Census Note 2: The Host and Cold Sunbelts
Fannie Mae Foundation Census Note 02
(April 2001)*
The Hot and Cold
Sunbelts: Comparing State Growth Rates, 1950-2000
Robert E. Lang and Kristopher M. Rengert
Fannie Mae
Foundation
Overview
When it comes to population growth, all Sunbelt states are
not equal. Parts of the region (the hot Sunbelt) grew at an
explosive rate, while other areas (the cold Sunbelt) lagged
behind the nation. This census note looks at differences in
state-level rates of change in the Sunbelt from 1950 to 2000.
The states are grouped into four tiers depending on their
percent change and the number of people added during the
period. The data shows that the middle section of the
Sunbelt, especially the Mississippi Delta, grew much slower
than the east and west coasts and the Southwest. Despite some
slow-growing areas, the Sunbelt boomed overall and now
contains nearly as many residents than the Northeast and
Midwest combined.
Definition and Background
The Sunbelt, as defined in this analysis, refers to the
states or parts of states that lie south of the 37th degree
latitude. The area runs from North Carolina and Florida in
the east, to Southern California in the west (Gottdiener
1994). In this report, the Sunbelt roughly forms the southern
third of the Continental United States (see map). In total,
the area includes 13 states and parts of two more. Ten
counties in Southern California and Clark County Nevada
(which includes Las Vegas) are sufficiently far south to be
included in this definition of the Sunbelt.
The idea that the Sunbelt comprised a distinct region
emerged during the post war years (Mohl 1990). In 1969, Kevin
Phillips coined the term "Sunbelt" to refer a group of
southern and western states that contained a new constituency
for the Republican Party. Kirkpatrick Sale (1976) followed
with a book that identified a "Southern Rim" of states that
were gaining more political power with each postwar census.
The term Sunbelt also refers to places outside the original
Northeastern and Midwestern urban core that grew rapidly from
the mid-20th century onward. Urban historian Carl Abbott
(1981) defines the Sunbelt as a "pair of regions oriented
toward the southeastern and southwestern corners of the
United States that have shared similarities of economic
development and demographic changes since the 1940s" (page
33).
The Sunbelt's metropolitan development required modern
engineering-from water projects in the Southwest and Florida
to air conditioning throughout the region (Fishman 2000). The
interstate highway system, which created a grid of equal
access throughout the nation, not only linked it to the
region's cities to rest of the nation; it also facilitated
growth in the rural Sunbelt.
Findings
As the table shows, the Sunbelt can be grouped into four
tiers based on population growth. At the top are the "Big
Three," or the hot Sunbelt. These places have each shot up by
over 13 million residents over the past 50 years.
Florida-which in 1950 contained less than three million
people-shot up to nearly 16 million by 2000. Texas and
Southern California also made impressive gains, but grew at a
slower rate because they started with larger population
bases.
The "Booming Four," which grew just slightly slower than
the Big Three, added almost 11.6 million to its population.
Clark County Nevada, which includes Las Vegas, shot up a
remarkable 2,749 percent in just 50 years. Arizona also
boomed, jumping from 750,000 in 1950 to over 5.1 million in
2000. Georgia, which began the period as a mid-sized state,
gained the most population in the Booming Four, and by 2000
had increased by over 4.7 million residents to reach 8.2
million.
States in the "Steady Four" gained populations on par with
the U.S. growth rate from 1950 to 2000. The Carolinas grew
the fastest by slightly outpacing the nation. Louisiana and
Tennessee, at 67 and 73 percent growth rates respectively,
lagged a bit and pulled the group average to just below the
national average. North Carolina, which in 1950 was the third
largest Sunbelt state with 4.1 million, almost doubled to 8
million.
The "Lagging Four" group of states, or the cold Sunbelt,
grew at half the U.S. growth rate. Mississippi and Arkansas,
states that comprised much of the western part of the old
South, added the least population and expanded at the slowest
rate. Neighboring Alabama registered a slightly faster rate
and gained the most population in the group. Oklahoma grew
the fastest despite being partly in the Great Plains, a
region that has been depopulating for decades (Popper and
Popper 1987).
Other findings derived from the table include:
-
In 1950, the Steady Four contained about three quarters
the population of the Big Three, but fell to just a
quarter by 2000.
