America Counts: Stories Behind the Numbers
Continued Decrease in Mortality Brings Natural Increase Closer to Pre-Pandemic Levels
Births in 2023 once again began to outpace deaths in over half of U.S. states as mortality declined, inching closer to pre-pandemic levels, according to U.S. Census Bureau population estimates released today.
Natural increase (more births than deaths) had been on the decline since 2020 and more states had natural decrease (more deaths than births) in the first years of the decade than at any point in the 2010s, driven largely by mortality hikes combined with smaller decreases in births.
Areas with large older populations often experience natural decrease and shrinking populations in the absence of migration. Prior to 2020, natural increase for the United States hovered around one million a year. It began declining in 2020 but this national trend obscured widespread natural decrease at the state level since the beginning of the decade.
In the 2010s, only four states (Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont and West Virginia) consistently had more deaths than births. But from 2020 to 2021 and 2021 to 2022, half of all states experienced natural decrease. While 19 states rebounded slightly, 15 ? mostly in the South ? experienced natural decrease during all estimates periods between April 1, 2020 (Census Day) and July 1, 2023.
Continue reading?to learn more about:?
- Measuring births and deaths
- U.S. births and deaths
- State-level natural decrease
- The impact of COVID-19
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