The Changing Demographics of America
The United States population will expand by 100 million over the next 40 years. Is this a reason to worry?
- By Joel Kotkin
- Smithsonian magazine, July-August 2010, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
To be sure, there will be 15 million to 20 million new urban dwellers by 2050. Many will live in what Wharton business professor Joseph Gyourko calls “superstar cities,” such as San Francisco, Boston, Manhattan and western Los Angeles—places adapted to business and recreation for the elite and those who work for them. By 2050, Seattle, Portland and Austin could join their ranks.
But because these elite cities are becoming too expensive for the middle class, the focus of urban life will shift to cities that are more spread out and, by some standards, less attractive. They’re what I call “cities of aspiration,” such as Phoenix, Houston, Dallas, Atlanta and Charlotte. They’ll facilitate upward mobility, as New York and other great industrial cities once did, and begin to compete with the superstar cities for finance, culture and media industries, and the amenities that typically go along with them. The Wall Street Journal noted that commercial success has already turned Houston, once considered a backwater, into “an art mecca.”
One of the least anticipated developments in the nation’s 21st-century geography will be the resurgence of the region often dismissed by coastal dwellers as “flyover country.” For the better part of the 20th century, rural and small-town communities declined in percentage of population and in economic importance. In 1940, 43 percent of Americans lived in rural areas; today it’s less than 20 percent. But population and cost pressures are destined to resurrect the hinterlands. The Internet has broken the traditional isolation of rural communities, and as mass communication improves, the migration of technology companies, business services and manufacturing firms to the heartland is likely to accelerate.
Small Midwestern cities such as Fargo, North Dakota, have experienced higher than average population and job growth over the past decade. These communities, once depopulating, now boast complex economies based on energy, technology and agriculture. (You can even find good restaurants, boutique hotels and coffeehouses in some towns.) Gary Warren heads Hamilton Telecommunications, a call center and telecommunications-services firm that employs 250 people in Aurora, Nebraska. “There is no sense of dying here,” Warren says. “Aurora is all about the future.”
Concerns about energy sources and hydrocarbon emissions will also bolster America’s interior. The region will be pivotal to the century’s most important environmental challenge: the shift to renewable fuels. Recent estimates suggest the United States has the capacity to produce annually more than 1.3 billion dry tons of biomass, or fuels derived from plant materials—enough to displace 30 percent of the current national demand for petroleum fuels. That amount could be produced with only modest changes in land use, agricultural and forest-management practices.
Not since the 19th century, when the heartland was a major source of America’s economic, social and cultural supremacy, has the vast continental expanse been set to play so powerful a role in shaping the nation’s future.
What the United States does with its demographic dividend—its relatively young working-age population—is critical. Simply to keep pace with the growing U.S. population, the nation needs to add 125,000 jobs a month, the New America Foundation estimates. Without robust economic growth but with an expanding population, the country will face a massive decline in living standards.
Entrepreneurs, small businesses and self-employed workers will become more common. Between 1980 and 2000 the number of self-employed individuals expanded, to about 15 percent of the work force. More workers will live in an economic environment like that of Hollywood or Silicon Valley, with constant job hopping and changes in alliances among companies.
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Comments (30)
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We did, in fact, at one time, used to be the greatest nation in the world. We had the best educational system in the world, the highest standard of living, number one in most industries and the most technically advanced nation in the world. Of course, these things were in the pre-diversity days of America, when the old red, white and blue was roaring like a lion and national identity and patriotism was strong. These things have gradually eroded over the past 45 years to where they no longer exist. It is obvious to all but the most dim witted that we are in terminal decline and have been for some time. An extra 100 million, mostly illiterate third worlders added to the population will exacerbate that decline much more quickly, although I find it hard to believe that we won't crash long before we reach that number.
Posted by Robert on February 16,2013 | 09:56 PM
Did he say that whites and Asians scores are high and blacks and Latinos are lower? Sounds like a southern white dude talking.
Posted by Willie on February 5,2013 | 07:42 PM
You cannot just state that a certain nation is "best" with no shred of proof. This jingoistic line of thinking, that America is the "greatest" nation in the world, only tends to lead towards one conclusion: America is exceptional, to the point where it has the "right" to bypass the sovereignty of other nations.
Posted by Ryan on January 22,2013 | 12:35 PM
America will look like Brazil in 50 years, including the favelas. You can't take millions of illiterate Mexicans in, plop them down among other Mexicans - and expect to achieve on par with other Americans and more affluent immigrants. The dumbest parts of America are growing. Standardized testing shows unambiguously that test scores of White kids and Asians remain high. Though test of Latinos and Blacks are improving - they are doing so at a very slow rate. In short - the expansion of the 'lower performers' is dragging the average test score down. As go the test scores - the nation will go as well. Enjoy your cardboard box homes, drug cartels, massively corrupt officials, and gated communities.
