,988
|
150,171
|
187,832
|
231,996
|
7.83
|
MF: Multiplication
factor of population between 1900 and 2010.
|
East Asia and South Asia have grown
slower than other regions
The population of East Asia and South Asia, the two most populous
regions of Asia, has grown much slower than the other regions of Asia. In the
last 110 years, population of East Asia has multiplied by less than 3 times and
that of South Asia by around 5.5 times, while that of the other three regions
has multiplied between 7 and 8 times.
Multiplication factor is related to
Muslim share
Region
|
%M
|
MF
|
Asia
|
25.91
|
4.36
|
South Asia
|
29.76
|
5.47
|
Southeast Asia
|
36.89
|
7.36
|
East Asia
|
1.37
|
2.96
|
Central Asia
|
94.25
|
7.94
|
West Asia
|
88.80
|
7.83
|
%M: Muslim share in 2010
|
The multiplication factor of the population of different regions seems
related to the share of Muslims in the population. Central Asia and West Asia,
where Muslims form, respectively, 94 and 89 percent of the population in 2010,
have both multiplied by nearly 8 times. Southeast Asia, with nearly 37 percent
Muslims in its population, has multiplied by 7.4 times. South Asia, with about
30 percent Muslims, has multiplied 5.5 times. And, East Asia, with only a few
Muslims in its population, has multiplied by less than 3 times.
China has grown slower than India
Population (‘000)
|
%Growth
|
|||
India
|
China
|
India
|
China
|
|
1900
|
229,900
|
472,000
|
--
|
--
|
1970
|
554,911
|
820,195
|
141.37
|
73.77
|
1990
|
850,785
|
1,141,120
|
53.32
|
39.13
|
2000
|
1,013,662
|
1,262,557
|
19.14
|
10.64
|
2010
|
1,224,614
|
1,348,932
|
20.81
|
6.84
|
Population of East Asia has grown much slower than not only the more
Muslim regions of Asia, but also South Asia. This is partly because of the
higher growth of the much larger Muslim population of South Asia. But it is
also because population of China has grown far slower than India because of the
more stringent population control measures of the former after 1950.
Share of different regions in the
population of Asia
Share of different regions in the
population of Asia (percent)
|
|||||
Total
|
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
Asia
|
100.00
|
100.00
|
100.00
|
100.00
|
100.00
|
South Asia
|
30.58
|
33.18
|
35.13
|
36.51
|
38.39
|
Southeast Asia
|
8.43
|
13.35
|
13.86
|
14.08
|
14.25
|
East Asia
|
55.70
|
45.96
|
42.46
|
40.33
|
37.80
|
Central Asia
|
2.19
|
3.50
|
3.83
|
3.97
|
3.99
|
Share of East Asia in total population
of Asia has declined
A consequence of the lower growth of population in East Asia is that the
share of the region in the population of Asia has declined drastically from
55.7 percent in 1900 to 37.8 percent in 2010. This is the one of the three
major reasons—besides the rise of Irreligion and that of Christianity—for the
large decline in the share of Chinese Religionists in Asia.
Share of other regions has improved
Share of all other regions in the population of Asia has improved. What
is of special significance is that South Asia also has improved its share from
30.6 percent in 1900 to 38.4 percent in 2010. This is partly because of the
relatively faster growth of the Muslim population whose share in the region has
increased by nearly 10 percentage points, as we have noticed earlier. But
non-Muslim populations of the region have also recorded considerable growth.
And therefore, share of Hindus in the population of Asia has indeed improved.
This is largely because the population control policies of India have neither
been as drastic, nor have these been implemented with the same rigour as in
China. This seems to have proved a blessing in disguise. Hindus continue to
form more than 23 percent of the population of Asia. More successful population
control in India would have resulted in the share of Hindus in Asia suffering a
considerable decline in this period.
Share
of different religions is partly determined by changes
in the total population of the regions they dominate
in the total population of the regions they dominate
The changes that have occurred in the shares of different religions,
especially of the Hindus, Buddhists and Chinese Religionist have been partly
determined by the relative growth in the total population of the regions and
countries where they have a significant presence. Of course, different rates of
growth of the populations of different communities and conversions to other
religions, especially Christianity, have also contributed to the changes in the
relative presence of different religions in Asia. Therefore, while looking at
the description and analysis of changing shares of different religions in Asia
and its regions, the relative growth of the total populations of different
regions described in this section should be kept in mind.
Share and distribution of different
religions in Asia
HINDUS (including Sikhs and Jains)
Number
(‘000) of Hindus in different region of Asia, 1900-2010
|
|||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
|
Asia
|
206,827
|
473,463
|
703,283
|
831,685
|
969,267
|
South Asia
|
205,504
|
469,706
|
694,321
|
820,315
|
960,594
|
Southeast Asia
|
1,307
|
3,611
|
8,233
|
10,334
|
7,079
|
West Asia
|
3
|
14
|
581
|
872
|
1,449
|
Distribution
of Hindus in different regions of Asia in percent
|
|||||
South Asia
|
99.36
|
99.21
|
98.73
|
98.63
|
99.11
|
Southeast Asia
|
0.63
|
0.76
|
1.17
|
1.24
|
0.73
|
West Asia
|
0.00
|
0.00
|
0.08
|
0.10
|
0.15
|
South Asia
Hindus are confined largely to South
Asia
Hindus are confined almost entirely to South Asia. In the analysis here,
we have added Sikhs and Jains to the Hindus. Of 206.8 million Hindus (including
Sikhs and Jains) in Asia in 1900, 205.5 million were in South Asia, leaving
only 1.3 million Hindus outside the region. In 2010, the situation remains
unchanged. Of 969.3 million Hindus, 960.6 million are in South Asia and less
than 9 million in other regions. In 1900, Hindus in South Asia formed 99.4
percent of Hindus in Asia; in 2010 that ratio is 99.1 percent.
