Here’s what you’ll learn when you read this story:

  • By studying population trends and forecasting models, researchers have come to believe that nearly 15,000 U.S. cities will face noticeable depopulation by 2100.
  • Populated areas of the cities in question could experience a decline of up to 44 percent.
  • Projections call for the biggest drops in city populations to occur in the Northeast and Midwest.
  • Yaky@slrpnk.net
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    2 hours ago

    What I don’t understand is that the most desirable areas (home price, population growth) in the US are also very prone to natural disasters: floods in Carolinas, fires in S California, hurricanes in Florida, extreme heat in Texas and the southwest. Meanwhile, Great Lakes / rust belt area does not get many disasters, still has seasons, has access to fresh water, and yet, cities/areas populations are slowly decreasing or staying flat.

    • TheSambassador@lemmy.world
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      14 minutes ago

      As someone who loved living in the Midwest, the severity of the winters are usually enough to scare people off. And it got kinda muggy in the summer.

      I’d love to end up there, as I didn’t mind the weather, but I also worked from home and didn’t have to go outside more than when I wanted to.

  • jaykrown@lemmy.world
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    2 hours ago

    This is probably a good thing, it’s more efficient if people live within larger municipal areas closer to amenities. It’s very inefficient if we have small towns everywhere that need their own supplies. I’m not saying we should all live in one massive city, just that at scale, things become more accessible to people.

  • daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    8 hours ago

    I live in a city that 10 years ago was losing population and nowadays it’s growing in population.

    I honestly preferred ot better when it was losing pops.

    Eternal growth is unsustainable

  • Uriel238 [all pronouns]@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    10 hours ago

    The US is also suffering from a low fertility rate, at 1.79 (population replacement rate is 2.1), which we made up for in the 20th century by lots of immigration.

    (This is one of the factors that informs the great replacement myth, as non-whites approach outnumbering whites in the US. A vocal minority sees this as a bad thing, especially since whites tend to vote Republican and Blacks tend to vote Democrat).

    I find it odd and fascinating that the ownership class is terrified by the notion of a lowering population – babies allegedly grow up to be workers after all – but are not willing to pass policy to support child rearing, and depend entirely on tradwife propaganda and restricting contraception access and abortion access.

    It’s especially a problem since our economy is based entirely on growth, with lots of young people providing support for elders.

    The US is not unique with this problem. South Korea, Japan and Italy (actually the whole EU) also have low rates and are trying to implement changes to improve fertility, and so far to little effect.

    • TrackinDaKraken@lemmy.world
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      2 hours ago

      They want more babies, but don’t want to pay anything for it, hence the laws restricting contraception and no support that would potentially increase taxes.

      But, the question is, why do they want us to have more babies? And, yes, I mean even specifically white babies. They’re hell-bent on replacing workers with machines. More angry people banging at the mansion door seems like a bad idea.

      I don’t think billionaires are particularly smart.

    • iocase@lemmy.zip
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      9 hours ago

      To add to this there’s an event horizon birth rate of 1.5 children per women. Once you cross the event horizon you never come back out (there might be one or two exceptions technically but I’m quoting someone else here so don’t @ me)

      The basic loop is once birth rates are that low things are usually pretty bad for parents. Uncertainty about the future, extreme focus on attaining stability where stability is an impossibility. Once you drop below 1.5 for a sustained period of time you never come back out. The people who could fix it (parents) are overworked, underpaid, living in tiny apartments they can barely afford, have to pay more in childcare than rent just to maintain their living situation…

      The young can’t be the only ones investing in the future…

      • mojofrododojo@lemmy.world
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        9 hours ago

        (parents) are overworked, underpaid, living in tiny apartments they can barely afford, have to pay more in childcare than rent just to maintain their living situation…

        seems like we’re already there

        • iocase@lemmy.zip
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          9 hours ago

          Yeah if you subtract immigration and first gen immigrants (>14yo at immigration is highly likely to have the same amount of kids as where they’re from. <14yo is highly likely to have close to the new host nations family size) the US is already on the other side of the event horizon.

    • rockSlayer@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      23 hours ago

      But sociology and economics are soft sciences, so obviously it’s pointless to use and never reflects reality. Unlike physics and engineering, where if it works on paper it will always work for real /s

      • schipelblorp@sh.itjust.works
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        22 hours ago

        Yeah, I really wonder about the mentality of people that would read that article and not wonder “what’s actually going on.” Like shit just kinda happens and we measure it when it does?

        • Aniki@feddit.org
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          9 hours ago

          yeah, since as we all know, the world is actually hollow. there is nothing going on inside.

    • iocase@lemmy.zip
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      9 hours ago

      That’s a bandaid fix. Everyone is depopulating except like 5 African countries which are going to enter their own negative birth rates in 15 years if they continue developing.

      Im Canadian, and India crossed into negative birth rates a few years ago. The median age in India is almost 30 now

      With a population of 1.45B people, India has a median age of 29.5 years which makes it the 108/196 oldest country. 24.6% of the demographic are children 0-14 years old, 68.2% are working-age people aged 15-64, and 7.15% are older population aged 65+ years

      Source

      What this means is

      A) average age is going to go up roughly 1 year every 2 years

      B) the average age in India will be roughly 38 or so in 20 years

      C) their 65+ cohort increases by a huge margin

      Eventually even they are too old and you’re importing a demographic they desperately want to retain domestically. Same with the Phillipines and other emigrant nations.

