According to CNN news, Zoe Emile Hudson, born this morning at New York's Presbyterian Hospital is the 300th million person in the United States.
U.S. Population Tops 300 Million on Immigrant Surge (Update3)
By Ryan Flinn
Oct. 17 (Bloomberg) -- The U.S. population passed 300 million today, propelled by the biggest surge in immigration in almost a century.
The Census Bureau population clock, adding one person every 11 seconds, reached 300 million at 7:46 a.m. New York time. The count includes one birth every seven seconds, one death every 13 seconds and one new immigrant every 31 seconds.
Between 1990 and 2000, the nation's foreign-born population increased 57 percent, according to census figures. Immigrants now make up 12 percent of the U.S., the most since a period between 1860 and 1920, when the figure was as much as 15 percent, the bureau said.
``The 1990s was the greatest decade for immigration in U.S. history,'' said John Kiley, a spokesman for the Center for Immigration Studies in Washington. The first five years of this decade have continued the trend, he said.
Immigrants now account for 40 percent of U.S. growth, according to the independent Population Reference Bureau, a Washington research institute that assesses population trends. The census data counts all residents and includes both legal and illegal immigrants.
``We're starting a new American melting pot,'' William Frey, a demographer at the Washington-based Brookings Institution, said in an interview. ``Our birth rate would have declined without immigration.''
Third in Immigration
The Census Bureau said 34.3 million people now living in the U.S. were born outside its borders, with the largest number from Mexico. The U.S. ranks third in net immigration, behind Ireland and Australia, with a rate of 3.4 per 1,000.
It took more than 100 years for the U.S. to reach 100 million residents, 52 years to cross 200 million and 39 years to reach 300 million.
The U.S. remains third in population behind China, at 1.3 billion, and India, at 1.1 billion. The world population is 6.6 billion.
In 1915, when the country's population hit 100 million, 15 percent were foreign-born, amounting to 13.5 million people, the Census Bureau said. Germany was the leading country of origin.
Five percent, or 9.7 million people, were foreign-born when the U.S. population reached 200 million in 1967 following the postwar Baby Boom, the bureau said. The leading country of origin then was Italy.
Latin America, Asia
Since 1970, the majority of immigrants have come from Latin America and Asia. The number of people born outside the U.S. climbed from 9.6 million in 1970 to 14.1 million in 1980; to 19.8 million in 1990 and to 31.1 million in 2000, according to the Census Bureau. As a percentage of the total population, the increase was from 4.7 percent in 1970 to 11 percent in 2000, the bureau said.
Economic expansion in the U.S., especially in the commercial and residential construction industry, was one factor attracting immigrants, both legal and illegal, Kiley said.
Illegal immigration probably amounts to a million people a year, said Charles Kuck, vice president of American Immigration Lawyers Association and a partner in Atlanta-based Kuck, Casablanca & Howard LLC.
Most immigrants initially live in California, Florida, Illinois, New York, New Jersey and Texas, the so-called gateway states, accord to Census Bureau data. They disperse from there to areas including Nevada, North Carolina, Georgia and Arkansas, the states with the highest rate of internal migration of foreign-born residents, the bureau said.
Europe's Population Shrinking
Sixteen countries, almost all former USSR states, experienced population declines between 2000 and 2005, lead by the Russian Federation, which lost 3.4 million to 143 million, according to the United Nations' 2004 World Population Prospects report.
Europe as a whole will see its population shrink 10 percent to 653 million during the next four to five decades, the UN report said, while Northern American population will increase 32 percent through 2050.
``We have some growth advantage,'' said Judith Treas, a sociology professor at University of California at Irvine. ``It's kind of an unusual situation; the rest of the world is worried about fertility and population decline.''
To contact the reporter on this story: Ryan Flinn in San Francisco at [email protected] .
Last Updated: October 17, 2006 12:03 EDT
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