Life expectancy in Indonesia from 1875 to 2020
the 1918 Spanish Flu epidemic would cause life expectancy to fall to just 27 years as the epidemic spread across the region. Following the end of the Spanish Flu epidemic in 1920, life expectancy would begin to rise in Indonesia, as public works and infrastructure programs by the Dutch colonial administration would see standards of living begin to rise in the country. However, after peaking at 36 years in 1940, life expectancy would fall to just thirty years once more with the invasion and subsequent occupation of the island by the Empire of Japan in 1942; most estimates suggest that between 2.4 and four million people in Indonesia died from famine, forced labor and violence during the Second World War.
Life expectancy would begin rising following the country’s independence from the Dutch in 1949, particularly in the early 1950s as mass immunization and vaccination, combined with rapid modernization would see child mortality and standards of living rise throughout the remainder of the century, reaching over 65 years by the turn of the millennium. This rise in life expectancy has continued in the 21st century, and in 2020, the average person born in Indonesia is expect to live to beyond the age of 71 years.
In 1875, those born in the present-day region of Indonesia lived to an averae age of thirty years. This figure would remain largely stagnant until the 1910s, where the Life expectancy would begin rising following the country’s independence from the Dutch in 1949, particularly in the early 1950s as mass immunization and vaccination, combined with rapid modernization would see child mortality and standards of living rise throughout the remainder of the century, reaching over 65 years by the turn of the millennium. This rise in life expectancy has continued in the 21st century, and in 2020, the average person born in Indonesia is expect to live to beyond the age of 71 years.