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Whites Wane, While Minorites Nudge over 50 Percent of US Births

Posted: May 19th, 2012 | Author: | Filed under: Favorite New Thought . . . | Tags: , , , , , | Comments Off

Whites Wane, While Minorites Take Up 50.4 Percent of US BirthsFor the first time in the history of United States, the number of non-white babies being born outnumbers the number of white babies. Hispanics, blacks, Asians and other minorities accounted for 50.4 per cent of births in the 12 months to July 2011, new census figures show.

That compares to just 37 per cent in 1990 and 49.5 per cent in April 2010. Social scientists say the change reflects a wave of immigration in recent decades.

Minority groups are already in the majority in California, Hawaii, New Mexico, Texas and Washington DC. Whites still made up the largest single share of the total births, at 49.6 per cent. They also constituted a majority of the overall population of the United States at 63.4 per cent ::::

Whites Wane, While Minorites Nudge over 50 Percent of US Births

“This is a sign that the future is here,” said Vanessa Cardenas, director of the Progress 2050 program at the Centre for American Progress, a liberal think tank in Washington. ”It adds urgency to the fact that we need investment in communities that are growing the most.”

But as the Census Bureau projected in 2008, they will no longer be in the majority by 2042.

“I think it is historic, both literally and figuratively,” said Isabel Sawhill, co-director of the Centre on Children and Families at the Brookings Institution think tank in Washington.

“It means we are going to have to work harder to make sure that all children get a good education, regardless of their racial or ethnic background, so that we can remain a strong country.”

In absolute numbers, the Census Bureau put the national Hispanic population at 52 million, followed by African Americans at 43.9 million and Asians – the second fastest growing minority group – at 18.2 million.

The Census Bureau also reported “a small uptick” in the nation’s median age to 37.3, and estimated the size of the current over-65 population at 41.4 million, including 5.7 million aged 85 or older.

At the other end of the population spectrum, the number of children under 18 slipped fractionally since April 2010 to 74 million “largely because of the decline of high school-age children 14 to 17,” the agency said.

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