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MARGOLIS: SLOW POPULATION GROWTH MIGHT BE THE NORM IN VERMONT FEB. 21, 2016, 2:34 PM BY JON MARGOLIS 15 COMMENTS Photo by Anne Galloway/VTDigger File photo by Anne Galloway/VTDigger Wanted: more Vermonters. Especially young Vermonters, or more precisely young non-Vermonters who can be persuaded to become Vermonters. The state with the second smallest population (only Wyoming is smaller) also has the second oldest population, with a median age at the end of 2014 of 42.8, lower only than Maine’s 44.1, and a birthrate higher only than Rhode Island’s. Compared with most other states, then, Vermont has a smaller percentage of working-age folks, all those people between 20 and 65 who go to work five days a week, earn money, and buy stuff with it. University of Vermont economics professor Art Woolf said a shortage of working-age people poses problems for the state’s economy. “Businesses are going to have a harder time finding qualified workers,” Woolf said. “They aren’t going to be able to expand or they’ll expand someplace else or relocate. The economy is going to grow more slowly.” Not all economists agree. In fact, not everybody agrees the state has to be bigger at all. States, like countries, can grow richer without adding population, and prosperity in any state depends less on what it does than on conditions in the whole country. “A state’s economy is embedded in the national economy,” said Ronald Lee, a demographer and economist at the University of California, Berkeley, via email. “People move in and out and so do goods and capital, so wages and interest rates will not be much affected by local population trends.” Still, it’s no wonder that in this election year, two candidates for governor, Republican Lt. Gov. Phil Scott and Democrat Matt Dunne, have proposed somehow increasing the state’s population — by a lot. They both want to get to 700,000 people in about 10 years. That would be an increase of more than 11 percent over the current population of 626,562, the U.S. Census Bureau’s estimate at the end of 2014. That’s a very tall order, according to demographers and historians. States experience that kind of growth only after a discovery of natural resources (such as the California Gold Rush of 1849 or North Dakota’s Bakken Shield oil and gas in 2006) or when the federal government decides to invest billions in military, aerospace or energy projects. In all its history, Vermont has had but one period of rapid population growth. It was in the 1960s and 1970s. The federal investment that made it possible was completion of interstates 89 and 91. Vermont’s version of “gold” was lots of cheap land, which happily coincided with a time when many young people had money and a yen to get away from the hurly-burly of metropolitan life. They bought that cheap land for second homes or communal farms, and the population boomed. It has not boomed since and had never boomed before. “Aside from the decades between 1960-80, Vermont’s population has never climbed with anything like the speed the candidates are talking about,” said University of Vermont historian Dona Brown. “In fact it has barely climbed at all since the period of its first settlement. On the contrary, Vermont’s population hovered quite close to zero growth for most of the decades between 1830 and 1950.” These days, noted Art Woolf, young people don’t want to go “back to the land.” “They want to live in metropolitan areas where there are other people,” Woolf said, “preferably big metro areas.” That could explain why Burlington — though Woolf called it “a pretty small metro area” – and surrounding Chittenden County are growing at a healthy clip. It’s Vermont’s rural areas that are losing population. Today’s slow growth, then, might just be the norm. That doesn’t mean it is not a problem, or that attempts to attract more people make no sense. It does mean a balanced view of the situation is probably a good idea, and that balanced view indicates that compared with the rest of the country, Vermont is in pretty good economic and demographic shape. Its median household income is higher than the nation’s as a whole. Its unemployment rate is among the lowest, and not – despite what some have argued – only because the workforce has shrunk. It has shrunk, but so has the whole country’s. The New York Times recently published a study showing that 16 percent of men between the ages of 25 and 64 were not in the workforce. In Vermont, that figure is 13.1 percent, according to Vermont Labor Department economist Mathew Barewicz. Furthermore, in most of those data indicating that Vermont is lagging, it is hardly lagging alone. Rural areas all over the country are losing population, most of them faster than Vermont’s are. Or take that second-lowest birthrate. It’s only 0.1 percentage point lower than the next two states. And those next two states are New Hampshire and Massachusetts. The entire Northeast is getting older. “People are generally moving out of the Northeast to other parts of the country,” said Michael Moser of UVM’s Center for Rural Studies. Vermont’s population is going up, though very slowly. People are not pouring out of the state. They are seeping out. But others are seeping in at just about the same rate. The Internal Revenue Service recently finished an analysis of in- and out-migration for all states by age and income levels. The IRS found that 10,009 tax filers (these would be households, not simply individuals) moved out of the state in 2012 and 2013. But 9,501 tax filers moved in. The out-migrants were younger. The in-migrants were older and richer. In fact, the total amount of income that came into the state was greater than the amount that moved out. The in-migration of the wealthy would seem to contradict (though by no means conclusively disprove) the argument that Vermont’s relatively high income tax rates on top earners discourage upper-income people from moving in. But the IRS data do reveal some potential problems for Vermont. The biggest net outflow – 2,175 moving out, 1,835 moving in – was among tax filers younger than 26. That’s only 340 households, and at that age probably one- or two-person households. Still, if that rate of loss continued for several years, it would at least put to the test Woolf’s concern about businesses not being able to find enough workers. Whether anything can or should be done about this is questionable, especially since most people enticed to move to Vermont would be likely to head to Chittenden County, where the population is already growing. Phil Scott acknowledged that he did not have a detailed plan for trying to increase the state’s population but said he wanted to “begin a conversation” about the matter and “look at every opportunity” to attract more people to the state. Matt Dunne said he envisioned a “smart growth” policy to encourage young people from other states to move to “open housing stock, abandoned buildings and vacant lots” in places like Springfield, White River Junction and Bennington, “the communities where we have to have greater growth.” Some of that may work. But demographers say state populations are far more likely to go up thanks to natural increase rather than schemes to encourage in-migration. “Regarding how the demographic situation might be altered, I would say: Forget it,” said the University of California’s Lee. “Fertility will matter more in the long run than net migration. Public policy has generally had very little effect on fertility.” It’s certainly hard to see how any state policy could persuade more Vermonters to have children. Most Vermonters — 93 percent, according to census figures — are non-Hispanic whites, who have the lowest fertility rate in the country. Perhaps the simplest way to increase Vermont’s population is somehow (though just how poses a problem) to attract more African-Americans, Asian-Americans and Hispanics to the state. That could yield more good food, more good music and more babies.
