Wednesday, March 16, 2011

USA Census shows Hispanic growth outpaced estimates

The recent USA census results are being released with another 10 states still to log their final tallies. The current USA population is estimated to be 311, 010,728 and so far the Hispanic number has reached nearly 39 million; 1.5% higher than what was originally estimated. Now, we all know that not all Hispanics were counted due to most being in the country illegally, so the figure is most likely more than what is currently being reported. The more worrying statistic is that their birth rate is higher than the White and Black population, so in the next 50 years they'll be a huge threat. By 2050, it is estimated that the White population will fall in total by at least 6%, down to 74%, and the Hispanic population will double to an estimated 15%, overtaking the African American population which at 13% rises up from 12% The rest will be made up of Asians, Native Indians and other races. So, the news doesn't look great. Only the Whites will lose percentage and all other races gain. It seems as if only Arizona had the guts to take note and do something about their little problem, and as a result, they're the only state who lost Hispanic numbers. Who said the USA was too big to fail? For a good interactive map of each state, click here.

"I'll give in to creating the Carolinas but Georgia? Do we want the world to think we're retarded?"


The Hispanic population grew more dramatically than expected in states with smaller and newer immigrant populations, according to an analysis of Census data out today.

The 2010 Census counted almost 600,000 more Hispanics than the Census Bureau had estimated in the 33 states for which data have been released so far, according to the Pew Hispanic Center. Twenty-eight states had more Hispanics than expected.

The Census count of 38.7 million Hispanics is 1.5% higher than the bureau's estimates.

"Hispanics are in some places growing faster than we had thought," Pew demographer Jeffrey Passel says. "This sort of broad pattern suggests immigration into these new areas was a bit higher."

The Census found 186,000 Hispanics in Alabama— 26,000 more than estimated. In North Carolina, Hispanics total 800,000, or 54,000 more than was estimated. Louisiana, where construction jobs soared after Hurricane Katrina, the Census counted 22,000 Hispanics — or 13.2% — more than estimated.

The underestimates show that immigrants continue to spread into the South and the Midwest from traditional gateways, such as California and New York.

"When they do these population estimates, they build on existing data," Passel says. "The data don't always pick up on new trends."

In Arizona, the opposite happened: The Census counted almost 1.9 million Hispanics, 8.7% or 180,000 fewer than estimated.

Arizona passed tough immigration laws and beefed up enforcement against the undocumented, which pushed some out of state and discouraged others from responding to the government count. Arizona's participation in the 2010 Census was 69%, below the national rate of 74%.

"The whole toxic environment against immigrants in Arizona probably contributed to the suppression of the count," says Arturo Vargas, of the National Association of Latino Elected and Appointed Officials.

The recession was expected to encourage immigrants to return to their countries of origin, but it does not seem to have had a significant impact.

"It could be an indication that what we had thought was a falloff in immigration is not as severe," says Steven Camarota of the Center for Immigration Studies, which advocates immigration controls.

In 2000, the estimate of 274.5 million was about 7 million short of the Census count. Much of the gap was due to a low estimate of Hispanics — mostly illegal immigrants.

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