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Tennessee Population Projections Matthew C. Harris, Ph.D. Assistant Professor, Economics Center for Business and Economic Research.

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Presentation on theme: "Tennessee Population Projections Matthew C. Harris, Ph.D. Assistant Professor, Economics Center for Business and Economic Research."— Presentation transcript:

1 Tennessee Population Projections Matthew C. Harris, Ph.D. Assistant Professor, Economics Center for Business and Economic Research

2 Demographic Data - Sources Decennial Census American Community Survey Census Bureau Population Estimates Population Projections

3 Decennial Census Mandated by Article 1, Section 2 of U.S. Constitution Based on actual counts of persons Used to determine number of members in House of Representatives from each state Provides the base population for the annual population estimates series

4 Population Estimates Calculated number of people living in an area at a specific point in time. Derived using models that account for changes in: Births Deaths Net Migration Used to control/inform ACS, CPS, etc. Used for denominators by state/local government agencies and non-profits as denominators in rate calculations and program fund allocations.

5 Population Projections Estimates of the population for future dates Relies on assumptions about future births, deaths, and net migration. Used by government, business, and non- profits for planning purposes and demand forecasts.

6 What We Do A ‘cohort-component’ model Single Age – Sex – Race/Ethnicity - County Birth: county-age-race specific birth rates Death: Statewide death rates, augmented by SSA tables for changing life- expectancy. Net Migration – Use decennial census data.

7 Invisible Forces Net Migration is Unobservable Birth and death are documented in vital statistics ‘Tennessee Department of Health’ Net migration is the ‘residual’ Population is known Births are known Deaths are known Net Migration makes up the difference Most volatile component of population change Most critical component of short-term population change.

8 TN Doing What TN Does From a population standpoint: Grow at about 1.0% per year on average Noisily 1930’s – 11.4% Growth 1940’s – 12.9% Growth 1950’s – 8.4% Growth 1960’s – 10.0% Growth 1970’s – 17.0% Growth 1980’s – 6.2% Growth 1990’s – 16.7% Growth 2000’s – 11.5% Growth 2010’s – 8.0% Growth (at current pace)

9 What We Project - Statewide 2020: 7.1M 2030: 7.8M 2040: 8.5M 2050: 9.3M

10 All of this has happened before

11 All of this will happen again

12 Cohort Component Model We model population growth as a pure population process. Births Deaths Historical Net Migration We do NOT include structural economic factors: Structural Economic Changes Planned Development Infrastructure Changes

13 Why we exclude economic data To include economic data in a model, you need: Consistent variables and consistent impact. An issued commercial development permit has to mean the same thing in County X as it does in County Y. Accurate forecasts of all economic variables included. When accurate, including economic variables may be helpful. Forecast error in economic variables may (and often does) make overall population forecasts less accurate. Most economic variables are even noisier than net migration. Incorporating them ALSO requires an understanding of who those variables bring in to a given county. Population growth is actually a pretty stable process.

14 A compounding effect Outcome (e.g., Population) Things we can observe Effect of Things we can observe on the Outcome Things we cannot observe

15 Short term gain, long term pain WRONG

16 Key Trends from the Projection

17 A few key numbers on race 2010: 75.6% White Non-Hispanic 16.5% Black Non-Hispanic 4.6% Hispanic 3.2% Non-Hispanic, NWoBA. 2040: 63.6% White Non-Hispanic 17.2% Black Non-Hispanic 11.1% Hispanic 7.9% Non-Hispanic, NWoBA

18 Hispanic Population Growth 1990: 32,741 2000: 123,838 278% Growth 2010: 290,059 134% Growth 2020: 461,704 (projected) 59% Growth 2030: 678,738 (projected) 47% Growth 2040: 954,115 (projected) 40.5% Growth

19 Age Histogram, 2010

20 Age Histogram, 2040

21 Births Per Year – United States YearBirths 1915-1925Approx 2.9M PA 19302.6M 19352.3M 19402.5M 19452.8M 19503.6M 19554.1M 19574.3M 19604.2M 19644.0M 1965-19893.1M-3.9M, trough in OPEC Years 19904.2M 2000’s4.0-4.1M 2010’s3.7-3.8M

22 Urbanization 10 Largest Counties 2010: 53% of TN Pop 10 Largest Counties 2040: 56% of TN Pop 10 Largest Counties 2060: 60% of TN Pop ShelbyDavidsonKnoxRutherfordHamilton WilliamsonMontgomerySumnerSullivanBlount

23 Top 10 – Absolute Change CountyAbsolute Population Change 2010-2040 Rutherford275,106 Davidson250,427 Williamson222,432 Knox152,180 Shelby148,936 Montgomery138,908 Wilson93,888 Hamilton90,081 Sumner84,704 Sevier58,441

24 Mid-cap Growth CountyAbsolute Population Change 2010-2040 Sevier58,441 Washington43,677 Robertson35,564 Maury32,178 Bradley29,380 Tipton28,182 Putnam27,134 Cumberland25,979 Madison23,589 Fayette23,511

25 Top 10 – Growth Rate CountyCAGR 2010-2040 Williamson2.68% Rutherford2.41% Wilson2.02% Montgomery1.99% Sevier1.68% Fayette1.60% Robertson1.44% Sumner1.42% Sequatchie1.37% Loudon1.29%

26 Growth Rate 11-20 CountyCAGR 2010-2040 Cumberland1.27% Tipton1.27% Blount1.14% Davidson1.12% Maury1.12% Bedford1.10% Putnam1.06% Washington1.01% Knox1.01% Dickson0.99%

27 (865) 974-5591 mharris@utk.edu


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