Within South Asia they are getting
confined to India
Number
(‘000) of Hindus in countries of South Asia, 1900-2010
|
||||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
MF
|
|
South Asia
|
205,504
|
469,706
|
694,321
|
820,315
|
960,594
|
4.67
|
India
|
187,523
|
446,083
|
661,946
|
781,455
|
921,030
|
4.91
|
Bangladesh
|
9,373
|
11,175
|
14,018
|
16,016
|
14,121
|
1.51
|
Pakistan
|
4,320
|
890
|
1,422
|
1,870
|
2,335
|
0.54
|
Nepal
|
3,410
|
9,103
|
14,514
|
18,367
|
20,300
|
5.95
|
Sri Lanka
|
832
|
2,199
|
2,043
|
2,171
|
2,725
|
3.28
|
Within South Asia, Hindus are largely confined to what now forms the
Indian Union. Of 961 million Hindus in the region, 921 million are in India.
Hindus in India form nearly 96 percent of all Hindus in South Asia. In 1900, of
205.5 million Hindus in the region, 187.5 million forming 91 percent of the
total were in India. Of the remaining about 9 percent, nearly 7 percent were in
Pakistan and Bangladesh, the two units that were carved out of what formed
India up to the middle of the twentieth century. The contraction of Hindus
outside India is also visible in the multiplication factors given in the Table
above. Between 1900 and 2010, Hindus in India have multiplied 4.9 times. In
Bangladesh, their number has multiplied only 1.5 times and in Pakistan it has
contracted to nearly half. Their growth has been slower than the average also
in Sri Lanka. Only in Nepal, their numbers have grown more than the average growth
of Hindus in South Asia.
Hindus
have grown slower than the total
population in every country of South Asia
population in every country of South Asia
MFT
|
MFH
|
|
South
Asia
|
5.47
|
4.67
|
India
|
5.33
|
4.91
|
Bangladesh
|
5.19
|
1.51
|
Pakistan
|
6.82
|
0.54
|
Nepal
|
6.76
|
5.95
|
Sri Lanka
|
5.84
|
3.28
|
MF: Multiplication 1900-2010;
T: Total M: Hindu Population |
It is remarkable that in every major country of South Asia, Hindus have grown
slower than the total population of that country. In the region as a whole,
Hindus have multiplied 4.7 times, while the total population has multiplied by
a factor of 5.5. The gap between the growth of total and the Hindu population
is very high in Pakistan, Bangladesh and also Sri Lanka. The gap is
considerable even in the predominantly Hindu countries of India and Nepal.
Share
of Hindus has contracted in every country of South Asia
Percent share of
Hindus in the countries of South Asia
|
|||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
|
South
Asia
|
70.28
|
65.94
|
62.15
|
61.01
|
60.08
|
India
|
81.57
|
80.39
|
77.80
|
77.09
|
75.21
|
Bangladesh
|
32.69
|
16.76
|
12.81
|
12.40
|
9.50
|
Pakistan
|
16.97
|
1.35
|
1.19
|
1.19
|
1.34
|
Nepal
|
76.98
|
80.37
|
77.32
|
76.75
|
67.76
|
Sri Lanka
|
23.28
|
17.57
|
11.98
|
11.53
|
13.06
|
Bhutan
|
15.00
|
24.20
|
22.36
|
20.52
|
11.39
|
As a consequence of the relatively slower growth of Hindus, their share
in the total population of every country of South Asia and of the region as a
whole has suffered a decline during this period. The decline has been
calamitous, of course, in Pakistan and Bangladesh. But there has been a
considerable decline in India, Nepal and Sri Lanka also. Even in tiny Bhutan,
there has been a sudden decline in the presence of Hindus during the last
decade.
Recent improvement in the share of
Hindus in Sri Lanka
As seen in the Table above, there was a sharp decline in the share of
Hindus between 1900 and 1970 and again between 1970 and 1990. The first decline
was probably related to the events associated with the Independence of that
country. The second may have had something to do with the rise of Tamil
militancy in northern Sri Lanka. Share of Hindus has indeed improved during the
last decade that saw the final defeat of that militancy. The issue needs to be
studied more carefully.
Southeast Asia
Hindus in Southeast Asia
Outside South Asia, the largest number of Hindus is in Southeast Asia.
They have some presence in several countries of the region. But, their highest
presence is in Indonesia and Malaysia. Of about 7 million Hindus in the region
in 2010, 3.9 million are in Indonesia and 1.8 million in Malaysia. In addition,
there are 8.2 lakh Hindus in Myanmar and 2.9 lakh in Singapore. This accounts
for nearly all Hindus in Southeast Asia.