Posted by james on November 8,2012 | 12:51 PM
Rodger you are wrong. people will emigrate to the US from Europe, because America is the best nation ever.
Posted by Jewish Phillistine on October 8,2012 | 10:23 PM
i love how positive this article was. But we should add some new jobs, and yea Max Baer is pretty kool!
Posted by Jewish Phillistine on October 8,2012 | 10:09 PM
I love Max Baer
Posted by Jack Silver on October 8,2012 | 09:51 AM
What a great read! I considered actually subscribing to the Smithsonian after reading this. How interesting to read fact-based opinion that leaned a different direction than opinion on this subject generally tends to lean. I felt like I had some very valuable perspective and insight I would not have otherwise garnered granted to me. Thanks, Mr. Kotkin.
Posted by Brett Stone on May 1,2012 | 12:02 AM
I'm on the negative population-growth side but I think Kotkin is merely trying to rationalize what he predicts is coming in terms that are hopeful. If I'm right then much of the critique of the author is killing the messenger. I think the Mainstream's definition of the good life and the way it works is based on "growth"-what some of us see as a ponzi scheme to others is what keeps this lifestyle going. The difference between us is how far into the future we project and our values of the profit and loss. Being old enough to have seen the world population double and expecting it to triple in my lifetime what I value, biodiversity, is mostly losing. But then I don't want to live "the good life" that depends on ever more sprawl and throw away consumption. The backdrop to Kotkin's article are the shadows of all our societal problems and solutions: planning for what is expected vs what we ideally want and who are the "we", resource depletion and innovation, immigration in the face of job loss, quality of lifestyle-upward mobility, racial inequity, care of the elderly, education...... We have policies in place addressing all these issues. Mostly they are dominated by special interest groups or the policy of postponement. We've gotten a huge wake up call in the past few years. But most of us want to go back to business as usual. If business doesn't pick up we'll have to figure something else out. As painful as it sounds that may be the only way that will lead to changes that will be more environmentally and socially sustainable.
Posted by mike ashlock on April 12,2012 | 10:29 AM
America's demographics are in worse shape than any other country in the Western world. The historical population is around 65 percent and falling. It doesn't take a PHD to figure out that many people will emigrate to Europe and other Western countries as the country continues its downward decline into second world and then third world status.
Posted by Rodger on February 13,2012 | 12:56 PM
It is good that Smithsonian presents a range of views, however a person doesn't have to be some twitchy-eyed conspiracy theorist to ponder why it always seems to be the same dozen writers, like Joel Kotkin, who perpetually blanket the mainstream media with arguments in favor of what is essentially the philosophy of the cancer cell and the locust swarm. The difference for humans is that thankfully we can benefit by having learned the basics of ecology, mathematics and the history of fallen civilizations--or not.
Posted by Thomas Michael Andres on January 6,2012 | 12:10 AM
This author assumes the population growth will consist of educated, civic-minded individuals. The truth is that immigrants overwhelmingly lack education and are impoverished. The working class is already stretched too thin in supporting or subsidizing this class of people, so who is going to support the additional masses? Immigrants leaving a geographical area of poverty and massive crowding will LOWER the standards of living of the areas they migrate to, not INCREASE them. Water, power, freeway gridlock, and food sources cannot keep up with the demand. Our poor children and grandchildren will be living in beehive-like conditions with rationed water and power and their quality of life will be dismal with this author's rose-colored glasses projections.
Posted by Melanie on July 1,2011 | 03:36 PM
I actually do know who my neighbors are. So, I believe that you are speaking gibberish.
Posted by dot on January 24,2011 | 09:39 AM
I let my subscription lapse because of this article.
The the traffic, the crime, the lack of water, the government, the enormous factory schools, illegal immigrants (how do you like not knowing your neighbor's identity), the lack of identity (kids today feel like a number), the poor food quality (go visit a cattle feedlot), the regulations, the deviants, the crowds, the taxes, the rules, the constant bickering, the issues, globalization, lack of job security, excessive competition, the thousand-and-one-things we must do everyday are already OVERWHELMING! And Kotkin wants another 100 million?
Obviously he's not thinking about water quality, the importance of birds, quiet (which allows young minds to rest and ponder), how we will need 200 million to take care of that extra 100 million, pollution, space, identity, political calm (which will decrease as population increases)...nor the massive complications of disease, religion... I think I'll stop before my morning is ruined.
WHere does this mentality come from? His way of thinking is like a virus I would like to escape.
More is less and less is more.
Posted by Nan on November 17,2010 | 09:16 AM
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