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    • 5.7% by 2050

      • The natural decline, rather than out-migration, will be the driver of overall population loss in Ohio. Ohio’s population is projected to decline by around 5.7% by 2050.
      development.ohio.gov/about-us/research/population/population-projections
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  2. 5 days ago · The Department of Development's projections show tiny Harrison County in eastern Ohio will lose about a quarter of its population by 2050, one of the biggest drops in the state. By 2050, the ...

  3. 5 days ago · Balance can be tenuous in Lawrence County, Ohio's southernmost county. From 2010 to 2020, its population declined more than any other. And it's projected to continue, with a loss of 31.7% of its ...

    • Legacy Cities
    • Labor Force, Population, and Demographics
    • Household Income
    • Recommendations

    The study said Ohio is rife with what are known as “legacy cities,” which are places “that came to prominence in the early-to-mid 1900s around a manufacturing economy but experienced significant population and manufacturing industry losses in the mid-to-late twentieth century.” Ohio has 22 legacy cities surrounded by 15 legacy metros, it said. On t...

    When it comes to the labor force, legacy cities experienced a loss of 85,000 workers with small to medium sized cities accounting for 70% of those losses, according to the study. Legacy city adjusted metro areas experienced little change. The Columbus area was the only place in the state to perform on par with the nation as a whole. Legacy city adj...

    Wages in Columbus city and metro increased the most of any place in Ohio since 2000 but even so did not keep pace with national trends, increasing at rates of 45% and 50% respectively, compared to the nation’s 55%, the study said. In 2020, the city of Columbus had the highest median household income for any city in the state ($54,902), it added. Th...

    As far as what can be done, the study said the focus of the state’s policies should be to stabilize existing populations and prevent further population loss by: 1. protecting municipal budgets with “predictable and assured access to stable sources of income;” 2. using national recovery and infrastructure funds to help to repair or modernize histori...

  4. Population change. Ohio’s population is projected to decline by approximately 675,000 (5.7%) by 2050 if current rates of fertility, mortality, and migration remain unchanged. Ohio is currently the seventh most populous state.

  5. Aug 13, 2021 · Ohio's population grew by just 2.3%, making it one of seven states to lose a Congressional seat. California, New York, Illinois, Pennsylvania, Michigan and West Virginia also each lost a seat. 33 of Ohio’s 88 counties gained population, while 55 lost residents.

  6. The state of Ohio is in the initial stage of gradual, sustained population loss because of an aging population, declining fertility, and stagnant migration patterns. The population decline began in the fall of 2020 because of a sharp increase in mortality.

  7. 4 days ago · Discover Ohios population & how it has changed over time. USAFacts uses Census data to break down the population of Ohio by race, age, and more. View today.

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