The table compares the ratio of females to males per 100 individuals across six diferrent regions.
It is clear that gender ratio expanded in Africa and Europe while the reverse was true for 4 areas left. Overall, Asia by far recorded the highest proportion in both examined years.
Initial, Asia led the ratio with 105.3 females per 100 males, followed by Oceania at 103.9 whereas North America and Central America displayed relatively balanced gender distributions. Africa and Europe, nevertheless, had fewer females than males, with ratios of 97.8 and 89.4, respectively.
By 2005, Asia experienced a marginal decline to 104.9 females for every 100 males, became the sole area where females outnumbered males. A similar downtrend was observed in regions including North America, Central America, and Oceania, where the ratio falling to 96.9, 97.5, and 99.8, in order. Conversely, Africa and Europe exhibited an upward trend, as their ratios increased to 99.2 and 91.8, respectively.
