What is the population density of New Zealand?

Recently, it has been argued that New Zealand’s success with dealing with Covid-19 has been due, in part, to its low population density. New Zealand’s population density is around 17.7 people per square kilometer, but just how dense is that number? If New Zealand’s population density were compared to US states, New Zealand would down rank toward the bottom in terms of population density. However population density, as it is normally calculated is not necessarily the best representation of densely people live in a region, state, or nation. In fact, the average person in New Zealand lives in a place with a population density of 425.4 people per square kilometer. This measure of density, called a lived density is a better metric to evaluate population density.

Lived density over population density

Lived density is the population density experienced by the average person in the region. For example the population density of New York State is 161 people per square-kilometer, but the average New York State resident lives in an area with 2,479 people per square-kilometer (the lived density). There are a number of different ways to compute this number. Inspired by the following tweet from Ryan Moulton, I computed the KL-divergence between the population distribution and the area distribution.

I plan on going into detail on this a future post, in the meantime I’ve made the source code available for this calculation.

Pinksvile and Bluetopia

Let’s start by considering two hypothetical cities: Pinksville and Bluetopia. Both cities are exactly 25 square-kilometers in area, and both cites have 25 residents. Using a traditional measure of population density, where the total population is divided by the total area, these cities are indistinguishable. However, if you take a closer look at figure below you’ll notice these cities are quite different in their population structure.

Population distributions for Pinksville and Bluetopia

Cartoon illustrating how in two hypothetical cities (Pinksville and Bluetopia) can have same population, area, and population density. In Pinksville the popuatlion is spread uniformly across area, in Bluetopia the population is clustered in one region, therefore the lived density of Bluetopia is much higher than Pinksville.

In Pinksville, people are very spread apart - indeed in every single square-kilometer of Pinksville, resides exactly one person. This stands in contrast to Bluetopia, where the entire population lives in a 4 square-kilometer corner of the city, while the remainder of the city is uninhabited. It turns out that cities, states and countries have population distributions that resemble Bluetopia where people live in clusters more then they represent Pinksville where everyone is smoothly distributed. Lived density is a better measure because it represents the density for which most people experience.

How New Zealand ranks

I’ve computed the population density, lived density, and density ratio for all 50 US states and New Zealand. This is an interactive table so you’ll be able to sort by the different columns as you desire.

