And estimate of the world population by race
Notes:
1.) Blacks and whites are obvious as who they refer to, but recent estimate puts black and white people on par (roughly an equal amount in population on earth as of right now). The black and white populations are included from ALL continents. Estimates put that blacks would take over the whites in numbers within a decade. Russia and the US are the only two countries where white populations are growing by large numbers to some degree, and in some European countries. In many other majority white countries, the white population, while growing, isn't growing as fast as the minority non-white population (Canada for example).
2.) Central and South American refers to people from Mexico and downwards (basically the Latin American population in general) but this does not include the massive Mexican and other Latin diaspora (in reality, on a different ratio map, the population would jump closer to blacks and white, but still below the two race groups). This census groups the native populations of Latin America with the whites, blacks, and others. On average, there are an equal numbers of white and blacks in Latin America, but they are grouped as Central/South Americans.
3.) South Asian refers to people from the Indian sub continent (Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, etc) but, like the Latin American population, does not include the massive South Asian diaspora. (Indians make up among the biggest minorities in many countries including the UK, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Canada, the US and many other gulf nations, Pakistanis are smaller, but also considerably big in population in these countries). Some estimates puts that the the South Asians in total make up 51.2% of Qatar, which is bigger than Qatar's native population! Some major cities like Toronto, Ontario and London, UK are also largely South Asian. Oman has a large chunk of a Pakistani Baluchi population as well. South Asians would move up a few points if the diaspora was included.
4.) East Asians, like South Asians, have a large diaspora and make up a big population in many overseas cities and countries (Vancouver Canada, Australia, the US, etc). East Asians generally refers to China, Japan, South Korea, North Korea, Taiwan, Mongolia, Hong Kong, and Macau. Singapore, for example, is a 'southeast' Asian country but consists of a population mainly from China, and minorities from India (South Asia) and other countries. East Asia would also move up a few points if the overseas population was included.
5.) South East Asia refers to countries as such as the Philippines, Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, Brunei, Cambodia, Thailand, Vietnam, East Timor, Laos, Myanmar, etc. Filipinos make up large chunks of overseas populations and are normally a well off group (like Indian Americans, Chinese Americans, Pakistanis Americans). Likewise, Southeast Asians would also move up a few points if the oversea populations were included.
6.) The Greater Middle East starts from Afghanistan near South Asia and ends in Egypt in North Africa. This population includes Arabs, Turks, Persians, Pashtuns, Kurds, Jews, and much more. Pashtuns, for example, make up 13% of Pakistan's population are considered South Asian on the Pakistani side, but the Afghan diaspora in Pakistan are mainly Pashtun and Persian (Dari) and would be included in this census. And, likewise, the population would move up a few points with the massive Turkish diaspora (the biggest minority group in Germany and other European nations) as well as the big Arab diaspora (not including the non-middle eastern Arabs). While this census does not include the rest of North African Arabs (and other groups) as "Middle Eastern" (Algerians, Moroccans, Tunisians, Libyans, Etc), the population of the group is sizeable, and they also make up the biggest minority groups in countries like France. In a more accurate estimate, "Middle Easterns, including North Africans" would resemble the population of Southeast Asians.
7.) This census does not include central Asians (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan) who, in general, are Mongoloid-Caucasians in nature. And it does not include native populations in countries other than "central and south American" countries.