      At what point are we just colonizing other nations through immigration? When their best and brightest all leave the country to earn more in a foreign country, start a family there, and the only thing they give back is a remittance. Any kids they would have had are citizens of their new home nation and they’re probably not going back (statistically the supermajority) while their home country dips into negative birth rates and having never developed industrially to support a massive cohort of elderly people.

      Hilariously I could see a point where an immigrant takes any net benefit they provide in a foreign nation and use it to support their own elderly parents and grand parents in their home country. The entire planet one giant retirement home…

    • tidderuuf@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      The USA has plenty of immigration, they just choose to not live where all these towns are depopulating. No one can figure out why.

      /S

    • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      Two men were standing under a tree when it began to rain. One said to the other, “good thing this tree will keep us dry.”

      “But what happens when the treek is soaked, and it can no longer keep us dry?” Asked the second.

      “Don’t worry,” said the first, “we’re in a forest. We’ll just run to another tree.”

  • AllNewTypeFace@leminal.space
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    23 hours ago

    If it’s a shift from a labour-intensive agrarian economy, that’s to be expected. A similar thing happened in Iceland, and due to the small scale of the country, it is very noticeable. Some 2/3 of the population live in the greater capital area, and beyond that, the countryside is dotted with abandoned farmsteads slowly falling apart.

    • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      This has nothing to do with the agrarian transition. These depopulating cities were created by the agrarian transition. They were where people went after they left the rural areas.

      • village604@adultswim.fan
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        20 hours ago

        Yup, this is likely because large cities have become too expensive, and rural areas have been getting fiber rollouts. With WFH being a viable option for many people, they can live in the boonies where you can get a 1200sqft house for under $200k.

        • WoodScientist@lemmy.world
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          9 hours ago

          It’s more about regional populations movements. There is no vast movement of people from the cities to the countryside. Rural areas continue to drop in population just as they have for the last century. The rural areas have a higher cost of living when you include job prospects. People can only afford to bid up the housing costs in cities because the jobs pay better than in the sticks.

  • mesa@piefed.social
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    18 hours ago

    Quick q, where is the research? I had a hard time finding the actual study they were talking about.

  • HubertManne@piefed.social
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    22 hours ago

    kinda strange giving wfh should theoretically disperse the populace more. I mean not me I like public transit.

  • THE_GR8_MIKE@lemmy.world
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    22 hours ago

    I live in a city and it sucks and I cannot wait to get back to the burbs. I don’t live in downtown, so it is not walkable, despite it being a dense area. So I pay more, own less, and do less than if I was back in the burbs. I have no idea why anyone over the age of 25 wants to live in a city. I cannot fathom being an elderly person living in a city. How do you put up with that? I absolutely cannot stand it. I’m glad I tried it, because now I know for sure how much I despise it. I’m not even 30 yet.

    • Maeve@kbin.earth
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      6 minutes ago

      Older people who have mobility issues sometimes prefer cities because markets, banks, care providers, other services can be close to home, it easily within ~5 minutes walking/golf cart distance.

    • schipelblorp@sh.itjust.works
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      16 hours ago

      The problem with cities is exactly the reason I’d want to move there: cars. I don’t want to be tied to cars, car payments, car traffic, car repairs. The only way to get out of that is to move to the city, where I can walk, ride, or take public transit.

      Problem: I’m always constantly less than 5 feet away from a fucking road and fucking cars in a city, I hear them when I’m awake and when I’m asleep–there is no escaping cars in a city.

      Reality: I’d rather be in a car than next to one if those are my only two options.

      We need to get cars the fuck out of cities and give people real choices.

    • Peffse@lemmy.world
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      22 hours ago

      Your usage of city and their usage of city differs.

      They are talking about cities like Cameron with a declining population not even hitting 1,000.

        • Peffse@lemmy.world
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          20 hours ago

          Yeah, I don’t know what defines a city. I’m guessing each state has it’s own definition based on population.

          I’d personally call less than 1,000 a village.

          • Hawke@lemmy.world
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            20 hours ago

            Varies by jurisdiction.

            In the US a lot of places are defined by the structure of the government rather than anything to do with their size.

          • village604@adultswim.fan
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            20 hours ago

            I went to school in a “city” of less than 1k people.

            The only address that was actually in the “city” was the post office.

      • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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        21 hours ago

        Obviously below “subway” population levels, which is the only place I’d want to live. Because life with a subway is awesome; and life without rail transit is abysmal.

    • hovercat@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      22 hours ago

      I live on the edge of urban/suburban in a small city and absolutely love it. 10 minutes to bike into downtown, tons and tons of businesses and job opportunities, and just a much better community atmosphere. Anytime I go into more suburban/exurban areas, it’s downright depressing at this point knowing that it takes 5 minutes in a car to get to literally anything that’s not another identical house.