Decline in the share of Hindus in
Southeast Asia
Percent share of
Hindus in SE Asia
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
2000
|
2010
|
|
SE Asia
|
1.62
|
1.26
|
1.99
|
1.19
|
Indonesia
|
2.00
|
1.93
|
3.42
|
1.62
|
Malaysia
|
10.19
|
7.60
|
7.49
|
6.44
|
Singapore
|
7.48
|
6.75
|
5.51
|
5.69
|
Myanmar
|
2.78
|
0.94
|
1.98
|
1.71
|
Between 1900 and 2010, share of Hindus has declined in all countries of
Southeast Asia where they have a significant presence. The decline is
particularly high in Malaysia, where their share has come down from 10.2
percent to 6.4 percent of the population. The decline is also considerable in
Singapore, where Hindu presence has declined from 7.5 to 5.7 percent. In
Indonesia and Myanmar, there was a rise in the share of Hindus after 1970,
which has been followed by a sharp decline during the last decade.
Sharp decline in the number of Hindus in
the last decade
There has been a sharp decline in the absolute number and share of
Hindus in Indonesia and Myanmar in the last decade. In Indonesia, there were
7.3 million in 2000; their number in 2010 is 3.9 million. In Myanmar, their
number has declined from 9.0 to 8.2 lakh. This decline has resulted in the
absolute number of Hindus in Southeast Asia declining from 10.3 million in 2000
to 7.1 million in 2010. This is another issue that needs to be looked into more
carefully.
West Asia
Recent rise in the number of Hindus in
West Asia
There were hardly any Hindus in West Asia at the beginning of the
twentieth century and there were only 14 thousand of them even in 1970. Since
then, there has been a significant rise in the number of Hindus in this region.
Their number rose to above 5 lakh in 1990 and has now reached 1.45 million.
Almost all the Hindus are in Arabian
Peninsula
Nearly all of the Hindus in West Asia are in the Arabian Peninsula. Of
1.45 million of them in the region in 2010, 510 thousand are in the United Arab
Emirates, 364 thousand in Saudi Arabia, 171 thousand in Oman and 102 thousand
in Kuwait. In these countries, they have significant share of 6.8, 1.3, 6.2 and
3.7 percent, respectively. But Hindus in this region are mainly expatriate
workers without any meaningful citizenship rights.
There are few Hindus in Central Asia or in East Asia.
BUDDHISTS
Number
(‘000) of Buddhists in different region of Asia, 1900-2010
|
|||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
|
Asia
|
126,620
|
232,239
|
318,862
|
354,650
|
487,037
|
South Asia
|
3,599
|
14,065
|
21,139
|
24,565
|
28,231
|
Southeast Asia
|
25,565
|
90,140
|
123,143
|
141,234
|
158,923
|
East Asia
|
97,446
|
127,998
|
174,371
|
188,583
|
299,334
|
Distribution
of Buddhists in different regions of Asia in percent
|
|||||
South Asia
|
2.84
|
6.06
|
6.63
|
6.93
|
5.80
|
Southeast Asia
|
20.19
|
38.81
|
38.62
|
39.82
|
32.63
|
East Asia
|
76.96
|
55.11
|
54.69
|
53.17
|
61.46
|
Buddhists are concentrated in East Asia
and Southeast Asia
Buddhists are concentrated largely in East and Southeast Asia. Of the
Buddhists in Asia in 2010, 61.5 percent are in East Asia, 32.6 percent in
Southeast Asia and 5.8 percent in South Asia. In 1900, East Asia had an even
larger share of Buddhists. At that stage, nearly 77 percent of the Buddhists of
Asia were in East Asia; of the rest 20.2 percent were in Southeast Asia and
only 2.8 percent were in South Asia. Share of Southeast Asia in the Buddhists
of Asia has increased mainly because of the faster growth of population in that
region. Increase in the share of South Asia is both because of relatively
higher growth of population of the region and conversion of certain sections of
Indian population to Buddhism as we have discussed in an
earlier note. Below, we give further details of the distribution and
changing share of Buddhists in different regions of Asia.
Growth of Buddhists has been slower less
than that of Hindus
Between 1900 and 2010, the number of Buddhists in Asia has risen from
126 million to 487 million, thus multiplying by a factor of 3.85. Hindus in
Asia, on the other hand, have multiplied by a larger factor of 4.69 percent,
with their numbers rising from 207 million in 1900 to 969 million in 2010. Main
reason for this larger growth of Hindus is in the larger growth of the total
population of India as compared to China, as we have remarked earlier. But
though the number of Buddhists has grown more slowly than that of Hindus, the
former have retained their share in the countries of their dominance and have spread
to many new countries, while Hindus have contracted to within the current
boundaries of India and their share within India has also shrunk.
East Asia
Buddhism
was confined to China and Japan
At the beginning of the twentieth century, Buddhism in East Asia was
confined largely to China and Japan. Of 97 million Buddhists in the region
then, 60 million were in China and 36 million in Japan. There were only a few
Buddhists in other countries of the region.
Number
(‘000) of Buddhists in different countries of East Asia
|
||||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
MF
|
|
East Asia
|
97,446
|
127,998
|
174,371
|
188,583
|
299,334
|
3.07
|
China
|
60,000
|
54,000
|
94,000
|
105,829
|
208,066
|
3.47
|
Japan
|
35,666
|
64,685
|
68,606
|
69,931
|
71,307
|
2.00
|
South Korea
|
800
|
5,319
|
6,700
|
7,174
|
11,954
|
14.94
|
North Korea
|
200
|
288
|
320
|
365
|
369
|
1.85
|
Taiwan
|
580
|
3,679
|
4,280
|
4,686
|
6,145
|
10.59
|
Mongolia
|
200
|
27
|
465
|
599
|
1,493
|
7.47
|
It has spread to other parts of East
Asia
In the course of the last 110 years, Buddhism has spread to all other
major countries of East Asia except North Korea. Its spread has been
particularly spectacular in South Korea, Taiwan and Mongolia. Only in Japan,
there has been some contraction in the share of Buddhists, as we shall see
below.
