"The slow rate of growth can be attributed to decreased net
international migration, decreased fertility, and increased
mortality due in part to the COVID-19 pandemic," the Census Bureau
said on Tuesday.
The year 2021 is the first time since 1937 that the U.S. population
grew by fewer than 1 million people, reflecting the lowest numeric
growth since at least 1900, when the Census Bureau began annual
population estimates.
The population of the United States increased in the past year by
392,665, or 0.1%, according to the U.S. Census Bureau Vintage 2021
Population Estimates released on Tuesday.
Slower population growth has been a trend in the United States for
several years, the result of decreasing fertility and net
international migration, combined with increasing mortality due to
an aging population.
Between 2020 and 2021, the population of 33 U.S. states increased.
Seventeen states and the District of Columbia lost population.
Eleven of those 18 areas that lost population had losses of 10,000
people or more, the figures released on Tuesday showed.
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"Apart from the last few years,
when population growth slowed to historically
low levels, the slowest rate of growth in the
20th century was from 1918-1919 amid the
influenza pandemic and World War One," Luke
Rogers, chief of the Census Bureau's population
estimates branch, said. Since
April 1, 2020 (Census Day), the nation's population increased from
331,449,281 to 331,893,745, a gain of 0.13%, the figures showed.
The United States' official death toll from the coronavirus outbreak
has been by far the highest in the world with over 800,000 deaths
recorded in the country from the disease, according to data from the
U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Bengaluru; Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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