U.S. Census Bureau
U.S. Department of Commerce News

            EMBARGOED UNTIL:  AUG. 1, 1995 (TUESDAY)   

Public Information Office                              CB95-137
301-457-2794
301-457-4067 (TDD)

Population Statistical Information Staff
301-457-2422

                POPULATION PROFILE OF THE NATION 
                     ISSUED BY CENSUS BUREAU

     EMBARGOED UNTIL:  AUG. 1, 1995 (TUESDAY) - The population of
the United States is projected to increase to 392 million by
2050--about 50 percent larger than today's population.  As of
July 1, 1994, Texas, with a population of 18.4 million, became
the second most populous state after California; and as of 
Jan. 1, 1995, the estimated population of the United States stood
at 261,638,000.

     These and other statistical facts are contained in a new publication 
titled, "Population Profile of the United States: 1995" (P23-189), 
a biennial compendium of facts about our nation collected by the Commerce 
Department's Census Bureau.

     Some facts from the compendium, which is illustrated with
graphs, charts, and maps, are:

     -    The number of births in 1994 fell below the 4 million 
          mark for the first time since 1988.

     -    California's Hispanic-origin population is expected to
          double between 1993 and 2020.

     -    The average American makes 11.7 moves in a lifetime
          (based on current age structure and average rates of
          moving by age).

     -    Thirty-four percent of the nation's 3- and 4-year-olds
          were enrolled in nursery schools in October 1993.

     -    Among persons 25 years old and over, 80 percent had
          completed high school and 22 percent had completed 
          four or more years of college in 1993.

     -    Post-secondary school students paid about $2,650 during
          the 1990-91 school year for their tuition and fees,
          books and educational supplies, and room and board.

     -    The share of households occupied by families fell from
          81 percent in 1970 to 71 percent in 1990, and remained
          at that level in 1994.

     -    The estimated median age at first marriage in 1994 was
          24.5 years for women and 26.7 years for men.

     -    More than one-half (53 percent) of women who gave birth
          between July 1993 and June 1994 were in the labor
          force.

     -    The aggregate amount of child support received in 
          1991 was $11.9 billion, 67 percent of the total 
          $17.7 billion that custodial parents were due.

     -    Real median household income fell 7 percent from
          $33,685 in 1989 to $31,241 in 1993.

     The publication has sections on national and state
population trends and projections; geographical mobility; school
enrollment, educational attainment, and post-secondary school
financing; households and families; marital status and living
arrangements; fertility, child care arrangements, and child 
support; disability, program participation, and health insurance;
labor force and occupation; money income and poverty; race and
Hispanic-origin populations; and the elderly population.

     Since data in the publication are from surveys, they are
subject to sampling variability and other sources of error.
-X-
Editor's note:  EMBARGOED UNTIL:  AUG. 1, 1995 (TUESDAY) - media
representatives may obtain copies of the publication from the
bureau's Public Information Office by telephone:  301-457-2794;
fax:  301-457-3670; or e-mail:  pio@census.gov.  Non-media orders
should be directed to the bureau's Customer Services Office on
301-763-INFO(4636); fax:  301-457-3842.


Source: U.S. Census Bureau
Public Information Office
(301) 763-3030

Last Revised: September 27, 2002 at 12:02:28 PM

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