-
In 1950, the Booming Four contained just over half the
population of the Lagging Four but surged far ahead by
2000.
-
Despite having just 40 percent of the Steady Four's
population in 1950, the Booming Four added over a million
and a half more people by 2000.
-
The Sunbelt's share of the national population jumped
from 28 percent in 1950 to 40 percent by 2000.
-
The Sunbelt accounted for over half of the population
added to the United States total during the second half
of the 20th century.
-
At 110 million, the Sunbelt nearly equals the combined
2000 population of 118 million for the Northeast and
Midwest (U.S. Bureau of the Census 2000).
Analysis
Given the Sunbelt's large size and its diverse environment
and economy, it is easy to understand how growth could vary
across the region. As the data show, the Big Three gained the
most people. The three have been the region's traditional
migration magnets. But a "new Sunbelt" of smaller states also
boomed (Frey 2000). Some of this growth, especially in the
West, was due to a secondary migration within the Sunbelt.
Migrants from Southern California helped fuel development in
Phoenix and Las Vegas. Some retirees in Florida who moved
there from the Northeast have subsequently moved north to the
Carolinas.
Sunbelt growth during the past 50 years has been both hot
and cold. The desert Southwest has been the hottest, followed
by Florida and Southern California. Growth has also been hot
in the big metro areas of Texas. But the rest of the interior
South's growth has mostly been cooler. The rural Mississippi
Delta, an area that experienced population losses as African
Americans migrated north (Lemann 1992), forms the cold growth
center of the Sunbelt.
The Sunbelt now contains a disproportionate number of
people relative to its share of national land area. In 2000,
the Sunbelt accounted for 40 percent of the nation's
population in an area comprising roughly a third of the lower
48 states. Where the nation was once top-heavy from cities in
the Northeast and Midwest, it is now bottom-heavy from the
booming Sunbelt. That shift, in just a half-century, shows
how much the Sunbelt has gained against the once-
unchallenged population dominance of the nation's original
urban-industrial core.
*About the Census Notes Series
The Fannie Mae Foundation's Census Notes series provides
timely analyses of Census 2000 data to stimulate discussion
and further research. Although Census Notes are reviewed
internally and on an informal basis externally, they have not
been subject to the formal process of external peer review
that is used for the Foundation's research publications.
Therefore, they should be viewed as works in progress and
their findings should be considered preliminary.
Authors
Robert E. Lang is Director of Urban and Metropolitan
Research at the Fannie Mae Foundation. Kristopher M. Rengert
is a Senior Research Fellow in the Innovations division of
the Fannie Mae Foundation
The authors thank Patrick Simmons for his help in gathering
the state data used in this report. They also thank Carol
Bell, Karen Danielsen, and Rebecca Sohmer for their comments
on this report
References
Abbott, Carl. 1981. The New Urban America: Growth and
Politics in Sunbelt Cities. Chapel Hill, NC: University
of North Carolina Press.
Fishman, Robert. 2000. The American
Metropolis at Century's End: Past and Future Influences.
Housing Policy Debate 11(1):199-213.
Frey, William H. 2000. Regional Shifts in America's Voting
Aged Population: What do they Mean for National Politics?
University of Michigan: Population Studies Center 00-459.
Gottdiener, Mark. 1994. The New Urban Sociology. New
York: McGraw-Hill.
Lemann, Nicholas. 1992. The Promised Land: The Great
Black Migration and How it Changed America. New York:
Vintage Books.
Mohl, Raymond A. 1990. Searching for the Sunbelt:
Historical Perspectives on a Region. Knoxville, TN:
University of Tennessee Press.
Phillips, Kevin. 1969. The Emerging Republican
Majority. New Rochelle, NY: Arlington House.
Popper, Deborah E., and Frank J. Popper. 1987. The Great
Plains: From Dust to Dust. Planning 53(9):12-18.
Sale, Kirkpatrick. 1997. Power Shift: The Rise of the
Southern Rim and its Challenge to the Eastern
Establishment. New York: Vintage Books.
U.S. Bureau of the Census. 2000. Resident Population of the
50 States, Puerto Rico and the District of Columbia. Table 5.
Internet Release: December 28. Washington DC: Department of
Commerce.