Buddhist share in East Asia has remained
unchanged
Percent share of
Buddhists in East Asia
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
18.30
|
12.97
|
12.91
|
12.70
|
19.02
|
The share of Buddhists in the total population of East Asia has remained
nearly unchanged. They formed 18.3 percent of the population in 1900; their
share in 2010 is 19 percent. There was a decline in their share in the latter
half of twentieth century because of the rise of irreligion in China. However,
during the last decade, share of Buddhists has recovered to somewhat above the
level of 1900 with the recent recovery of faith in China.
Buddhists in China
Religious Profile of
China
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
12.71
|
6.58
|
8.24
|
8.38
|
15.42
|
Two-fifths of the Buddhists in Asia and in the world are in China, but
they form only 15.4 percent of the population of China. Their share was
somewhat lower at 12.7 percent in 1900. It dropped to 6.6 percent in 1970 with
the spread of irreligion under Marxist rule, but has risen considerably during
the last decade.
Buddhists in Japan
Percent share of
Buddhists in Japan
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
79.57
|
62.00
|
55.53
|
55.19
|
56.35
|
Unlike China, Japan is a predominantly Buddhist country. Nearly 80
percent of the population was Buddhist in 1900. That share declined to about 62
percent in 1970 and to 55.2 percent in 2000; it has slightly improved to reach
56.4 percent in 2010. This decline in the share of Buddhists is largely because
of the rise in what the Christian sources on International Demography—which we
have been using and have described in an
earlier note—call ‘New Religionists’. They form nearly 26 percent of the
population in 2010.
Buddhists in South Korea
Percent share of
Buddhists in S Korea
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
10.00
|
16.66
|
15.63
|
15.32
|
24.81
|
Buddhism has undergone its greatest expansion in South Korea. Number of
Buddhists there has multiplied nearly 15 times, rising from 800 thousand in
1900 to 12 million in 2010. Their share in the population has increased from
10.0 to 24.8 percent.
Buddhists in North Korea
In North Korea, Buddhists form less than 2 percent of the population. Much
of the population is Irreligious or follows Ethnic Religions and also some ‘New
Religions’.
Buddhists in Taiwan
Percent share of
Buddhists in Taiwan
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
18.14
|
25.07
|
21.12
|
20.92
|
26.47
|
More than a quarter of the population of Taiwan is Buddhist. Share of
Buddhists in Taiwan has improved from 18 percent in 1900 to 26.5 percent now.
There was some decline in their share between 1970 and 2000, because of the Irreligious
acquiring a share of about 4 percent in the population. The sharp rise in the share
of Buddhists during the last decade has been largely at the cost of Chinese
Religionists, as we see later.
Buddhists in Mongolia
Percent share of
Buddhists in Mongolia
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
38.31
|
2.15
|
20.98
|
22.49
|
54.17
|
As in South Korea, Buddhism has
experienced an expansion in Mongolia in the last 110 years. In 1900, Buddhists
had a share of 38 percent in the population; they have a share of 54 percent
now, making Mongolia the most Buddhist country of East Asia after Japan. The
sudden rise in the share of Buddhists in the last decade has been mainly at the
cost of Ethnic Religions. The low share of Buddhists in 1970 was because of the
sharp rise of irreligion in Mongolia. That trend was reversed by 1990.
Thus in East Asia, Buddhism has
experienced an expansion during this period. The expansion is not so much in its
share of the total population, but more in its area of influence, which has
expanded to cover South Korea and Mongolia. Many of the followers of Ethnic
Religions in these countries have turned to Buddhism in this period.
Southeast Asia
Number (‘000) of Buddhists in different
countries of Southeast Asia
|
|||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
|
Southeast Asia
|
25,565
|
90,140
|
123,143
|
141,234
|
158,923
|
Thailand
|
5,488
|
32,931
|
47,639
|
52,383
|
60,298
|
Myanmar
|
9,055
|
21,309
|
29,358
|
33,145
|
35,823
|
Vietnam
|
7,623
|
26,235
|
33,502
|
39,534
|
43,212
|
Cambodia
|
2,138
|
6,038
|
7,284
|
9,462
|
12,007
|
Laos
|
905
|
1,566
|
2,034
|
2,650
|
3,236
|
Indonesia
|
200
|
1,099
|
1,630
|
1,938
|
1,944
|
Malaysia
|
105
|
690
|
1,160
|
1,479
|
1,502
|
Southeast
Asia is more Buddhist than East Asia
Buddhists have a share of 26.8 percent in the population of Southeast
Asia in 2010. This is significantly higher than their share of 19 percent in
East Asia. Thailand, Myanmar and Cambodia are predominantly Buddhist countries
and Vietnam and Laos are around half Buddhist. Among other major countries of
the region, Indonesia and Malaysia are predominantly Muslim and Philippines
largely Christian. Singapore is divided between Chinese Religionists, Buddhists
and Christians, with the Chinese Religionists having the dominant share.
But number of Buddhists in East Asia is higher
East Asia, of course, has a much higher number of Buddhists than
Southeast Asia. In 2010, there are 299 million Buddhists in East Asia and 159
million in Southeast Asia.
