Hispanics Account for More than Half of Nations Growth in Past Decade
Hispanics 50.5 million in US
WASHINGTON & SANTA FE, NM (By
Jeffrey S. Passel, DVera Cohn, Mark Hugo Lopez, Pew Hispanic Center) March 25, 2011
The 2010 Census counted
50.5 million Hispanics
in the United States,
making up 16.3% of the
total population. The
nation's Latino
population, which was
35.3 million in 2000,
grew 43% over the
decade. The Hispanic
population also
accounted for most of
the nation's growth
56% from 2000 to 2010.
Among children ages 17 and younger, there were 17.1 million Latinos, or 23.1% of this age group, according to an analysis by the Pew Hispanic Center, a project of the Pew Research Center. The number of Latino children grew 39% over the decade. In 2000, there were 12.3 million Hispanic children, who were 17.1% of the population under age 18. Although the numerical growth of the Hispanic population since 2000 more than 15 million surpassed the totals for the previous two decades, the growth rate of 43% was somewhat slower than previous decades. Growth rates topped 50% in the 1980s (53%) and 1990s (58%). Geographically, most Hispanics still live in nine states that have large, long-standing Latino communities Arizona, California, Colorado, Florida, Illinois, New Mexico, New Jersey, New York and Texas but the share living in other states has been growing. In 2010, 76% of Latinos lived in these nine states, compared with 81% in 2000 and 86% in 1990. (In 2000, 50% of Hispanics lived in California and Texas alone. In 2010, that share was 46%.) Despite the pattern of dispersion, however, there are more Latinos living in Los Angeles County (4.7 million) than in any state except California and Texas. The states with the largest percent growth in their Hispanic populations include nine where the Latino population more than doubled, including a swath in the southeast United States Alabama, Arkansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, North Carolina, Tennessee and South Carolina. The Hispanic population also more than doubled in Maryland and South Dakota.
1 in 6 Americans is Hispanic
WASHINGTON & SANTA FE, NM (By Hope Yen, AP) March 24, 2011 In a surprising show of growth, Hispanics accounted for more than half of the U.S. population increase over the last decade, exceeding estimates in most states.
Pulled by
migration to the Sun Belt, America's population center edged westward on a
historic path to leave the Midwest.
Geographers
estimate that the nation's population center will move southwest about 30 miles
and be placed in or near the village of Plato in Texas County, Mo.
Currently
the fastest growing group, Hispanics are on track to exceed 50 million, or
roughly 1 in 6 Americans; among U.S. children, Hispanics are now roughly 1 in 4.
Many of
their biggest jumps were in the South, including Alabama, Louisiana, North
Carolina and Louisiana, where immigrants made large inroads over the last
decade.
Asians for the first time had a larger numeric gain than African-Americans, who remained the second largest minority group at roughly 37 million.
Based on the
2010 census results released by state so far, multiracial Americans were on
track to increase by more than 25 percent, to about roughly 8.7 million.
Declining
birth rates meant their share of the total U.S. population dropped over the last
decade from 69 percent to roughly 64 percent.
Over
the last decade, Hispanic population growth was most rapid in the South, where
many states have seen their Hispanic populations double since 2000. For the
first time, Hispanic population growth outpaced that of blacks and whites in the
region, changing the South's traditional "black-white" image.
More
than half of the cities with the largest African-American concentrations showed
black population declines in the last decade, including Chicago and Detroit. In
contrast, the suburbs of growing southern metro areas like Atlanta, Dallas and
Houston saw some of their highest gains.
The center
represents the middle point of the nation's population distribution the
geographic point at which the country would balance if each of its 308.7 million
residents weighed the same.
Its later move to the Midwest bolstered the region as the nation's cultural heartland in the 20th century, central to U.S. farming and Rust Belt manufacturing sites. |
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