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Home > Population Estimates > 2007 Estimates > South Carolina

South Carolina 2007 Population Estimates

2007 Population

  July 1, 2007 Population Estimate
South Carolina 4,407,709
United States 301,621,157

 

Annual Population Change 2006-2007

South Carolina ranked 10th in the nation for highest percent change in population between July 1, 2006 and July 1, 2007.

  July 1, 2007 Estimate July 1, 2006 Estimate Population Change 2006-2007 Percent Change in Population 2006-2007
South Carolina 4,407,709 4,330,108 77,601 +1.8%
United States 301,621,157 298,754,819 2,866,338 +1.0%

 

Cumulative Population Change 2000-2007

South Carolina ranked 11th in the nation for highest percent change in population between April 1, 2000 and July 1, 2007.

  July 1, 2007 Estimate April 1, 2000 Estimates Base Population Change 2000-2007 Percent Change in Population 2000-2007
South Carolina 4,407,709 4,011,816 395,893 +9.9%
United States 301,621,157 281,424,602 20,196,555 +7.2%

 

Annual Components of Population Change 2006-2007

  Total Population Change 2006-2007* Births Deaths Natural Increase (Births - Deaths) Net International Migration Net Internal Migration Net Migration (International + Internal)
South Carolina 77,601 58,943 40,545 18,398 5,339 53,993 59,332
United States 2,866,338 4,278,899 2,450,218 1,828,681 1,037,657 - 1,037,657

*Total population change includes residual. The residual results from the application of a national population control to state and county population estimates. The residual is the difference in state and county population before and after the application of the control. The residual is not a demographic component of population change.
 

Cumulative Components of Population Change 2000-2007

  Total Population Change 2000-2007* Births Deaths Natural Increase (Births - Deaths) Net International Migration Net Internal Migration Net Migration (International + Internal)
South Carolina 395,893 409,724 276,833 132,891 40,959 228,133 269,092
United States 20,196,555 29,809,472 17,597,188 12,212,284 7,984,271 - 7,984,271

*Total population change includes residual. The residual results from the application of a national population control to state and county population estimates. The residual is the difference in state and county population before and after the application of the control. The residual is not a demographic component of population change.
 

Annual Rates* for the Components of Population Change 2006-2007

  Total Population Change 2006-2007** Births Deaths Natural Increase (Births - Deaths) Net International Migration Net Internal Migration Net Migration (International + Internal)
South Carolina 17.8 13.5 9.3 4.2 1.2 12.4 13.6
United States 9.5 14.3 8.2 6.1 3.5 - 3.5

*Rates per 1,000 average population at the midpoint of the time period.

**Total population change includes residual. The residual results from the application of a national population control to state and county population estimates. The residual is the difference in state and county population before and after the application of the control. The residual is not a demographic component of population change.
 

Estimated Resident Population by Selected Age Groups: July 1, 2007

  South Carolina United States
# % # %
Total Population 4,407,709 100.0 301,621,157 100.0
Under 5 years 296,302 6.7 20,724,125 6.9
5 to 9 years 287,116 6.5 19,849,628 6.6
10 to 14 years 287,012 6.5 20,314,309 6.7
15 to 19 years 318,283 7.2 21,473,690 7.1
20 to 24 years 302,038 6.9 21,032,396 7.0
25 to 29 years 297,494 6.7 21,057,706 7.0
30 to 34 years 275,891 6.3 19,533,220 6.5
35 to 39 years 301,237 6.8 21,176,460 7.0
40 to 44 years 312,293 7.1 21,984,829 7.3
45 to 49 years 323,067 7.3 22,861,373 7.6
50 to 54 years 308,998 7.0 21,013,387 7.0
55 to 59 years 286,494 6.5 18,236,259 6.0
60 to 64 years 238,386 5.4 14,475,817 4.8
65 to 69 years 174,530 4.0 10,752,441 3.6
70 to 74 years 136,662 3.1 8,599,708 2.9
75 to 79 years 108,614 2.5 7,324,882 2.4
80 to 84 years 80,793 1.8 5,698,629 1.9
85 years and over 72,499 1.6 5,512,298 1.8

 

Median Age: July 1, 2007

  Median Age for Resident Total Population Median Age for Resident Male Population Median Age for Resident Female Population
South Carolina 37.3 35.7 38.9
United States 36.6 35.3 37.9

 