Buddhists in Southeast Asia have grown faster
than in East Asia
Number of Buddhists in Southeast Asia, however, has grown much more than
in East Asia during the last 110 years. Their number has multiplied by a factor
of 3.1 in East Asia, while the multiplication factor in Southeast Asia is 6.2.
In 1900, number of Buddhists in East Asia was nearly four times that in
Southeast Asia; it is not even double in 2010. This is partly due to the much
slower growth of the total population of East Asia.
Even so, share of Buddhists in Southeast
Asia has declined
Percent share of
Buddhists in SE Asia
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
31.71
|
31.44
|
27.93
|
27.24
|
26.78
|
Notwithstanding this high growth of Buddhists, their share in the
population of Southeast Asia has declined from 31.7 percent in 1900 to 26.8
percent in 2010. This is because of the much faster growth of Muslims and
Christians in this region. As we have seen earlier, Muslims have experienced an
accretion of 15 percentage points and Christians of 11 percentage points in
their share between 1900 and 2010. On
the other hand, Buddhists have lost 5 percentage points off their share in the
population and Ethnic Religionists, as we shall see below, have lost more than
23 percentage points.
Buddhists in Thailand
Percent share of
Buddhists in Thailand
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
90.86
|
92.13
|
85.69
|
85.31
|
87.23
|
Thailand has the largest Buddhist population in Southeast Asia; it is
also the country with the largest share of Buddhists in the world. At the
beginning of the twentieth century, 91 percent of the population of Thailand
was Buddhist. That ratio rose to 92 percent in 1970 with the share of Chinese
and Ethnic Religionists declining in that period. After 1970, the share of
Buddhists has declined by about 5 percentage points to reach 87 percent. Much
of the gain has been that of Muslims, though there has been some increase in
the share of Christians, Ethnic Religionists and the Irreligious also.
Buddhists in Myanmar
Percent share of
Buddhists in Myanmar
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
86.65
|
78.63
|
72.45
|
72.67
|
74.69
|
Share of Buddhists in Myanmar has declined more sharply than in
Thailand. They formed 86.7 percent of the population in 1900; their share now
is now 74.7 percent. The decline is because of the rise in the share of
Christians and of Ethnic Religionists.
Buddhists in Vietnam
Percent share of
Buddhists in Vietnam
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
69.30
|
61.40
|
50.24
|
49.52
|
49.19
|
In Vietnam, Buddhists formed 69 percent of the population in 1900. Their
share has declined to about 49 percent in 2010. This is largely because of the
rise in the share of the Irreligious and the New Religionists, as we shall see
later.
Buddhists in Cambodia
Percent share of
Buddhists in Cambodia
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
85.50
|
87.03
|
84.19
|
84.72
|
84.93
|
Cambodia, like Thailand and Myanmar, is a Buddhist country. They form 85
percent of the population in 2010. Their share was about the same in 1900 also.
Despite the country passing through a Marxist phase, it has remained
steadfastly Buddhist.
Buddhists in Laos
Percent share of
Buddhists in Laos
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
60.33
|
57.75
|
48.98
|
48.78
|
52.19
|
Share of Buddhists in Laos has declined from 60 percent in 1900 to 52
percent in 2010. The remaining population of Laos largely adheres to Ethnic
Religions.
Buddhists in Malaysia
Percent share of
Buddhists in Malaysia
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
5.00
|
6.36
|
6.50
|
6.65
|
5.29
|
Share of Buddhists in Malaysia has remained largely unchanged at around
5 percent. It had risen to above 6.5 percent in 2000, but has since declined to
5.3 percent.
Buddhists in Singapore
Percent share of
Buddhists in Singapore
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
17.00
|
9.64
|
14.26
|
14.46
|
14.81
|
There are only about 750 thousand Buddhists in Singapore. They form 14.8
percent of the population. Their share was higher at 17 percent in 1900.
Buddhists in Philippines and Indonesia
There are only 107 thousand Buddhists in Philippines, where they form
about 0.1 percent of the population. Their number is higher at 1.94 million in
Indonesia, but their share there is also less than 1 percent. Philippines is
around 90 percent Christian and Indonesia about 80 percent Muslim, as we have seen
earlier.
Thus among the Buddhist countries of Southeast Asia, Thailand and
Cambodia have largely retained their faith intact, while there has been
considerable decline in the Buddhist share in Myanmar because of the increased
presence of Christianity and of Ethnic Religions, in Vietnam because of the
rise of Irreligion and New Religions and in Laos because of the increasing
share of Ethnic Religions.
South Asia
Number (‘000) of Buddhists in different
countries of South Asia
|
|||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
|
South Asia
|
3,599
|
14,065
|
21,139
|
24,565
|
28,231
|
India
|
200
|
3,779
|
5,950
|
7,249
|
8,772
|
Nepal
|
886
|
842
|
1,540
|
1,967
|
3,441
|
Sri Lanka
|
2,115
|
8,287
|
11,651
|
12,879
|
14,378
|
Bhutan
|
242
|
705
|
1,223
|
1,571
|
610
|
Bangladesh
|
157
|
450
|
700
|
802
|
921
|
Buddhist presence in South Asia is low
Percent share of
Buddhists in South Asia
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
1.23
|
1.97
|
1.89
|
1.83
|
1.77
|
Of 487 million Buddhists in Asia in 2010, only 28 million are in South
Asia, where they form less than 1.8 percent of the population. In the course of
the last 110 years, their share has somewhat improved, partly because of the
neo-Buddhist movement of India, which led to substantial numbers from certain
caste groups converting to Buddhism. That movement has more or less exhausted
itself. Presence of Buddhists in South Asia as a whole is low, but two of the
countries in the region, Sri Lanka and Bhutan, are predominantly Buddhist and
Nepal has a substantial Buddhist presence.
