On average, roughly 2500 questions attract at least one close vote or flag every day on Stack Overflow. This has gone up a bit over time.
On average, roughly 800 questions are actually closed every day. This has been more or less constant for quite a while.
Oh... And about 50 questions that enter close review exit with a "Leave Open" result each day.
As you can see, there will be somewhere around 1700 more questions each day that enter the close queue than those that leave. The votes that keep them there age away after between 4 to 14 days, assuming they're not retracted in the meanwhile. Also, some significant number of these questions get deleted. I don't know how many, but tons of questions get deleted all the time, so you gotta figure...
Anyway, 1700*14 is 23800. You can probably assume that that's more or less the real size of the close queue, in the sense that that's how big it would be if every pending close vote or flag kept a question in it - but that'd be a waste, so after a few days (currently 4), questions with less than some threshold of votes or flags (currently 3) are dropped out of the queue; they can be re-added if they get more votes, but after four days of not being closed this is increasingly unlikely and there's a good chance the existing votes will start aging away soon anyway.
So the count reflects the delta between questions that are identified (by someone) as needing to be closed, and questions that are actually closed. While the exact range of time this delta is allowed to accumulate is subject to some variation, it's rarely ever more than 2 weeks and usually a lot shorter.
Thus, the queue will only increase in size by a significant amount if a lot more questions get voted on or flagged and/or a lot fewer questions get closed each day. Both of those could happen. Generally though, the size of the queue fluctuates naturally throughout the week and throughout the year as the volume of questions asked goes up and down.