https://finance.yahoo.com/news/25-cities-highest-female-male-182244352.htmlIf we take a deeper look at the statistics, in 2021, 50.42% of the world’s population consisted of males and 49.58% were females. Numerically, this means there were 3,970,238,390 men and 3,904,727,342 women. In other words, today, there are 101 males per 100 females globally.
However, these numbers are not evenly spread around the globe. Some countries like India and China (the two most populous countries of the world) have significantly fewer females than males. On the flipside, countries in Eastern Europe happen to have notably more females than males.
It's kind of surprising that places like Connecticut (USA) seem to have higher ratios than even places like Russia.
- Tokyo, Japan: 50.1%
- Seoul, South Korea: 50.5%
- Melbourne, Australia: 50.7%
- Brisbane, Australia: 50.8%
- Salamanca, Spain: 51.4%
- Helsinki, Finland: 51.5%
- Stockholm, Sweden: 51.3%
- Vienna, Austria: 52.2%
- Genoa, Italy: 52.7%
- Madrid, Spain: 53.5%
- Florence, Italy: 53%
- Lisbon, Portugal: 53%
- Bucharest, Romania: 53.6%
- Saint Petersburg, Russia: 53.8%
- Riga, Latvia: 53.9%
- Tallinn, Estonia: 54%
- Budapest, Hungary: 54%
- Warsaw, Poland: 54.1%
- Buenos Aires, Argentina: 54.3%
- Vilnius, Lithuania: 54.8%
- Porto, Portugal: 55%
- Zagreb, Croatia: 53.2%
- McLoud, Oklahoma, US: 63%
- Heritage Village, Connecticut, US: 63.1%
- Mitchellville, Iowa, US: 63.5%