he U.S. is projected to have no racial or ethnic group as its
majority within the next several decades, but that day apparently is
already here for the nation’s youngest children, according to new Census Bureau population estimates.
The
bureau’s estimates for July 1, 2015, released today, say that just over
half – 50.2% – of U.S. babies younger than 1 year old were racial or
ethnic minorities. In sheer numbers, there were 1,995,102 minority
babies compared with 1,982,936 non-Hispanic white infants, according to
the census estimates. The new estimates also indicate that this
crossover occurred in 2013, so the pattern seems well established.
Pinpointing the exact year when minorities outnumbered non-Hispanic
whites among newborns has been difficult. The change among newborns is
part of a projected U.S. demographic shift from a majority-white nation
to one with no racial or ethnic majority group that is based on
long-running immigration and birth trends. But changes in short-term
immigration flows and in fertility patterns can delay those long-term
shifts.
In 2012, the Census Bureau declared that in 2011 most children younger than age 1 were minorities.
The bureau’s population estimates also indicated minorities were the
majority among babies in 2012. But when the bureau released its 2013
estimates, it revised those earlier estimates to indicate that, in all
three years, newborn non-Hispanic whites still outnumbered minorities, by a small margin.
The estimates released this year included revised 2013 estimates that now say there were
about a thousand more minority babies than non-Hispanic white babies
that year, a tiny difference given that each group numbered more than
1.9 million. In 2014, minority babies outnumbered white babies by about
16,000, and in 2015 the difference was about 12,000, according to the
agency’s estimates.
The Census Bureau frequently revises its past population estimates to
account for newly available data. Birth data is a special problem: In
estimating the number and characteristics of newborns, the agency relies
in part on birth certificate information from the National Center for
Health Statistics that is two years out of date.
One reason that the bureau had to delay its claim of a majority-minority newborn population may have been a sharp falloff in births and birth rates after the onset of the Great Recession in 2007. Birth rates declined most steeply for Hispanic and immigrant women.
The
Census Bureau statistics indicate that demographic change is
percolating upward through the nation’s age groups, starting with the
youngest ones. In fact, the bureau estimates indicate that 50.3% of
children younger than 5 were racial or ethnic minorities in 2015.
In the total U.S. population, non-Hispanic whites will cease to be the majority group by 2044, according to Census Bureau projections, or by 2055, according to Pew Research Center projections.
Racial and ethnic minorities have accounted for most of the nation’s
growth in recent decades. The non-Hispanic white population has grown
too, but not as quickly. Minority populations have grown more rapidly in
part because these groups are younger than whites and include a higher
share of women in their prime child-bearing years. Some minority groups,
especially Hispanics, have higher birthrates than do non-Hispanic
whites. In addition, a rising number of babies are being born to couples
where one parent is white and the other nonwhite.
While census estimates have shown a shift toward a majority-minority infant population, estimates about the race of mothers from another data source – the National Center for Health Statistics – do not. Its preliminary 2015 data
indicate that 54% of births are to non-Hispanic white mothers, a
similar share as in 2011, 2012, 2013 and 2014. However, the two agencies
measure race differently. For example, the Census Bureau reports data
about children of multiple races, while the National Center for Health
Statistics changes mixed-race mothers into single-race mothers in
publishing its data. And the Census Bureau uses available information
about the father’s race or Hispanic origin, as well as the mother’s, to
determine the baby’s race and ethnic categories, while the
health-statistics center reports only the mother’s race and ethnic
origin.
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