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To put this
into perspective, there are more minorities in this country
today than there were people in the United States in 1910.
Louis Kincannon, Director, Census Bureau
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| Louis Kincannon, Director, Census
Bureau |
The nation's minority population
reached 100.7 million, according to the national and state
estimates by race, Hispanic origin, sex and age released today
by the U.S. Census Bureau. A year ago, the minority population
totaled 98.3 million. Rent to Own and Retail companies can
leverage US Census data for targeted marketing campaigns.
"About one in three U.S. residents is a minority," said Census
Bureau Director Louis Kincannon. "To put this into perspective,
there are more minorities in this country today than there were
people in the United States in 1910. In fact, the minority
population in the U.S. is larger than the total population of
all but 11 countries."
The population in 1910 was 92.2 million. On Oct. 17, 2006, the
Census Bureau reported that the overall population had topped
300 million.
California had a minority population of 20.7 million -- 21
percent of the nation's total. Texas had a minority population
of 12.2 million -- 12 percent of the U.S. total.
There were other milestones reached as well during the July 1,
2005, to July 1, 2006, period: The nation's black population
surpassed 40 million, while the Native Hawaiian and Other
Pacific Islander group reached the 1 million mark.
Hispanic remained the largest minority group, with 44.3 million
on July 1, 2006 -- 14.8 percent of the total population. Black
was the second-largest minority group, totaling 40.2 million in
2006. They were followed by Asian (14.9 million), American
Indian and Alaska Native (4.5 million), and Native Hawaiian and
Other Pacific Islander (1 million). The population of non-
Hispanic whites who indicated no other race totaled 198.7
million in 2006.
With a 3.4 percent increase between July 1, 2005, and July 1,
2006, Hispanic was the fastest-growing minority group. Asian was
the second fastest- growing minority group, with a 3.2 percent
population increase during the 2005-2006 period. The population
of non-Hispanic whites who indicated no other race grew by 0.3
percent during the one-year period. (See
Table 1.)
Four states and the District of Columbia are
"majority-minority." Hawaii led the nation with a population
that was 75 percent minority in 2006, followed by the District
of Columbia (68 percent), New Mexico (57 percent), California
(57 percent) and Texas (52 percent). No other state had a
minority population exceeding 42 percent of the total. (See
Table 2.)
Highlights:
Hispanic
-- Hispanics accounted for almost half (1.4 million) of the
national
population growth of 2.9 million between July 1, 2005, and July
1,
2006.
-- California had the largest Hispanic population of any state
as of July
1, 2006 (13.1 million), followed by Texas (8.4 million) and
Florida
(3.6 million). Texas had the largest numerical increase between
2005
and 2006 (305,000), with California (283,000) and Florida
(161,000)
following. In New Mexico, Hispanics comprised the highest
proportion of
the total population (44 percent), with California and Texas (36
percent each) next in line.
-- The Hispanic population in 2006 was much younger, with a
median age of
27.4 compared with the population as a whole at 36.4. About a
third of
the Hispanic population was younger than 18, compared with
one-fourth
of the total population.
Black
-- The black population increased by 1.3 percent, or 522,000,
between 2005
and 2006.
-- New York had the largest black population in 2006 (3.5
million),
followed by Florida (3 million) and Texas (2.9 million). Texas
had the
largest numerical increase between 2005 and 2006 (135,000), with
Georgia (101,000) and Florida (86,000) next. In the District of
Columbia, the black population comprised the highest percentage
(57
percent); Mississippi (37 percent) and Louisiana (32 percent)
were
next.
-- The black population in 2006 was younger, with a median age
of 30.1,
compared with the population as a whole at 36.4. About 31
percent of
the black population was younger than 18, compared with 25
percent of
the total population.
Non-Hispanic White
-- The non-Hispanic, single-race white population, which
represented 666
percent of the total population, accounted for less than a fifth
(18
percent) of the nation's total population growth.
-- California, New York and Texas had the largest population of
this group
(15.7 million, 11.7 million and 11.4 million, respectively), but
Texas
experienced the largest numerical increase (104,000), followed
by North
Carolina (91,000) and Arizona (78,000). Maine and Vermont had
the
highest proportion of single-race non-Hispanic whites (96
percent
each), followed by West Virginia (94 percent).
-- The non-Hispanic, single-race white population in 2006 was
older than
the population as a whole: The respective median ages were 40.5
and
36.4. About 21 percent of the population of this group was
younger than
18, compared with 25 percent of the total population.
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