As Births Diminish and Deaths Increase, Natural Decrease becomes More Widespread in Rural America

Even before the onset of the Covid‐19 pandemic, the U.S. population growth rate last year was the lowest in 100 years. And, from 2010 to 2019 nonmetropolitan America lost population for the first time in history. Diminished natural increase was a major contributor to this and also accelerated the in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Rural sociology 2020-12, Vol.85 (4), p.1045-1058
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description Even before the onset of the Covid‐19 pandemic, the U.S. population growth rate last year was the lowest in 100 years. And, from 2010 to 2019 nonmetropolitan America lost population for the first time in history. Diminished natural increase was a major contributor to this and also accelerated the incidence of natural decrease (more deaths than births), particularly in rural America. Deaths exceeded births in 46 percent of all U.S. counties—a near record high. Nearly 79 percent of these natural decrease counties were nonmetropolitan. This research uses recent data and a multivariate spatial regression model to update our understanding of the growing incidence of natural decrease in both rural and urban America. In light of the mortality increase and likely fertility declines stemming from the Covid‐19 pandemic, these findings have significant implications for future nonmetropolitan demographic trends.
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source Wiley Online Library Journals Frontfile Complete; Sociological Abstracts; Education Source
subjects Births
Childbirth & labor
COVID-19
Deaths
Fatalities
Fertility
Growth rate
Multivariate analysis
Original
Pandemics
Population growth
Regression models
Rural areas
Spatial analysis
title As Births Diminish and Deaths Increase, Natural Decrease becomes More Widespread in Rural America
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