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  • Economic Improvement Nudges U.S. Migration to Normal

    March 15, 2013, William H. Frey

  • More than 70 percent of today's baby boomers and seniors are white, and they grew up during a time when the nation's minority population was relatively small and consisted mainly of African Americans. By contrast, 40 percent of those under age 35 belong to minority groups. They have grown up during a period when racial mingling is the norm at school, work, social occasions and houses of worship.

    March 14, 2013, William H. Frey, Phys.org
  • The fact that outer suburban growth has continued to falter two years after the recession ended calls into question whether today’s younger generations will hold the same residential preferences as their forebears.

    February 26, 2013, William H. Frey, The International
  • We need to have an immigration policy that recognizes the labor-force needs of this country, whatever they are. Clearly, we focus on the high-skilled workers because they have the greatest productivity for the economy. But low-skilled jobs are important, too. As we get a bigger middle-class population, we will need people to work in many of those lower-skilled jobs which may not be filled with our existing population.

    January 30, 2013, William H. Frey, National Journal
  • Three "Must-Knows" Regarding Immigration

    January 30, 2013, William H. Frey

  • We still are a country that's kind of divided, and a lot of that fissure in the population tends to be based in race and age and ethnicity. There's kind of a dangerous result in this election when we see older whites moving in one direction and younger minorities moving in another direction.

    January 21, 2013, William H. Frey,
  • What’s constant in this country is its ability to adapt—adapt to people with changing backgrounds, people with changing attitudes. But Hispanics really are a very big part of America’s present and future. And they’re not clustered in one area. They’ve been fanning out to all parts of the United States, and by moving into new parts of the country ...they’re becoming accepted by these communities.

    January 19, 2013, William H. Frey, USA Today
  • The long-term scenario [for Rhode Island] will be at best tepid population gain. It’s quite likely that the state could lose a Congressional seat, as it barely retained its second seat after the past census. If it loses its second seat, it will be the first time the state had one seat since 1793.

    January 8, 2013, William H. Frey, New York Times
  • A Modest Population Bounce Back for the Sun Belt and the Nation

    December 21, 2012, William H. Frey

  • After decades of wars, a depression, immigration surges, baby booms, boomlets and busts, we are entering a new era of modest growth.

    December 20, 2012, William H. Frey, Star-Telegram
  • When the 2020 Census comes around, we’re going to have a majority-minority child population.

    December 13, 2012, William H. Frey, New York Times
  • Census Projects New “Majority Minority” Tipping Points

    December 13, 2012, William H. Frey

    • Video
  • America’s Changing Demographic Landscape: New Projections from the Census Bureau

    December 13, 2012, William H. Frey

    • Video
  • America’s Young Adults: A Generation On the Move

    November 20, 2012, William H. Frey

    • Video
  • On Election Day, A New American Mainstream

    November 8, 2012, William H. Frey

  • Nationally, even modest white support is no longer necessary for a Democratic victory if there is strong turnout for minorities.

    November 7, 2012, William H. Frey, Bloomberg Businessweek
  • Our idea of what racial categories were in the past are changing. I think it's especially going to be changing for younger people as ... there's been an increase in mixed-race marriages, and that will eventually change the classic racial [categories].

    September 27, 2012, William H. Frey, The Washington Examiner
  • What’s new here [in the recently released Census data] is that it shows there’s a pulse in the urban core, in big metro areas that have diverse economies. It’s interesting that Chicago and New York were the top ones, which suggests these are places that will attract young and well-off people who want to feel like they live in an important area. You can’t generalize entirely, of course, because while some urban cores are doing very well, others are still part of a broader suburban trend.

    September 27, 2012, William H. Frey, Christian Science Monitor
  • I think there is at least a hint that we have hit bottom in this post-recession malaise in the United States. And by that I mean we've not turned up, but we're going down at a slower pace, and we might see a little bit of the glimmer of the light at the end of the tunnel.

    September 20, 2012, William H. Frey, National Public Radio
  • On many levels we are continuing to slide in the wrong direction [in terms of recovery] but just at a much slower pace. Now inter-state migration is picking up, it's still below 2007 levels, on a number of measures we are not moving down as quickly as we were. It seems the worst is over.

    September 20, 2012, William H. Frey, The Guardian
  • A big sliver of American society that generally does well tends to cluster in Washington. When people make the argument that $250,000 is middle income, that’s way higher than most of the country regards as middle income. But here in Washington, your next-door neighbor has that kind of income.

    September 20, 2012, William H. Frey, Washington Post
  • We can take good advantage of our history as an immigrant nation in incorporating new people and ideas into our society and economy, which will become even more important as the economy becomes more globalized. The sky's the limit.

    September 13, 2012, William H. Frey, USA Today
  • Even today, young people are are much more open about immigration, much more open about interracial marriage...We've [United States] been so successful in lots of ways, but one aspect that we have not been successful in is total integration of the different racial groups. I think that will change dramatically over the next 30 years.

    September 13, 2012, William H. Frey, USA Today
  • The key [to raising voter turnout among Hispanics] is energizing those eligible voters, getting them to register, getting them to vote.

    September 12, 2012, William H. Frey, Bloomberg
  • A decade from now, I think you'll see [changes in the electoral map due to minority population growth in] Arizona, Texas, and Georgia for sure. You have got to look at the South and West—those are the fast-growing parts of the country—and that's where the minorities are dominating the growth.

    August 30, 2012, William H. Frey, Roll Call

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