Population by Gender: July 1, 2007

  South Carolina United States
# % # %
Total: 4,407,709 100.0 301,621,157 100.0
Male: 2,147,146 48.7 148,658,898 49.3
Female: 2,260,563 51.3 152,962,259 50.7

 

Population by Race: July 1, 2007

  South Carolina United States
# % # %
Total: 4,407,709 100.0 301,621,157 100.0
White alone 3,025,220 68.6 241,166,890 80.0
Black or African American alone 1,266,225 28.7 38,756,452 12.8
American Indian and Alaska Native alone 17,708 0.4 2,938,436 1.0
Asian alone 53,105 1.2 13,366,154 4.4
Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander alone 2,441 0.1 537,089 0.2
Two or more races 43,010 1.0 4,856,136 1.6

The original race data from Census 2000 are modified to eliminate the "some other race" category. This modification is used for all Census Bureau estimates products and is explained in the document entitled Modified Race Data Summary File Technical Documentation and ASCII Layout that can be found on the Census Bureau website at http://www.census.gov/popest/archives/files/MRSF-01-US1.html. Hispanic origin is considered an ethnicity, not a race. Hispanics may be of any race.
 

Hispanic or Latino Origin: July 1, 2007

  South Carolina United States
# % # %
Total population 4,407,709 100.0 301,621,157 100.0
Hispanic or Latino 168,920 3.8 45,504,311 15.1
Not Hispanic or Latino 4,238,789 96.2 256,116,846 84.9

 

Housing Unit Estimates: July 1, 2007

  South Carolina United States
July 1, 2007 2,021,947 127,901,934
July 1, 2006 1,977,899 126,305,754
July 1, 2005 1,929,730 124,528,548
July 1, 2004 1,892,168 122,682,693
July 1, 2003 1,859,122 120,972,978
July 1, 2002 1,828,542 119,379,756
July 1, 2001 1,799,794 117,863,693
July 1, 2000 1,762,492 116,289,877
April 1, 2000 (Estimates Base) 1,753,586 115,904,474
April 1, 2000 (Census 2000) 1,753,670 115,904,641

 

Glossary

Births
Total number of live births occurring to residents of an area during a time period, as estimated using reports from the Census Bureau's Federal-State Cooperative Program for Population Estimates (FSCPE) and the National Center for Health Statistics. The birth rate expresses births during a time period as a percentage of an area's population at the midpoint of the time period.

Deaths
Total number of deaths occurring to residents of an area during a time period, as estimated using reports from the Census Bureau's Federal-State Cooperative Program for Population Estimates (FSCPE) and the National Center for Health Statistics. The death rate expresses deaths during a time period as a percentage of an area's population at the midpoint of the time period.

Estimated Components of Population Change
Occurrences used by the Census Bureau to estimate changes in the population during a time period. These components consist of births, deaths, net internal migration and net international migration.

Natural Increase
Births minus deaths. The rate of natural increase expresses natural increase during a time period as a percentage of an area's population at the midpoint of the time period.

Net Internal Migration
The difference between internal in-migration to an area and internal out-migration from the same area during a time period. Internal in- and out-migration consist of moves where both the origin and the destination are with in the United States (excluding Puerto Rico). The net internal migration rate expresses net internal migration during a time period as a percentage of an area's population at the midpoint of the time period.

Net International Migration
International migration, in its simplest form, is defined as any movement across U.S. (50 states and District of Columbia) borders. The U.S. Census Bureau makes estimates of net international migration for the nation, states, and counties. We estimate net international migration as: (1) net migration of the foreign born, (2) net movement from Puerto Rico, (3) net movement of the U.S. Armed Forces, and (4) emigration of the native born. The largest component, net migration of the foreign born, includes lawful permanent residents (immigrants), temporary migrants (such as students), humanitarian migrants (such as refugees), and people illegally present in the United States. Currently, we do not estimate these components individually. The Census definition of foreign born is available on the foreign-born population page.

Net Migration
Net internal migration plus net international migration. The net migration rate expresses net migration during a time period as a percentage of an area's population at the midpoint of the time period.

Population Estimate
The estimated population is the calculated number of people living in an area as of July 1. The estimated population is calculated from a components of change model that incorporates information on natural change (births, deaths) and net migration (net internal migration, net international migration) that has occurred in an area since a Census 2000 reference date.

Resident Population
The resident population includes all residents (both civilian and Armed Forces) living in the United States.

Source: Population Division, U.S. Census Bureau

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