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Immigrants, Births Put US on Way to 400 Million by 2043
20 October 2006
This is IN THE NEWS in VOA Special English.
This week, the national population clock at the United States Census Bureau
reached three hundred million. This is only an estimate -- the next official
count is in two thousand ten.
But the Census Bureau says the United States is gaining one new person every
eleven seconds. Government experts based this on an estimate of one birth every
seven seconds and one death every thirteen seconds.
They also considered immigration. The Census Bureau says an immigrant enters the
country every thirty-one seconds.
The United States is the third most populous country in the world, although it
is still much smaller than China and India.
Some hospitals claimed they had the three hundred millionth baby. Yet the three
hundred millionth person in the United States could have been an immigrant.
Experts say about fifty-five percent of new population growth has resulted from
immigration, including the children of immigrants.
Today twelve percent of the population is foreign-born. The leading place of
origin is Mexico. In the past, it was Europe.
America's population reached one hundred million in nineteen fifteen. It reached
two hundred million just over fifty years later, in nineteen sixty-seven.
But the country has taken less than forty years to reach three hundred million
people. And researchers expect a population of four hundred million in even less
time.
At that point, in two thousand forty-three, non-Hispanic whites could make up
just over half the population.
In nineteen sixty-seven, more than eighty percent of Americans were white. Less
than five percent were of Spanish ancestry. Today, Hispanics -- either
American-born or foreign-born -- make up almost fifteen percent of the
population.
About thirteen percent of the population is black, and about five percent is of
Asian ancestry.
The population growth in the United States is unusual among big industrial
nations. Japan and some European countries expect their populations to decrease
over the next twenty to thirty years.
America is known as a nation of immigrants. But today, as at other times in its
history, immigration is also a hot issue. There is debate especially about the
millions who are in the country illegally.
Reporters were invited to watch the Census Bureau clock hit three hundred
million Tuesday morning. There was no big ceremony, although bureau employees
later held a small event of their own at their offices near Washington.
President Bush released a statement. He said the new population mark is, in his
words, "further proof that the American Dream remains as bright and hopeful as
ever."
In nineteen fifteen, the most popular names for babies in the United States were
John and Mary. This year they are Jacob and Emily.
IN THE NEWS, in VOA Special English, was written by Brianna Blake. MP3 files and
transcripts of our programs are at voaspecialenglish.com. I’m Steve Ember.
Voice of America