Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

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PROMOTING EXCELLENCE IN GOVERNMENT Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness Matt Hauer Applied Demography Program

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Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness. Matt Hauer Applied Demography Program. Themes to Highlight. 1) Rapid Population Growth 2) Changing Racial and Ethnic Composition 3) Aging. Population of Georgia, 1900–2010. Millions. Source: US Census Bureau. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Page 1: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

PROMOTING EXCELLENCE IN GOVERNMENT

Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Matt HauerApplied Demography Program

Page 2: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Themes to Highlight

• 1) Rapid Population Growth

• 2) Changing Racial and Ethnic Composition

• 3) Aging

Page 3: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Population of Georgia, 1900–2010M

illio

ns

Source: US Census Bureau

Page 4: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Components of Change, 1940–2009

1,020,304

Source: US Census Bureau

Page 5: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Fastest Growing Counties

• Of the fastest growing counties in the United States, Georgia has– 3 of the top 20,– 6 of the top 50, and– 9 of the top 100

Source: US Census Bureau

Page 6: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Fastest Growing Counties: 9 of 100

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Change in Population, 2000–2010

Source: US Census Bureau

Page 8: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Change in Population, 2010–2013

Source: US Census Bureau

82 Counties have lost population since 2010.

35 Counties have negative natural increase.

93 Counties have negative net migration.

6 counties account for 2/3 of all Pop growth since 2010.

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1970-1980 1980-1990 1990-2000 2000-2010 2010-20130%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

Figure 1. Net Migration as a Percentage of Population Change for Georgia

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1) Rapid Population Growth/Decline

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Rapid Growth in Urban Areas…

• Of the 10 most populous Metropolitan Areas in the US…

Non-Southern Cities Southern Cities0.00%

5.00%

10.00%

15.00%

20.00%

25.00%

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… Declining or Slow Growth in Rural Areas

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Georgia’s Race Distribution, 1980

72%

27%

1% 1%

White Black Hispanic Other

Page 14: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Georgia’s Race Distribution, 2010

1980 201072%

27%

1% 1%

White Black Hispanic Other

56%30%

9%

5%

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Georgia’s Race Distribution, 1980–2030

72%

27%

1% 1%White Black Hispanic Other

56%30%

9%5%

1980 2010

44%33%

16%8%

2030

Source: US Census Bureau, and internal population projections

Page 16: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Race and Ethnic Population Change, 1980–2010

1980 1990 2000 20100

2,000,000

4,000,000

6,000,000

8,000,000

10,000,000

12,000,000

OtherHispanicBlackWhiteP

op

ula

tio

n

Source: US Census Bureau

Page 17: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Gwinnett County has the largest

New Immigrant

Asian population.

Percent Asian Percent Change

County 1990 2000 2010 1990–2010

Henry 0.6% 1.8% 3.0% 1,753%

Gwinnett 2.9% 7.2% 10.7% 739%

Fulton 1.3% 3.0% 5.6% 519%

Cobb 1.8% 3.1% 4.5% 291%Henry

County is one of the four fastest

growing counties in

the U.S.

Source: US Census Bureau

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Growth, 2000–2010

Number Change

White 285,259

Black 579,335

Other 218,144

Hispanic 418,462

Source: US Census Bureau

Page 19: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Growth, 2000–2010

Number Change

Percent Change

White 285,259 5.6%

Black 579,335 24.8%

Other 218,144 74.9%

Hispanic 418,462 96.1%

Source: US Census Bureau

Page 20: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Growth, 2000–2010

Number Change

Percent Change

Annual Growth Rate

White 285,259 5.6% 0.6%

Black 579,335 24.8% 2.5%

Other 218,144 74.9% 6.4%

Hispanic 418,462 96.1% 7.8%

Source: US Census Bureau

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Growth, 2000–2010

Number Change

Percent Change

Annual Growth Rate

Doubling Time

White 285,259 5.6% 0.6% 116.67 years

Black 579,335 24.8% 2.5% 28 years

Other 218,144 74.9% 6.4% 10.94 years

Hispanic 418,462 96.1% 7.8% 8.97 years

Source: US Census Bureau

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Change in White Population, 2000–2010

Source: US Census Bureau

Page 23: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Change in Black Population, 2000–2010

Source: US Census Bureau

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Change in Hispanic Population, 2000–2010

Source: US Census Bureau

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Where Do Babies Come From?Demographic Perspective

Number of Women of Childbearing Age

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Total Fertility Rate, 2000

Total Fertility Rate

Statewide 2.13

Source: GA Vital Statistics

Page 27: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Total Fertility Rate, 2000

Total Fertility Rate

Statewide 2.13

White 1.96

Black 2.22

Other 1.44

Hispanic 3.53

Source: GA Vital Statistics

Page 28: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Total Fertility Rates 2000–2009

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 20091.4

1.5

1.6

1.7

1.8

1.9

2.0

2.1

2.2

2.3

Black

White

Source: Internal Estimates

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The “Browning” of the South…A Declining Share of White Population

A Steady/Increasing Black Population

A Rapidly Increasing Latino Population

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Educational Outcomes

Page 31: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Source: Pew Hispanic Center

Page 32: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Population Change 1990–2010

% Increase 1990-2010

Under 25 51%

25–44 25%

45–64 111%65–80 53%80+ 76%

Source: US Census Bureau

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Mock Projection

1990

5–24 2.0

25–44 2.2

45–64 1.2

65–80 0.6

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Mock Projection

1990 2010

5–24 2.0 2.7

25–44 2.2 2.7

45–64 1.2 2.4

65–80 0.6 0.9

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Mock Projection

1990 2010 2030

5–24 2.0 2.7

25–44 2.2 2.7 2.7

45–64 1.2 2.4 2.7

65–80 0.6 0.9 2.4

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Baby Boom

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• Population over age 65 is expected to more than double over the next 50 years.

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20-County Area around Albany Georgia

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Aging

65+ 75+ 85+0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

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70%

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90%

• 65+ Most Rapidly Growing age group– Only part of the Picture…

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ConclusionsMost rapid growth

among youngest and oldest individuals

The middle-aged population growing the

least

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Conclusions

Georgia is no longer a black and white state.

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Recap

• 1) Rapid Population Growth• “Rich get richer, Poor get poorer”

• 2) Changing Racial and Ethnic Composition• “Browning of America”

• 3) Aging• “The workforce is aging”

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Contact Info

Matt Hauer(706) 542-9369

[email protected]

www.vinsoninstitute.org

Page 47: Demographics, Projections, and College Readiness

Change in Population 18-64

• Working Age Adult growth will occur.

• Growth will occur in Non-White populations. Millions %

Total Growth 8.3 4.3%

White -14.5 -11.7%Black 2.2 9.1%Hispanic 14.7 45.4%Asian 3.7 35.3%

Source: US Census Bureau, Vintage 2012 Projections

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Source: IPEDS

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Trend lines

White Black Asian Latino Other66%

68%

70%

72%

74%

76%

78%

80%

82%

84%

Share of each Race Group Attending Public Undergraduate

2006-2008 2008-2010 2010-2012

2006-2008 2008-2010 2010-20120%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

80%

90%

100%

58% 51% 50%

34%36% 38%

3% 4% 4%3% 6% 6%2% 3% 3%

Race/Ethnic Shares of Total Public Un-dergraduate Enrollment

White Black Asian Latino Other