Marketing Charts reports this year, non-Hispanic whites are estimated to account for 62.1% of the US population, down from 75.8% in 1990. By 2019, that figure will be down to 59.5%, as Americans of Hispanic and Asian origin will grow to represent about one-quarter of the population.
That’s a drastic change from 1990, when these groups combined to account for 11.6% of the population. Between 1990 and this year, the share of Americans of Hispanic origin has doubled from 8.8% to 17.7%, while for non-Hispanic Asian and Pacific Islanders, their population shares are up from 2.8% to 5.1%.
Based on these trends, Geoscape projects that the non-Hispanic white population will drop to a minority by 2040. In late 2012, the Census Bureau forecast that the US will become a majority-minority nation in 2043.
In sum, among the projected 334.1 million Americans in 2019:
- 198.9 million will be non-Hispanic white
- 64.8 million will be Hispanic
- 41.5 million will be Black
- 19.3 million will be Asian and Pacific Islanders
Among Hispanics, for instance, Geoscape says that:
- 22% are English-Dependent
- 31% are Bi-Lingual English Preferred
- 14% are Bi-Lingual
- 19% are Bi-Lingual Spanish Preferred
- 14% are Spanish-Dependent
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