Sara Swanson

Census: Michigan’s population falls a hair in 2022

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by Mike Wilkinson (Bridge Michigan)

Michigan’s population fell slightly in 2022, according to U.S. Census Bureau estimates released Thursday.

Michigan’s population was estimated at 10,034,113 as of July 1, down 3,400 from 2021’s estimate and 43,200 from the 2020 population of 10,077,325.

As a percentage, Michigan’s loss was the 17th most in the nation. New York had the biggest drop, losing nearly 1% of its population — over 180,000 people.

Florida led the nation, growing 1.9% in 2022, adding 416,000 people to more than 22 million.

Michigan’s decline appeared to be driven by COVID-19, with the state recording 12,500 more deaths than births in 2022. (Overall, the virus has killed more than 40,000 people in the state since 2020.)

Overall, the U.S. population grew by 1.2 million people to 333.2 million, the Census estimated.

The estimates show that the Sun Belt continues to attract people from much of the country, with Florida, Texas, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, Georgia and Arizona adding nearly 1 million people combined in the year.

Meanwhile, Maryland, Louisiana, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Illinois and California combined for a nearly 1 million person loss to other states.

Michigan was the only state to lose population from 2000 to 2010 but gained from 2010 to 2020, rising above 10 million people.

Estimates from University of Michigan economists anticipate declines over the next few years before modest increases, with the state peaking at about 10.5 million in 25 years.

With an aging population and without substantial growth, it could be a big problem for the state’s employers, said Don Grimes, a regional economic specialist with U-M who estimates the state will consistently have more deaths than births by 2050.

“Firms are going to have an extraordinarily hard time finding workers,” Grimes said at a recent economic conference. “We’re going to have a population growth problem.”

The estimates are through July 1 and that should mean that, barring a surge of COVID-19 cases and deaths, the impact of the pandemic should fall even more next year.

Over 64% of this year’s COVID-19 nearly 9,000 deaths occurred before July.

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