Not to worry. In order to fill the demand for cheaper and cheaper labor for the "one percenters" they plan on importing thousands of Islamic refugees. Of course these imports don't share most of the beliefs that most of the current population does. They have proven that they love huge families especially when supported by someone else's money. They also believe that Sharia law should replace our current system of justice. Remember to keep voting for the same politicians who are willing to destroy their constituents for the almighty dollar. "Allahu Akbar!"
ReplyDeleteIf your taxes weren't so high you could get more people to come in. I love Vermont, always will, but moved away to NC for the lower taxes I'm sad to say.
ReplyDeleteNo one noticed you were gone....
DeleteI have moved away to better use my education and skills in a rewarding (not just monetarily, although the pay is far better) job.
ReplyDeleteWell, if people don't have to worry about getting a good education for their kids or getting meals and medical care for their elderly, they can live more cheaply in a lot of other states, but I haven't heard of too many moving to where it's cheapest-- Mississippi.
ReplyDeleteI'm in favor of having refugees live in Vermont. For one thing, they're intensely grateful and behave accordingly. They know how bad a dysfunctional society can be and are willing to work really hard to keep their new society functional. They are largely steeped in the (sadly, out-of-date) notion that America is #1 in everything, so have a lot of pride in having a chance to become Americans-- and if we welcome them, help them integrate and appreciate what they do, we will be rewarded a hundredfold. I agree with the message, if not its intent, of GW Bush, who famously said, "Bring 'em on!"
Tell that fairy tale to the European nations that bought into that baloney. How is that working out? A collapsing society with rampant crime. Only idiots and those that will profit immensely are still crying "Bring 'em on!".
DeleteHow many are you going to bring into your home and support?
DeleteSo Chuck, how many refugees are you going to bring into your home and support?
DeleteChuck, many of us are puzzled at why you insist on broadcasting opinion that is so far from the truth? "....willing to work really hard to keep their new society functional." How did that that play out in another, Northern New England town (Lewiston, Maine?) A village financially decimated by an influx of Shinnies. Both their education and healthcare systems were bankrupted. The majority of small business closed and left town. Property values tanked.
DeleteIf you want a first hand experience appreciating the cultural diversity of immigrants, try riding that crazy bike of yours around the Spfld, Mass. metro area after dark. Odds are you wont be coming home.
"......worry about getting a good education for their kids" By virtue of NECAP scores and dropout rates Springfield has about the worst school system in Vermont(171 out of 179)
http://www.schooldigger.com/go/VT/districtrank.aspx Yet we have about the highest cost per student. Clearly there is no coloration in dollars spent to quality of education. Please explain how infusing our system with illiterate, non English speaking children will help?
Chuck, many of us are puzzled at why you insist on broadcasting opinion that is so far from the truth? "....willing to work really hard to keep their new society functional." How did that that play out in another, Northern New England town (Lewiston, Maine?) A village financially decimated by an influx of Shinnies. Both their education and healthcare systems were bankrupted. The majority of small business closed and left town. Property values tanked.
ReplyDeleteIf you want a first hand experience appreciating the cultural diversity of immigrants, try riding that crazy bike of yours around the Spfld, Mass. metro area after dark. Odds are you wont be coming home.
"......worry about getting a good education for their kids" WTF? By virtue of NECAP scores and dropout rates Springfield has about the worst school system in Vermont(171 out of 179)
http://www.schooldigger.com/go/VT/districtrank.aspx Yet we have about the highest cost per student. Clearly there is no coloration in dollars spent to quality of education. Please explain how infusing our system with illiterate, non English speaking children will help?