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  1. #1

    Default Census Bureau will release Michigan data next week: Predict Detroit's population.

    The census bureau's web site says Michigan results will be available next week. It doesn't specify a day. After what seems like a decade of discussion about how many people Detroit will lose, it's now time make our official predictions. The winner will get to bask in the glory of having bested all the other amateur demographers on DetroitYes.

    Here's my prediction: 797,438.
    Next?

  2. #2

    Default

    City = 756,328
    Metro = 4,024,876

  3. #3

    Default

    City: 865,032
    Metro: 4,183,265

  4. #4

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    I defer to Danny.

  5. #5

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    Prediction? A significantly lesser populated city of Detroit. It's amazing in the last 5 years how many neighborhoods have been abandoned, stripped, and burnt to the ground. At least 100K less than whatever the last official census numbers were.

  6. #6

    Default

    City = 901,451
    Metro [[MSA) = 4,381,753

  7. #7

    Default

    city=715,000

  8. #8

    Default

    Between 740,000 and 790,000.

  9. #9
    NorthEndere Guest

    Default

    There is already a thread on this down-page [[2010 Census).

    Anyway, I'll guess 838,500 for sh%ts-and-giggles, and that's me being kind of optimistic. If Cleveland [[a city with very similar population trends to Detroit) is any guide, it'll be about 770,00.
    Last edited by NorthEndere; March-19-11 at 11:37 PM.

  10. #10

    Default

    No guesses on Detroit.

    Metro Detroit = falls below 4 million.

  11. #11

    Default

    If Detroit falls under 750,000 then Indianapolis will surpass it in population. Damn.

  12. #12

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    Quote Originally Posted by Cincinnati_Kid View Post
    If Detroit falls under 750,000 then Indianapolis will surpass it in population. Damn.
    In my worst moments, I feel as if less than 500,000 people are in the city. It feels as if it has half the population that it did 10 years ago. That's why I said I can't provide an informed guess.

  13. #13
    NorthEndere Guest

    Default

    English, no way. Sorry. That mean that the region lost over 400,000 people, alone, which would mean that the state outside of Detroit would have had to have added about 350,000, since Michigan only lost a little over 50,000 people, net. There is no way that 350,000 net were added outstate, so there is no way that Metro Detroit loses 500,000 people.

    The last Census estimate [[4.40 million as opposed to 4.44 million) for the Metro will be very close to what they find, I'd bet you. The very worst it could come in at is 4.35 million). I think people have to actually look at trends and do a bit of math before just throwing out numbers. Michigan had a tough decade, but you have to look at trends across the state and Metro Detroit historical trends.

    Quote Originally Posted by Cincinnati_Kid View Post
    If Detroit falls under 750,000 then Indianapolis will surpass it in population. Damn.
    Indy is already 830,000.
    Last edited by NorthEndere; March-19-11 at 11:44 PM.

  14. #14

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by NorthEnder View Post
    English, no way. Sorry. That mean that the region lost over 400,000 people, alone, which would mean that the state outside of Detroit would have had to have added about 350,000, since Michigan only lost a little over 50,000 people, net. There is no way that 350,000 net were added outstate, so there is no way that Metro Detroit loses 500,000 people.
    No need to fuss... that's why I said I wasn't really providing an informed guess. This place just feels emptier than a decade ago, and let's not even talk about 20 years ago. There are entire neighborhoods that my friends lived in growing up that don't even exist anymore... and we grew up in CAY's supposedly emptied-out, post-riot, 1980s Detroit.

    I am sure that the numbers are less bleak than my perception. At least, I hope so.

  15. #15
    NorthEndere Guest

    Default

    English, I didn't mean to be so pushy. Sorry about that. I just don't think people realize how deceptive looks can be, and how much we've bought into "the world is falling" rhetoric by our local, state, and national media.

    Detroit is almost certainly going to lose a greater percentage of its population than over the 90's [[when it lost about 7.5%), but some of this wild predictions are about as bad as the overly optimistic, head-in-the-sand predictions. There are a few things we know:

    - The Greater Grand Rapids metropolitan area [[CSA) is predicted to have added a little over 72,000 people, which will be the greatest numerical gain anywhere in the state. Lansing adds only another 4,100, Kalmazoo about 8,900 and Ann Arbor another 25,000. The other metropolitan areas in the state are either losing population [[and more quickly than Detroit, I'll add), or are not large enough to make much a numerical difference.

    - Add up those large out-state metropolitan areas and you have about 110,000 in outstate metropolitan areas. When you include all non-metropolitan counties, and the other shrinking metropolitan areas and counties, I can't imagine the number changing much. As was stated in the other thread, of Michigan's 83 counties, over 60 of them are estimated to have declined in population from 2000. So total out-state growth might even only be in the 100,000 range.

    - Given all of that, there are only a few possibilities 1.)Metropolitan Grand Rapids/West Michigan will have grown A LOT more than predicted if Metro Detroit fell anywhere near these most pessimistic scenarios, 2.) Detroit proper could possibly have a horrendous loss, but most of those would have had to have stayed within the tri-county area given the state only lost 50,000 on net, so the Census has underestimated the populations of nearby Macomb, Oakland, and out-county Wayne, 3.) the 50,000 net loss from Michigan will be far more evenly distrubuted across the state than some think, meaning we'll see high-growth predictions for some areas be more modest, and high-decline predictions for others be less than anticipated.

    I really don't know how this is going to turnout, but I want to believe it my #3 is right, even though it seems like my #2 is probably more likely. #1 seems completely improbable given how West Michigan struggled economically in the second-half of the decade.

