More Americans Will Die Than Be Born in 2030 – Immigration Will Drive Growth
14 hours ago
- #demographics
- #economy
- #immigration
- The U.S. is projected to reach a demographic tipping point in 2030 when deaths will exceed births for the first time in modern history.
- Net immigration will become the sole source of population growth starting in 2030, a shift previously seen in aging nations like Italy and Japan.
- The CBO's updated forecast moves this demographic crossover nearly a decade earlier than previous estimates, driven by declining fertility and an aging population.
- The total fertility rate is expected to drop to 1.53 births per woman, far below the 2.1 replacement rate needed for population stability.
- Policy changes, including the 2025 Reconciliation Act, will reduce immigration, leading to 320,000 fewer people in the U.S. by 2035 than previously projected.
- U.S. population growth will slow until it hits zero in 2056, a stark contrast to the 1% annual growth seen in the 20th century.
- The aging population will strain Social Security and Medicare, with the worker-to-retiree ratio dropping from 5:1 in 1960 to 2:1 by the mid-2050s.
- Future economic growth will rely heavily on productivity gains and AI, as labor force expansion stagnates.