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NYC led the latest state population drop

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BY E.J. McMAHON

For a second consecutive year, New York’s population loss was mainly concentrated downstate, according to the latest Census Bureau estimates.

During the 12-month period ending last July 1, the 50 counties of upstate New York lost 20,846 residents, a decrease of 0.33 percent, while the downstate region lost a combined total of 55,944 people, or 0.42 percent. Virtually all of the change (53,264) occurred in New York City, accounting for the bulk of the state’s net decrease of 76,790 in 2018-19. It was the third straight year of decline in the city’s estimated population after a long period of growth.

The latest downstate population estimate of 13,241,115 reflects an increase of 202,289 (1.6 percent) since the 2010 census, while the combined population upstate stood at 6,212,446, a decrease of 126,830 people (-2.0 percent) since 2010. Since the last decennial census in 2010, the total state population has grown by 75,459, or just 0.4 percent.

As shown below, 45 of 50 upstate counties have lost population since the last decennial census; in all but six of the losing counties, the decline has exceeded 2 percent of the 2010 base population. Dutchess, Putnam and Suffolk remain the only downstate counties to have lost population since the census.

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Highlights of 2019 Census Bureau estimates for New York Counties
(See Tables 1 and 2 for more details)

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E.J. McMahon is a senior fellow at the Empire Center for Public Policy. 

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