Growth and Decline: Visualizing U.S. Population Change by County

Visualizing U.S. Population Change by County (2010-2018)

The American Heartland continues to feed the growth of urban centers — not only with its agricultural products and natural resources, but with its people as well.

Across the nation, coastal urban centers are adding new citizens, while rural counties are seeing their populations decline. Outside of this general trend, fracking has created some rare pockets of growth in rural areas, while coal mine closures have had the opposite effect.

Today’s map comes to us from Reddit user jinkinson, and it maps U.S. population change by county from 2010 to 2018, using data from the U.S. Census Bureau.

Uneven Growth

From 2010 to 2018, the total United States population increased by 6% from 308,745,538 to 327,167,434. However, it’s clear that not all counties participated in this uptrend.

There are 3,142 counties counted as part of this map (Puerto Rico and U.S. territories excluded). Of these, 1,489 experienced positive growth, while 1,653 saw a decline.

Which Counties are Growing the Fastest?

America’s economy has grown for over a decade, but that growth increasingly concentrates in 1% of the nation’s counties.

In fact, just 31 counties were responsible for 32.3% of the U.S. gross domestic product (GDP) in 2018, according to data from the Bureau of Economic Analysis.

Although economic concentration tells part of the story, a view of changing population patterns can help us see where physical growth is happening across the country.

Top 20 Counties for U.S. Population Growth

Rank State County Name 2010 Population 2018 Population % Change
#1 North Dakota McKenzie County 6,360 13,632 114%
#2 Texas Loving County 82 152 85%
#3 North Dakota Williams County 22,398 35,350 58%
#4 Texas Hays County 157,107 222,631 42%
#5 Utah Wasatch County 23,530 33,240 41%
#6 Tennessee Trousdale County 7,870 11,012 40%
#7 Texas Hudspeth County 3,476 4,795 38%
#8 Florida Sumter County 93,420 128,754 38%
#9 Florida Osceola County 268,685 367,990 37%
#10 Texas Comal County 108,472 148,373 37%
#11 Texas Kendall County 33,410 45,641 37%
#12 Iowa Dallas County 66,135 90,180 36%
#13 Georgia Forsyth County 175,511 236,612 35%
#14 Texas Fort Bend County 585,375 787,858 34%
#15 Texas Williamson County 422,679 566,719 34%
#16 Florida St. Johns County 190,039 254,261 34%
#17 North Dakota Mountrail County 7,673 10,218 33%
#18 Georgia Long County 14,464 18,998 31%
#19 South Dakota Lincoln County 44,828 58,807 31%
#2 Virginia Loudoun County 312,311 406,850 30%

At the top of the list is McKenzie County, North Dakota, which experienced a growth of 114% in its population from 2010 to 2018. This is due to the shale gas industry that flourished in the area. Interestingly, all of North Dakota’s active oil and gas rigs are in just four counties: McKenzie, Dunn, Williams, and Mountrail, three of which make the top 20 list above.

The fracking boom also fueled growth in Texas, where six counties made the list.

However, immediate economic success built on fracking sands and sensitive commodity prices may not be sustainable over the longer term. In fact, counties from a previous energy era are already seeing what happens when demand dries up.

Which Counties are Declining the Fastest?

If you look at a map of coal operations in the U.S. and compare it to the list of declining counties below, a stark pattern appears.

Half of country’s coal miners work in just 25 counties, and as mines close there are fewer economic opportunities available in those areas.

Top 20 Counties for U.S. Population Decline

Rank State County Name 2010 Population 2018 Population % Change
#1 Illinois Alexander County 8,238 6,060 -26%
#2 Oklahoma Blaine County 11,943 9,485 -21%
#3 West Virginia McDowell County 22,113 18,223 -18%
#4 Kansas Morton County 3,233 2,667 -18%
#5 Arkansas Phillips County 21,757 18,029 -17%
#6 Texas Terrell County 984 823 -16%
#7 Texas Schleicher County 3,461 2,895 -16%
#8 Alaska Petersburg Borough 3,815 3,221 -16%
#9 Arkansas Monroe County 8,149 6,900 -15%
#10 Louisiana Tensas Parish 5,252 4,462 -15%
#11 South Carolina Allendale County 10,419 8,903 -15%
#12 Michigan Ontonagon County 6,780, 5,795 -15%
#13 Mississippi Quitman County 8,223 7,051 -14%
#14 Alabama Macon County 21,452 18,439 -14%
#15 Arkansas Lee County 10,424 8,985 -14%
#16 Alabama Perry County 10,591 9,140 -14%
#17 Virginia Emporia city 5,927 5,121 -14%
#18 Mississippi Coahoma County 26,151 22,628 -13%
#19 Colorado Kit Carson County 8,270 7,163 -13%
#20 Texas Mitchell County 9,403 8,145 -13%

While coal counties have grim figures due to the changing domestic energy story, it’s Alexander County in Illinois that tops the list with a 26% decline in population over the time period.

In fact, the harsh reality is that 93% of Illinois’ counties have seen a decrease in population between 2010-2018.

State by State: Winners and Losers

The number of declining counties within a state reveals a larger picture. Visual Capitalist aggregated county level data to reveal the patterns of U.S. states.

State # Counties with Negative Growth # Counties with Positive Growth % of Counties with Negative Growth
Illinois 93 9 91%
Connecticut 7 1 88%
Kansas 90 15 86%
West Virginia 46 9 84%
Mississippi 62 20 76%
New York 46 16 74%
Nebraska 66 27 71%
Pennsylvania 47 20 70%
New Mexico 23 10 70%
Missouri 79 36 69%
Iowa 68 31 69%
Ohio 58 30 66%
Alabama 43 24 64%
Indiana 59 33 64%
Arkansas 48 27 64%
Michigan 53 30 64%
Louisiana 39 25 61%
Oklahoma 44 33 57%
Vermont 8 6 57%
Maine 7 6 54%
Kentucky 63 57 53%
Wyoming 12 11 52%
North Dakota 27 26 51%
Minnesota 44 43 51%
Rhode Island 4 4 50%
New Jersey 10 11 48%
Wisconsin 34 38 47%
Georgia 73 86 46%
South Carolina 21 25 46%
Virginia 60 73 45%
North Carolina 43 57 43%
South Dakota 26 40 39%
Alaska 11 18 38%
Texas 96 158 38%
Nevada 6 11 35%
Tennessee 32 63 34%
Montana 18 38 32%
New Hampshire 3 7 30%
Maryland 7 17 29%
California 15 43 26%
Colorado 16 48 25%
Utah 7 22 24%
Florida 15 52 22%
Massachusetts 3 11 21%
Idaho 9 35 20%
Hawaii 1 4 20%
Oregon 7 29 19%
Arizona 2 13 13%
Washington 2 37 5%
Delaware 0 3 0%
District of Columbia 0 1 0%

Illinois tops the list with the most people leaving its counties, while areas such as the District of Columbia and Delaware experienced no declines.

What happens to a state where the majority of its counties are losing residents?

The Big Picture

Americans are seeking out opportunity where it resides: in the cities. The pursuit of fracking oil and gas created opportunities in regions beyond the coast or traditional urban centers.

However, the long term trend of concentration of people on coasts and in major urban centers will continue to impact infrastructure spending, labor mobility, and economic activity. America no longer derives the majority of its economic success from rural counties and industries.

It is unclear how rural counties will fare as their denizens continue to dwindle. What is clear is that the few that rely on natural resources for success will continue to experience the ups and downs of volatile commodity markets.

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