Buddhists in Sri Lanka
Percent share of Buddhists
in Sri Lanka
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
59.18
|
66.22
|
68.35
|
68.41
|
68.93
|
Half of the Buddhists in South Asia are in Sri Lanka. They form 69
percent of the population of the country. Their share has improved
substantially since 1900, when they formed around 59 percent of the population.
This improvement is largely at the cost of Hindus, as we have seen earlier.
Buddhists in Bhutan
Percent share of
Buddhists in Bhutan
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
79.02
|
66.58
|
72.13
|
73.97
|
84.02
|
Bhutan is a small country with a population of 726 thousand. Buddhists
form 84 percent of the population there. Their share has improved to this level
from 79 percent in 1900 and only 67 percent in 1970. As in Sri Lanka, this rise
in the share of Buddhists has been mainly at the cost of Hindus.
Buddhists in Nepal
Percent share of
Buddhists in Nepal
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
20.00
|
7.44
|
8.20
|
8.22
|
11.49
|
In Nepal, share of Buddhists has declined from 20 to 11.5 percent
between 1900 and 2010. Share of Hindus has also declined in this period. The
loss of Buddhists and Hindus has been to the gain of Ethnic Religionists,
Christians and Muslims. Remarkably, during the last decade, share of Buddhists
has increased by about 3 percentage points; this rise has been largely at the
cost of Hindus.
Buddhists in India
Percent share of
Buddhists in India
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
0.09
|
0.68
|
0.70
|
0.72
|
0.72
|
Number of Buddhists in India increased from 200 thousand in 1900 to 3.8
million in 1970, and their share from 0.09 to 0.68 percent. This was because of
the neo-Buddhist movement that we have discussed in detail in our earlier note
on Buddhists
in India. Share of Buddhists has been now stable at around 0.7 percent for
the last several decades.
Buddhists in Bangladesh and Pakistan
There are 0.9 million Buddhists in Bangladesh, where they form 0.6
percent of the population. Their share in Bangladesh has been stable, while
that of Hindus has been declining rapidly. There are only about 107 thousand
Buddhists in Pakistan.
Thus, one of the main stories of South Asia is the contraction of
Hinduism in the Buddhist countries of Sri Lanka and Bhutan and even in the
Hindu country of Nepal, and a rise in the share of Buddhists in the first two
and also in Nepal during the last decade.
CHINESE RELIGIONISTS
Number
(‘000) of Chinese R in different region of Asia, 1900-2010
|
|||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
|
Asia
|
380,930
|
238,082
|
354,637
|
392,315
|
449,385
|
East Asia
|
379,507
|
231,314
|
343,685
|
379,186
|
436,665
|
China
|
376,369
|
217,568
|
326,130
|
359,978
|
417,998
|
Taiwan
|
2,493
|
8,935
|
12,346
|
13,638
|
12,924
|
South Korea
|
640
|
4,768
|
4,917
|
5,251
|
5,304
|
Chinese Religionists
here include Daoists and Confucianists.
|
East Asia
Chinese Religionists are largely in East
Asia
Chinese Religionists, among whom we have included Daoists and
Confucianists, are confined largely to East Asia. Of 449 million Chinese Religionists
in Asia in 2010, 437 million are in East Asia. The remaining 12 million Chinese
Religionists are in Southeast Asia. There are few Chinese Religionists in the
rest of Asia.
Their share in East Asia has declined
sharply
Percent share of Chinese
R in East Asia
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
71.26
|
23.44
|
25.45
|
25.53
|
27.74
|
We have seen that the share of Chinese Religionists in the population of
Asia has declined from 39.8 percent in 1900 to 10.8 percent in 2010. In East
Asia, the decline has been from 71.3 to 27.7 percent, which is comparatively
less precipitous than in Asia as a whole. The fall in East Asia has been mainly
because of the rise of irreligion in China, which now claims 36.4 percent of
the population of the region.
Distribution of Chinese Religionists in
East Asia
Within East Asia, the Chinese Religionists are confined to China, Taiwan
and South Korea. Of 437 million Chinese Religionists in East Asia, 418 million
are in China, 13 million in Taiwan and about 5 million in South Korea. Chinese
Religionists in South Korea are nearly all of them Confucianists, as we shall in
a later note.
Chinese Religionists in China
Percent share of Chinese
R in China
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
79.74
|
26.53
|
28.58
|
28.51
|
30.99
|
Chinese Religionists formed nearly 80 percent of the population of China
in 1900. In 2010, Chinese Religionists form 31 percent of the population, while
the Irreligious have come to claim 40 percent. During the last decade, there
has been a sharp decline in irreligion, as we shall see later. But the share of
Chinese Religionists has increased by only about 2.5 percentage points, while
Buddhists have experienced a substantial accretion, as we have noted above.
Chinese Religionists in Taiwan
Percent share of Chinese
R in Taiwan
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
77.95
|
60.88
|
60.93
|
60.88
|
55.67
|
Chinese Religionist formed 78 percent of the population of Taiwan in
1900. By 1970, their share had declined to 61 percent. This was largely to the
gain of Buddhists, but there was some accretion to the share of Christians and
‘New Religionists’ also, as we see later. During 2000-10, Chinese Religionists
have again suffered a decline of about 5 percentage points. This has been
largely to the gain of Buddhists, as we have seen above.
