The one sure thing about US population
as it moves past 300 million - expected to happen in the next
few days - is that there will be more Americans. A lot more.
Everything else is informed speculation. Still, much will
turn on how big the United States becomes and how fast it grows
- from its use of natural resources to its settlement patterns
to shifts in political clout.
There will be 400 million Americans in 2043, climbing to 420
million by midcentury, the US Census Bureau estimates. The added
numbers will change the nature of the populace, reflecting
trends already begun.
Between the last official census in 2000 and the one of 2050,
non-Hispanic whites will have dwindled from 69 percent to a bare
majority of 50.1 percent. The share who are Hispanic will have
doubled to 24 percent. Asians also will have doubled to 8
percent of the population. African-Americans will have edged up
to 14 percent. In other words, the US will be on the verge of
becoming a "majority of minorities."
Wars, natural disasters, shifts in the economy, unforeseen
social and political developments - any or all of these could
affect the numbers, perhaps dramatically. For one thing, America
could, as many voters and their elected officials now demand,
clamp down on immigration. The country's unusually high teen
pregnancy rate could drop. Scientific advances could extend
longevity.
In any case, Americans are expected to continue to gravitate
west and south. Today, the Top 10 fastest growing states,
cities, and metropolitan areas are all in those regions, mostly
in the West. In general, the West and South have been growing
two to three times as fast as the Northeast and Midwest.
The great American midsection, meanwhile, will continue to
empty out.
When historian Frederick Jackson Turner declared the American
frontier "closed" in 1893, he was using the Census Bureau
definition of "frontier" as areas having no more than six people
per square mile. By that same density definition, the number of
such counties actually has been increasing: from 388 in 1980 to
397 in 1990 to 402 in 2000. Kansas has more "frontier" land now
than it did in 1890.
If these regional shifts continue as expected, the political
impact will be felt. For one thing, membership in the US House
of Representatives, fixed at 435 seats, would change, producing
winners and losers just as it has with recent censuses. It may
shift the current alignment of "red" states and "blue" states -
but other factors besides population growth in the South and
West may influence that political balance.
For example, wealthy, relatively liberal Californians and
others with money to spend have been buying up ranch land in
politically conservative Rocky Mountain states such as Montana,
Idaho, and Wyoming. Many of them are more inclined to want to
protect the environment from energy exploration and other
development.
An increasing Hispanic population - which could see 188
percent growth between 2000 and 2050, according to the Census
Bureau - could affect the political balance as well.
At the same time, the population will become relatively
older. A person born in 1967, when the population turned 200
million, could be expected to live 70.5 years. Life expectancy
for those born today is 77.8 years.
More older Americans
The impact of the aging baby-boom generation, whose oldest
members turn 60 this year, will be felt on Social Security and
Medicare. "We really are doing very well in terms of extending
life, and that is going to increase the rate of population
growth," says Samuel Preston, a University of Pennsylvania
demographer. It could also have political impact.
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SOURCES: TRUSTEES OF THE SOCIAL SECURITY AND
MEDICARE TRUST FUNDS; CENTER ON BUDGET AND POLICY
PRIORITIES; RICH CLABAUGH - STAFF
Click here to enlarge the image
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As the US moves toward 400 million people, Americans can be
expected to marry later in life, and more of them will live
alone. Between 1970 and 2005, the median age of first marriage
moved from 23 to 27 for men and from 21 to 26 for women. Over
the same period, the percentage of single-person households grew
from 17 percent to 26 percent. Those trends are likely to
continue.
Experts generally believe that expansion to meet the housing
and other community needs of a growing population is likely to
remain concentrated in suburbs and exurbs.
"Most projections show that the continued increase in the US
population and the projected 50 percent increase in space
devoted to the built environment by 2030 will largely take place
in the sprawling cities of the South and West, areas dominated
by low-density, automobile-dependent development of residential,
commercial, and industrial space," writes demographic
trend-watcher Joel Kotkin in a recent issue of the magazine The
Next American City.
