The nation's Asian population grew at 3.4 per cent between July 2014 and 2015, with migration responsible for the majority of the growth, government officials said today. There are now 21 million Asians in the United States, with Hawaii as the nation's only majority Asian state.
Sam Garrow, a Census Department demographer, said Asians have been the fastest-growing race group since about 2000, and the main driving force is international migration. In 2013,
China replaced Mexico as the top sending country for immigrants to the United States, officials said.
California has the largest number of most racial and ethnic groups, with more Hispanics, whites, Asians and American Indians than any other state. New York state has more blacks than any other state, and Hawaii has the largest numeric population of Native Hawaiians than any other state.
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In fact, the most diverse generation is the nation's youngest. Census figures show that of those born since 2000, nearly half or 49 per cent belong to a race or ethnic group other than non-Hispanic white. In contrast, 44.5 per cent of the millennials born between 1982 and 2000 did not classify themselves as non-Hispanic whites.
The census found that the white population, including those who chose white along with another race, grew only 0.5 per cent between 2014 and 2015. There were more than 255 million people who said they were white or white in combination with something else. California had the largest number of these people at 29.8 million, but Vermont had the highest population of those described themselves as white or white along with another race or ethnicity at 96.6 per cent.
The numbers change little for those who say they are white alone. There are 198 million people who say they are white alone, an increase of 0.1 per cent. California once again had the largest population at 14.9 million, but Maine had the largest percentage as its population at 93.6 per cent.