Chinese Religionists in South Korea
Percent share of Chinese
R in S Korea
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
8.00
|
14.94
|
11.47
|
11.21
|
11.01
|
There are about 11 percent Chinese R in South Korea. Their share has
declined to this level from the peak of about 15 percent in 1970. But in recent
decades, it has remained largely stable. Chinese Religionists in South Korea
are mostly Confucianists.
Southeast Asia
Number
(‘000) of Chinese R in Southeast Asia, 1900-2010
|
|||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
|
SE Asia
|
1,413
|
6,697
|
10,796
|
12,941
|
12,467
|
Malaysia
|
525
|
2,698
|
4,325
|
5,364
|
5,220
|
Singapore
|
124
|
1,125
|
1,330
|
1,521
|
1,987
|
Chinese Religionists
here include Daoists and Confucianists.
|
Chinese Religionists are mainly in
Malaysia and Singapore
In Southeast Asia, Chinese Religionists have a significant presence only
in Malaysia and Singapore. Besides these, there are about 2 million Chinese
Religionists in Indonesia, where they form less than 1 percent of the
population; about half a million in Cambodia with about 3 percent share in the
population; 0.9 million in Thailand with a share of about 1.3 percent; 0.9
million in Vietnam with a share of about 1 percent; and, about 0.8 million in
Myanmar with a share of about 1.7 percent. Most of the Chinese Religionists in
Myanmar, as in South Korea, are Confucianists.
Their share in SE Asia is declining
Percent share of Chinese
R in SE Asia
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
1.75
|
2.34
|
2.45
|
2.50
|
2.10
|
There has been a recent decline in the share of Chinese Religionists in
Southeast Asia. They had a share of 2.50 percent in 2000; it has fallen to 2.10
percent in 2010. This decline is visible in nearly all of the countries with marginal
presence of Chinese Religionists that we have counted above. But the decline
has been more significant in Malaysia and Singapore.
Chinese Religionists in Malaysia
Percent share of Chinese
R in Malaysia
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
25.00
|
24.86
|
24.24
|
24.11
|
18.38
|
In 1900, Chinese Religionists had a share of 25 percent in the
population of Malaysia. That share declined only slightly to 24 percent in
2000. During the last decade, there has been a sudden decline in their share to
18.4 percent. Share of Buddhists and Hindus has also declined in this decade,
though not so precipitously. All this loss has been to the gain of Muslims, as
we have seen in the previous two notes.
Chinese Religionists in Singapore
Percent share of Chinese
R in Singapore
|
||||
1900
|
1970
|
1990
|
2000
|
2010
|
49.52
|
54.23
|
44.10
|
42.65
|
39.07
|
Chinese Religionists formed half of the population of Singapore in 1900.
Their share rose to 54 percent in 1970. It has since declined to just 39
percent. Much of this decline is to the gain of Christians and partly of
Buddhists, as we have seen in this and the previous notes.
Share of Chinese Religionist has thus declined precipitously in their
home country of China and they have experienced some decline in Malaysia and
Singapore also. Only in South Korea, their share has improved in this period.
CONCLUSION
1. In the course of the last 110 years, religions other than Islam and
Christianity have experienced a sharp decline in their cumulative share. In
1900, Islam and Christianity together claimed 18.6 percent of the population.
In 2010, that share has gone up to 34 percent.
2. Share of the older religions of Asia meanwhile has declined to less
than 50 percent, with nearly 15 percent of the population having turned
Irreligious.
3. The decline has been the most precipitous in the share of Chinese
Religionists. They formed 39.8 percent of the population of Asia in 1900; their
share now is 10.8 percent.
Relative growth of different regions
4. Part of the reason for the rise of Islam and decline in the share of others
is that the population of regions dominated by Islam has grown faster than
others.
5. In general, there is a correlation between the share of Muslims in a
region and growth of its population during the last 110 years. Populations of
Central Asia and West Asia, which are largely Muslim, have multiplied nearly 8
times. Population of Southeast Asia, where Muslims have a share 37 percent, has
multiplied 7.4 times. Population of South Asia, with Muslim share of around 30
percent, has multiplied 5.5 times. And, population of East Asia, with Muslim
share of only 1.4 percent, has multiplied less than 3 times.
6. Difference in the growth of South Asia and East Asia is also because
population control measures of China have been more stringent than that of
India.
7. Changes in the share of different religions in Asia have been partly
determined by the differential growth of the population of different regions
dominated by different religious communities.
Hindus
8. Share of Hindus in Asia has slightly improved from 21.6 to 23.3
percent because of the relatively higher growth of South Asia compared to East
Asia.
9. But Hindus are confined mainly to South Asia, more than 99 percent of
Hindus in Asia are in South Asia. And in the population of South Asia, their
share in the population has declined sharply from 70.3 to 60.1 percent.
10. In the course of the last 110 years, Hindus seem to have contracted
more and more within the boundaries of what currently constitutes India.
11. There has been a sharp decline in the share of Hindus within India.
But the decline has been even sharper outside India.
12. Share of Hindus has declined from around 17 to 1.3 percent in
Pakistan, from 32.7 to 9.5 percent in Bangladesh, 77 to 67.8 percent in Nepal,
23.3 to 13.1 percent in Sri Lanka and from 15 to 11.4 percent in Bhutan.