Population density, lived density, and their ratio

REGION
POPULATION
AREA
POPULATION DENSITY
LIVED DENSITY
RATIO
New York
19,618,453
122,049
160.7
2478.9
15.4
California
39,148,760
403,504
97.0
1718.4
17.7
New Jersey
8,881,845
19,048
466.3
1550.5
3.3
Massachusetts
6,830,126
20,205
338.0
1200.7
3.6
Rhode Island
1,056,611
2,678
394.6
1160.5
2.9
Hawaii
1,422,029
16,634
85.5
1087.7
12.7
Maryland
6,003,435
25,151
238.7
970.5
4.1
Nevada
2,922,849
284,330
10.3
960.3
93.4
Illinois
12,821,497
143,781
89.2
902.0
10.1
Florida
20,598,139
138,949
148.2
886.0
6.0
Connecticut
3,581,504
12,542
285.5
739.7
2.6
Pennsylvania
12,791,181
115,884
110.4
653.1
5.9
Arizona
6,946,685
294,199
23.6
618.4
26.2
Delaware
949,495
5,046
188.2
587.5
3.1
Utah
3,045,350
212,886
14.3
542.0
37.9
Washington
7,294,336
172,113
42.4
539.7
12.7
Texas
27,885,195
676,653
41.2
536.7
13.0
Ohio
11,641,879
105,829
110.0
514.8
4.7
Colorado
5,531,141
268,423
20.6
500.9
24.3
Virginia
8,413,774
102,258
82.3
473.4
5.8
Michigan
9,957,488
146,601
67.9
429.5
6.3
New Zealand
4,699,494
264,924
17.7
425.4
24.0
Oregon
4,081,943
248,607
16.4
345.1
21.0
Louisiana
4,663,616
111,898
41.7
327.6
7.9
Indiana
6,637,426
92,789
71.5
310.2
4.3
Wisconsin
5,778,394
140,290
41.2
289.5
7.0
Georgia
10,297,484
149,482
68.9
271.1
3.9
Minnesota
5,527,358
206,229
26.8
266.0
9.9
North Carolina
10,155,624
125,924
80.6
242.3
3.0
Missouri
6,090,062
178,051
34.2
238.8
7.0
Nebraska
1,904,760
198,957
9.6
211.0
22.0
Tennessee
6,651,089
106,803
62.3
206.2
3.3
South Carolina
4,955,925
77,865
63.6
199.7
3.1
New Hampshire
1,343,622
23,189
57.9
181.0
3.1
Oklahoma
3,918,137
177,663
22.1
169.6
7.7
New Mexico
2,092,434
314,196
6.7
164.2
24.7
Kansas
2,908,776
211,755
13.7
160.2
11.7
Kentucky
4,440,204
102,279
43.4
149.7
3.4
Idaho
1,687,809
214,050
7.9
144.9
18.4
Alabama
4,864,680
131,174
37.1
138.8
3.7
Iowa
3,132,499
144,661
21.7
110.0
5.1
Mississippi
2,988,762
121,534
24.6
99.6
4.1
North Dakota
752,201
178,708
4.2
86.6
20.6
Arkansas
2,990,671
134,769
22.2
84.4
3.8
West Virginia
1,829,054
62,266
29.4
82.0
2.8
Maine
1,332,813
79,887
16.7
79.3
4.8
Alaska
738,516
1,478,840
0.5
69.1
138.3
Vermont
624,977
23,874
26.2
59.1
2.3
South Dakota
864,289
196,347
4.4
54.9
12.5
Wyoming
581,836
251,459
2.3
46.2
20.0
Montana
1,041,732
376,963
2.8
28.5
10.3

*areas are in km2 and densities are in people/km2, Ratio is lived density divided by population density.

By inspecting the ratio between the lived density and population density, some states stand out. Alaska has a lived density that is over one hundred times its population density. At the other end, Vermont only has a lived density just over twice its population density. It’s worth noting that the this ratio can never be less than one. A ratio of one would mean the population is perfectly spread out of over the state, like the Pinksville example.

Ranking states by density vs lived density

We can compare the relative way ranking changes in population density vs lived density in the slopegraph below.

By pure population density, New Jersey is the most densely populated state. However in terms of lived density, New York ranks at the top.

Many states rankings don’t change much going from population density measure to a lived density, but there are some major changes here. Most notable is Nevada that goes from nearly the bottom in terms of population density to near the top for the lived density rankings. New Zealand is included in this ranking and rises a considerable number of places.

Spatial patterns in lived density ratio

If we map the spatial pattern in the lived density ratio, we can see that Western states are have a larger ratio than Eastern states. Here I use a logarithmic scale of density ratio to color the map, which I call the density factor.

Chloropleth map of ratio of lived density to population density, including all 50 US states and New Zealand.
This density factor gives a measure of how clustered the population is versus how spread out the population is. Lower density factors mean the population of the region is more evenly distributed (like Pinksville), while higher numbers mean the population is more clustered like (like Bluetopia). Largely, states in the Western USA are more clustered than the Eastern USA states.

Takeaways

  • Lived density is a better way of computing population density when what you care about is how many people the average person lives near. Which is probably the case for modeling disease spread.

  • If New Zealand were a US State it would rank near the middle in terms of lived density and near the bottom in terms of population density.

  • The ratio of lived density to population density gives a measure of how clustered people live in a region.

Adam J Campbell PhD
Adam J Campbell PhD
Data Science | Geospatial | Data Storytelling

I’m Geospatial Data Analyst interested in data visualization, statistical problem solving, and data storytelling.

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