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US Census: Five key takeaways on population trends

Ns News Online Desk;Ns News Online Desk; US Census officials have completed their once-a-decade count of the American population, showing the second slowest growth in recorded history.

Texas and Florida, two Republican titans of the Sunbelt, will gain congressional seats, while two Democratic giants, California and New York, are losing political influence.
US population growth slows, but some regions boom

The census shows the US population currently stands at 331,449,281 – an increase of 7.4% over 2010’s count.

The number is the slowest since the 1930s during the Great Depression.

But some regions are booming: the South grew fastest at 10.2%, the West was second fastest at 9.2%, followed by the north-east at 4.1%.

The fastest growing state was Utah, which grew at a rate of 18.4% over the past decade. West Virginia was the fastest shrinking state with a rate of -3.2%.

The census figures are used to determine how to apportion the 435 seats in the House of Representatives, which affects the votes in the Electoral College that picks the US president every four year, and to determine how to allocate federal funding.
A census worker in 1930 speaks to a New York City tenant

California growth shrinks

For the first time in US history, California will lose one of its 53 seats in the House after its population grew at a slower rate compared to other states.

Since joining the United States in 1850 amid a gold rush, the Golden State has become the most populous in the country with over 39.5m residents today. Wyoming remains the least populous state with just 576,000 residents.

Experts say the reason for the decline in population growth is due to several trends, including falls in birth rates and immigration, as well as Californians leaving the state as fewer arrivals replace them.

Officials from the US Census Bureau say the state experienced net negative growth, meaning more people left the state than moved there in the past 10 years. However, over 2.2 million people were added in the past decade.

New York loses out by 89 people

New York will also lose one House seat after the state came up just 89 people short.

The apportionment means the Empire State will be down to 26 seats in the US House of Representatives.

Census officials say that while New York’s population grew overall because of immigration, it had a “negative net domestic migration”.

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