Concerns about use of resources
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MORE TO COME:
Seniors at a retirement community
in State College, Pa., enjoy a water aerobics class. People
over age 66 will be 19.4 percent of Americans by 2043, up
from 11.8 percent now.
CAROLYN KASTER/AP./FILE
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This kind of continuing development tied to US population
growth worries many environmentalists, as well as those
concerned about the loss of farmland.
Annual US population growth of nearly 3 million contributes
to the water shortages that are a serious concern in the West
and many areas in the East, says Lester Brown, president of the
Earth Policy Institute. Water tables are now falling throughout
most of the Great Plains and in the Southwest, he warns. Some
lakes are disappearing and rivers are running dry.
"As water supplies tighten, the competition between farmers
and cities intensifies," says Mr. Brown. "Scarcely a day goes by
in the western United States without another farmer or an entire
irrigation district selling their water rights to cities like
Denver, Las Vegas, Phoenix, Los Angeles, or San Diego."
Concern about a growing populace and decreasing resources is
likely to push governments toward conservation and more
sustainable development, experts say.
This may be especially true of energy. Nineteen states and
the District of Columbia now have renewable portfolio standards
that require electric utilities to use more wind, solar,
biomass, geothermal, and other renewable sources.
"The global context will really drive what happens in the
United States," says futurist Hazel Henderson.
Last month, for example, the Chinese government released its
first "green" gross domestic product (GDP) report. It measures
economic growth while also factoring in the environmental
consequences of that growth. Other governments and financial
intuitions now are being pushed in the same direction. US
portfolio managers in charge of $30 trillion in assets now
demand carbon disclosures of all the companies in their
portfolios, says Ms. Henderson.
"The tipping point has been reached there," says Henderson.
"I feel very hopeful that the evolution to the solar age could
happen much quicker than we might have expected because it's
being driven by so many stress points, from global warming to
water shortages to desertification."
By mid-century, she predicts: "Cars will be getting 100
m.p.g. if they're still using gasoline instead of fuel cells.
That's definitely a no-brainer. Cities and towns will get more
and more compact as these sprawling suburbs end up being too
costly and inefficient."
That vision for the future contrasts sharply with Mr.
Kotkin's. But given current political, economic, environmental,
and social trends - especially the unknowns about world energy
supplies - it is likely to be just as valid.
Meanwhile, the US population clock keeps ticking: Every 13
seconds somebody dies. Every 31 seconds there's another
immigrant - legal or illegal. It adds up to a net gain of one
person every 11 seconds, or about 8,000 every day. It took 39
years to add the most recent 100 million; the next 100 million
will take a couple of years less than that.
The US population growth rate is expected to decline a bit by
mid-century. Still, by then the numbers will have increased to
some 420 million, according to official calculations. Critics of
US immigration policy say the number could be significantly
higher.
"If Congress should end up ducking the issue of immigration
reform and maintaining the status quo of mass legal and illegal
immigration, our population is projected to still continue its
rapid growth," warns the Federation for American Immigration
Reform in a recent report. "Our projection is for a population
of between 445 and 462 million residents depending on the
assumptions used."
Diversity is changing attitudes
But societal changes tied to population are more than
numbers.
As the racial and ethnic mix among Americans shifts in the
decades ahead, public attitudes are likely to change as well. In
some ways, they already are.
For example, between 1986 and 2003, the share of adults who
approved of interracial marriage rose from 70 percent to 83
percent, according to a Roper Reports study. This trend is
especially true among young Americans. A 2002 Gallup survey
showed that just 30 percent of adults 65 and older approved of
marriage between blacks and whites. But among people between 18
and 29, 86 percent said they had no problem with interracial
marriage.
"The fact that today we see young people intermarrying more,
interracial dating much more common - all of that I think
portends that we're going to become much more ecumenical in the
way we look at things than we were in the past," says William
Frey, a demographer at the University of Michigan and the
Brookings Institution. "I think we'll have much more tolerance
for people of other backgrounds, cultures and languages, points
of view, and religious and belief systems."
What's certain is that there will be a lot more Americans.