13. Of 9 million Hindus outside South Asia, 7 million are in Southeast
Asia. Their share in the region has declined from 1.6 percent in 1900 to 1.2
percent in 2010.
14. Decline in the share of Hindus is sharper in countries where they
have a significant population. Thus their share has declined from 2 percent to
1.6 percent in Indonesia, 10.2 to 6.4 percent in Malaysia, 7.5 to 5.7 percent
in Singapore and from 2.8 to 1.7 percent in Myanmar.
15. There are about 1.3 million Hindus in West Asia. Almost all of them
are expatriate workers in the Arabian Peninsula. Emigration of Indian workers
to this region began after 1970, when there were only about 14 thousand Hindus
there.
Buddhists
16. Share of Buddhists in Asia has declined by about 2 percentage
points, but unlike Hindus in their home region of South Asia, Buddhists have
improved their share in East Asia.
17. More than 60 percent of the Buddhists in Asia are in East Asia. And,
their share in the population of that region has improved from 18.3 percent in
1900 to 19 percent in 2010. This is largely a consequence of the recent rise in
their share in China.
18. In China, the share of Buddhists has improved from 12.7 percent in
1900 to 15.4 percent in 2010. This is a consequence of the recovery of faith
that China has been experiencing in recent decades. In 1970, the share of
Buddhists had declined to 6.6 percent and it was only 8.4 percent in 2000.
19. Share of Buddhists has improved even more strongly in other
countries of East Asia. Their share has risen from 18.1 to 26.5 percent in
Taiwan, from 38.3 to 54.2 percent in Mongolia and from 10 to 24.8 percent in
South Korea. Only in Japan has their share declined from 79.6 to 56.4 percent,
mainly because of the rise of ‘New Religions’.
20. Thus in East Asia, Buddhism has undergone an expansion. Not only the
share of Buddhists has increased in most of the countries of East Asia, but Buddhism
also seems to have spread to newer areas and groups, particularly in South
Korea and Mongolia.
21. Southeast Asia is the other region of Asia with a considerable
Buddhist presence. Their share in this region has declined from 31.7 to 26.8
percent between 1900 and 2010.
22. Among the Buddhist countries of the region, the share of Buddhists
in Thailand and Cambodia has remained largely intact. The former is 87 percent
and the latter 85 percent Buddhist.
23. Share of Buddhists in Myanmar, however, has declined from 87 to 75
percent, because of rise in the share of Christians and Ethnic Religionists.
And their share in Vietnam has declined from 69 to 49 percent because of rise
in the share of the Irreligious and Ethnic Religionists.
24. Share of Buddhists in Malaysia has remained nearly unchanged and it
has declined from 17 to about 15 percent in Singapore.
25. In South Asia, the share of Buddhists has increased from 1.2 percent
in 1900 to 1.8 percent in 2010. Their share has increased in every country of
the region except Nepal.
26. In India, the share of Buddhists has increased from nearly zero in
1900 to 0.7 percent now. That number has remained unchanged now for several
decades.
27. In Sri Lanka, the Buddhist share has increased substantially from 59
to nearly 69 percent. That rise has been almost entirely at the cost of Hindus.
28. In Nepal, there has been a decline in the share of Buddhists from 20
to 11.5 percent. Share of Hindus has also declined in Nepal, while Christians,
Muslims and Ethnic Religionists have all improved their share. However, there
has been a significant rise in the share of Buddhists during the last decade
and a corresponding decline in that of Hindus.
Chinese Religionists
29. Chinese Religionists are confined almost entirely to East Asia. Of
449 million Chinese Religionists in 2010, 437 million are in East Asia. And of
them, 418 million are in China, 13 million in Taiwan and 5 million South Korea.
30. Share of Chinese Religionists in East Asia has declined sharply from
71.3 to 27.7 percent. The decline in China is from nearly 80 percent to 31
percent.
31. This decline in East Asia and China is because of the rise of irreligion
in the latter during the Marxist phase.
32. The phase of irreligion seems to be now passing away, and the share
of Chinese Religionists in China has improved from 28.5 to 31 percent during
the last decade. There has been a larger improvement in the share of Buddhists.
It seems that the Chinese Religionists in China would soon recover their share.
33. In Taiwan, the share of Chinese Religionists has declined from about
78 percent in 1900 to 56 percent now. This decline is largely because of the
increase in the share of Christians and of New Religionists.
34. In South Korea, the share of Chinese Religionists has somewhat
improved in this period, rising from 8 percent in 1900 to 11 percent now.
35. Outside East Asia, Chinese Religionists are mainly in Malaysia and
Singapore. Their share has declined considerably in both countries, from 25 to
18.4 percent in Malaysia and from 49.5 to 39 percent in Singapore.
36. The Chinese Religionists have thus contracted in both East and
Southeast Asia. But the larger decline in East Asia has been mainly due to the
rise of irreligion in China. That process is likely to get reversed in the
future.
37. Thus of the three major older religions of Asia, Buddhism seems to
have expanded in this period of 1900 to 2010 and Chinese Religions are on the
way to recovery. But Hindus (including Sikhs and Jains) have contracted to
within the shrunken boundaries of India and their share has declined in every
country of South Asia, including India. Since this decline has occurred because
of the rise of other major religions, including Islam, Christianity and
Buddhism, the prospects of Hindus beginning to recover
their share seem remote.
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