It seems there is a misunderstanding in your question. The population of Mexico City has never reached 7 billion; as of recent estimates, it is around 9 million within the city proper and about 21 million in the metropolitan area. The population growth of Mexico City has occurred over many decades, with significant increases in the 20th century. If you meant the growth from a different starting point, please clarify for a more accurate response.
Depends on what you are looking for: population? 97.48 million. GDP? US$702 billion.
Right. Annual increase is about 1.118% (1.26 million people a year)
It depends: to whom? Some stats: Size of economy: Mexico: US$1,542 billion(11th in the world) Egypt: US$442 billion (25th) Population: Mexico: 108 million (11th) Egypt: 78 million (16th) Area: Mexico: 1.96 million square kilometers / 0.75 million sq mi (15th) Egypt: 1 million sq km / 0.39 million sq mi (30th) Armed Forces: Mexico: 518,000 Egypt: 1.1 million
One million of millions. A billion in Mexico is a trillion in the United States.
I guess you mean of its population. Its population growth is of 1.13% or 1.26 million new Mexicans each year.
In 1940, the population of Mexico was 19.8 million people. By the year 2000, the population had reached 100 million people.
Panama and Mexico are two different countries. The population of Mexico is of 111.2 million people, while Panama has 4.4 million people.
19.65% (22.07 million out of 112.34 million for 2010) of Mexico's population qualifies as such.
The urban population in Mexico accounts for 77% of the total population (some 86 million out of 112 million for 2010).
21.16 million people.
No. Los Angeles has a population of 15.25 million, while Mexico as a whole country has a population of 113 million. Mexico City, the capital of Mexico has a population of 21.16 million and is regarded as the third largest city in the world.
Canada. It has a population of 34.3 million while Mexico has a population of 114.98 million (2012 est.)