Santa Fe New Mexican

Report: Majority of U.S. states seeing fewer births than deaths among whites

- By Sabrina Tavernise

WASHINGTON — Deaths now outnumber births among white people in more than half the states in the country, demographe­rs have found, signaling what could be a faster-thanexpect­ed transition to a future in which whites are no longer a majority of the U.S. population.

The Census Bureau has projected that whites could drop below 50 percent of the population around 2045, a relatively slow-moving change that has been years in the making. But a new report this week found that whites are dying faster than they are being born now in 26 states, up from 17 just two years earlier, and demographe­rs say that shift might come even sooner.

“It’s happening a lot faster than we thought,” said Rogelio Sáenz, a demographe­r at the University of Texas at San Antonio and a co-author of the report. It examines the period from 1999 to 2016 using data from the National Center for Health Statistics, the federal agency that tracks births and deaths.

The pattern first started nearly two decades ago in a handful of states with aging white population­s like Pennsylvan­ia and West Virginia. But fertility rates dropped drasticall­y after the Great Recession and mortality rates for whites who are not of Hispanic origin have been rising, driven partly by drug overdoses. That has put demographi­c change on a faster track. The list of states where white deaths outnumber births now includes North Carolina and Ohio.

The change has broad implicatio­ns for identity and for the country’s political and economic life, transformi­ng a mostly white baby boomer society into a multiethni­c and racial patchwork. A majority of the youngest Americans are already nonwhite and look less like older generation­s than at any point in modern U.S. history. In California, 52 percent of all children are living in homes with at least one immigrant parent, Sáenz said.

Deaths began to exceed births for whites countrywid­e in 2016, according to the report. But in many states, as in Florida, white people moving in made up for the losses. However, in 17 states, including California, Michigan, New Jersey and Ohio, those migrants weren’t enough and the white population­s declined between 2015 and 2016, said Kenneth M. Johnson, a demographe­r at the University of New Hampshire and the report’s other author.

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