Richard Florida
by Richard Florida
Tue Dec 26th 2006 at 9:07am UTC

U.S. State Population Estimates from Census

Steven Pedigo, manager of research at GWI, sent us a note over the holiday regarding the new state population estimates from the Census Bureau. According to the Census press release, Arizona (3.6%)  nudged past Nevada (3.5%) as the fastest growing state over the past year and the South and the West continue to dominate the list of growing states.

From the Census Bureau,

Meanwhile, Arizona was the nation’s fastest-growing state over the period, breaking Nevada’s grip on the title, with its population rising 3.6 percent.  Nevada ranked second this time,as its population climbed by 3.5 percent, followed by Idaho (2.6 percent), Georgia (2.6 percent) and Texas (2.5 percent). (See Table A below.) The South and West again monopolized the list of fastest-growing states with Utah, North Carolina, Colorado, Florida and South Carolina rounding out the top 10. Colorado and South Carolina replaced Delaware and Oregon on the list this year.

According to the estimates, California remains the most populous state with a population of 36.5 million on July 1, 2006. Rounding out the top five states were Texas (23.5 million), New York (19.3 million), Florida (18.1 million) and Illinois (12.8 million).

Other highlights:

  • North Carolina replaced New Jersey as the 10th most populous state.
  • The Northeast region grew by only 62,000 people. In contrast, the South grew by 1.5 million and the West by 1 million. The Midwest added 281,000 people.
  • The West was the fastest-growing region, with its population climbing by 1.5 percent. The South followed (1.4 percent), with the Midwest third (0.4 percent) and the Northeast fourth (0.1 percent).
  • The South now accounts for 36 percent of the nation’s total population, with the West comprising 23 percent, the Midwest 22 percent and the Northeast 18 percent.
  • The population estimate for Puerto Rico for July 1, 2006, was 3.9 million, up about 16,000 since July 1, 2005. Puerto Rico’s rate of increase was 0.4 percent.

Table A. Leading 10 States/Equivalents by Population Changes: July
1, 2005 to July 1, 2006

Top 10 Fastest-GrowingTop 10 Numeric Gainers
State
Percent
Change
StateChange
1. Arizona3.61. Texas579,275
2. Nevada3.52. Florida321,697
3. Idaho2.63. California303,402
4. Georgia2.54. Georgia231,388
5. Texas2.55. Arizona213,311
6. Utah2.46. North Carolina184,046
7. North Carolina2.17. Washington103,899
8. Colorado1.98. Colorado90,082
9. Florida1.8 9. Nevada83,228
10. South Carolina1.710. Tennessee83,058

posted by David

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