    BTW, want to mention one last thing. Even though the city will see an overall loss, there are a few bright spots. There will definitely be Census tracts and neighborhoods within the city to show considerably growth and regeneration, and a few will hold steady. The Census is also sure to show the city becoming more diverse [[more diverse than it's been in decades), as it is almost certain that both the hispanic, Asian, and foreign-born populations in the city will have continued to grow like they have been since the 90's even as the African American population on net has suburbanized.
    Last edited by NorthEndere; March-20-11 at 01:25 AM.

  16. #16

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by NorthEnder View Post
    English, I didn't mean to be so pushy. Sorry about that. I just don't think people realize how deceptive looks can be, and how much we've bought into "the world is falling" rhetoric by our local, state, and national media.
    Yeah, Chicago also looked like it grew over the last decade. Ended up being 200,000 residents smaller than it was 10 years ago.

  17. #17

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by NorthEnder View Post
    English, I didn't mean to be so pushy. Sorry about that. I just don't think people realize how deceptive looks can be, and how much we've bought into "the world is falling" rhetoric by our local, state, and national media.

    Detroit is almost certainly going to lose a greater percentage of its population than over the 90's [[when it lost about 7.5%), but some of this wild predictions are about as bad as the overly optimistic, head-in-the-sand predictions. There are a few things we know:

    - The Greater Grand Rapids metropolitan area [[CSA) is predicted to have added a little over 72,000 people, which will be the greatest numerical gain anywhere in the state. Lansing adds only another 4,100, Kalmazoo about 8,900 and Ann Arbor another 25,000. The other metropolitan areas in the state are either losing population [[and more quickly than Detroit, I'll add), or are not large enough to make much a numerical difference.

    - Add up those large out-state metropolitan areas and you have about 110,000 in outstate metropolitan areas. When you include all non-metropolitan counties, and the other shrinking metropolitan areas and counties, I can't imagine the number changing much. As was stated in the other thread, of Michigan's 83 counties, over 60 of them are estimated to have declined in population from 2000. So total out-state growth might even only be in the 100,000 range.

    - Given all of that, there are only a few possibilities 1.)Metropolitan Grand Rapids/West Michigan will have grown A LOT more than predicted if Metro Detroit fell anywhere near these most pessimistic scenarios, 2.) Detroit proper could possibly have a horrendous loss, but most of those would have had to have stayed within the tri-county area given the state only lost 50,000 on net, so the Census has underestimated the populations of nearby Macomb, Oakland, and out-county Wayne, 3.) the 50,000 net loss from Michigan will be far more evenly distrubuted across the state than some think, meaning we'll see high-growth predictions for some areas be more modest, and high-decline predictions for others be less than anticipated.

    I really don't know how this is going to turnout, but I want to believe it my #3 is right, even though it seems like my #2 is probably more likely. #1 seems completely improbable given how West Michigan struggled economically in the second-half of the decade.

    BTW, want to mention one last thing. Even though the city will see an overall loss, there are a few bright spots. There will definitely be Census tracts and neighborhoods within the city to show considerably growth and regeneration, and a few will hold steady. The Census is also sure to show the city becoming more diverse [[more diverse than it's been in decades), as it is almost certain that both the hispanic, Asian, and foreign-born populations in the city will have continued to grow like they have been since the 90's even as the African American population on net has suburbanized.
    You weren't being pushy. We're on the same side. I just hope you're right... is anyone other than me dreading the official census data announcement?

    Of course, some of my friends are already preparing not to believe whatever the official number is. One of my mentors and good buddies is a retiree who worked the census last year. Their take is that there are MANY Detroiters in 2010 who had good reason to hide their presence in a household for legal or financial reasons.

    I just hope you guys are right. I can't believe some of the cities that are now bigger and more happening than we are. I mean, Indy? Columbus???

  18. #18

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by English View Post
    Is anyone other than me dreading the official census data announcement?
    It's not worth the bother of dreading census data. The census data represents an effect. What we all ought to be dreading is the cause. Detroit continues to lose population because the government of Detroit is not making any meaningful changes to reverse the trend. I don't see an end to that in sight, but perhaps I'm just cynical because of my age; does anyone else see anything coming down the pike that might reverse this trend?

  19. #19

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by professorscott View Post
    does anyone else see anything coming down the pike that might reverse this trend?
    Yeah. The end of Freddie Mac, Fannie Mae and the 30 year mortgage: http://finance.yahoo.com/loans/artic...mod=loans-home

  20. #20

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by professorscott View Post
    It's not worth the bother of dreading census data. The census data represents an effect. What we all ought to be dreading is the cause. Detroit continues to lose population because the government of Detroit is not making any meaningful changes to reverse the trend. I don't see an end to that in sight, but perhaps I'm just cynical because of my age; does anyone else see anything coming down the pike that might reverse this trend?
    Not in the short term. By midcentury, Detroit will be more important than it is today because of the global water crisis. It also will be demographically different.

    I dread the data because it will be yet another opportunity for metro Detroit to engage in collective self-loathing and self-flagellation. It will be on the TV news. It will be discussed on Spotlight and Flashpoint. It will make newspaper headlines. No one, but no one is harder on Detroit and SE Michigan than Detroiters and SE Michiganders ourselves.

  21. #21

    Default

    750-ish

    ......

  22. #22

    Default

    Detroit - 699,000
    Metro - 4,700,000

  23. #23

    Default

    A lot of cities had a greater loss than expected: St. Louis, Chicago, Cleveland to name a few. Will Detroit buck that trend?

  24. #24

    Default

    My guess is that the city's population contracted by about 20% since 2000... So I say somewhere in the 750,000 - 760,000 range.

  25. #25

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by iheartthed View Post
    My guess is that the city's population contracted by about 20% since 2000... So I say somewhere in the 750,000 - 760,000 range.
    Wait? Aren't you the one that said before that no way in the world could Detroit have lost that many people in such a short period of time? Becoming a believer now I see....

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