An American Slowdown
The U.S. has always relied on population growth to keep its economy pumping. A plateau may be coming.
By German Lopez
The U.S. has always relied on population growth to keep its economy pumping. A plateau may be coming.
By German Lopez
City officials said that the new census estimates did not fully account for the growing number of migrants, which would have resulted in a minimal drop being reported.
By Winnie Hu and Stefanos Chen
Most people of Middle Eastern and North African descent are classified as “white” in U.S. census data. Thousands of respondents to a Times survey told us how they actually identify.
By Karen Zraick, Allison McCann, Sarah Almukhtar, Yuliya Parshina-Kottas, Robert Gebeloff and Denise Lu
Many of those displaced also reported food shortages and predatory scams, according to new data from the Census Bureau.
By Aidan Gardiner
Only 1.4 percent of the city’s rentals were available in 2023, according to new data, the lowest portion since 1968. The market was even tighter for lower-cost apartments.
By Mihir Zaveri
The New York Times recopiló los datos de años de censos, analizó patrones de migración y recorrió comunidades texanas para comprender lo que ocurre en el segundo estado más poblado del país.
By J. David Goodman, Edgar Sandoval and Robert Gebeloff
White people make up a declining minority in Texas, even among those born in the state. And all those people moving in? They’re as likely to be Black, Hispanic or Asian.
By J. David Goodman, Edgar Sandoval and Robert Gebeloff
We explain what the next census could look like.
By K.K. Rebecca Lai
Census categories for race and ethnicity have shaped how the nation sees itself. Here’s how they have changed over the last 230 years.
By K.K. Rebecca Lai and Jennifer Medina
A lapse in funding would delay data on unemployment and inflation as policymakers try to avoid a recession.
By Ben Casselman
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