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California's population grew again in 2024 after a pandemic slump

California's population grew again in 2024 after a pandemic slump

Independent01-05-2025

California 's population climbed above 39.5 million in 2024, marking the second year of growth following a string of declines in the nation's most populous state during the coronavirus pandemic.
The population rose an estimated 1%, adding 108,000 people compared to 2023, Gov. Gavin Newsom 's office said Thursday. The increase is due in part to the number of births outpacing deaths and a boost in the number of adults 65 and older. The state said it also had better data to account for increases in legal immigration into the state from other countries.
About one in nine people living in the United States reside in California.
The Democratic governor touted the population gains as a sign of the state's growing economy, which is one of the largest in the world. The size of the state's economy has now surpassed that of Japan, which puts it only behind the U.S. as a whole, China and Germany, Newsom's office announced last week.
' People from across the nation and the globe are coming to the Golden State to pursue the California Dream, where rights are protected and people are respected,' Newsom said in a statement. 'Regions throughout California are growing, strengthening local communities and boosting our state's future.'
But Republicans in the Democrat-dominated state and beyond have taken aim at California's population declines in the past and the loss of its residents to Texas, which previously made up the largest state-to-state movement in the U.S., according to U.S. Census data.
Critics have tied past population decreases in the Golden State to the relentless homelessness crisis and rising cost of living. California has some of the highest housing, gas and utility prices in the country.
The population rose in nine of the 10 largest counties, with Los Angeles County increasing by 28,000 compared to 2023. In Contra Costa, the state's ninth most populous county which is part of the San Francisco Bay Area, the number of residents fell by just two dozen.
In Mono, a small county located on the California-Nevada border around Yosemite National Park, the population fell by about 1.6%.
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