September 19, 2023

Just the facts

 USA Facts

  • From 1980 to 2022, the US population grew by nearly ​​one and a half times. Federal government spending tripled, however, from $2.1 trillion to $6.4 trillion. Social Security has been the biggest budget item for years ($2.0 trillion in 2022), while national defense and veterans spending moved up from third to second ($1.0 trillion) after assistance to individuals has lessened since the pandemic. 

  • In 2021, federal, state, and local governments employed a combined 20.7 million people. Around 79% of these employees worked for state or local governments, predominantly in elementary and secondary education. More than half of federal employees worked in national defense and international affairs.   

 Population 

  • The nation’s birth rate rose slightly to 1,104 births per 100,000 people in 2021, the first increase since 2014.  

  • The Hispanic population grew by 28 million people between 2000 and 2022.  

  • Seventeen percent of the US population was 65 or older in 2022 — up from 11% in 1980.  

Standard of living 

  • The average middle-class family earned about $59,600 in income in 2021. That’s down 5% from 2000 after adjusting for inflation. Average income fell the most for the bottom 20% of income earners, dropping 53% to $2,461. Meanwhile, income for the top 1% increased 43% to nearly $3.4 million. 

 Health 

  • The share of American adults with obesity has more than doubled since 1995, hitting 33.9% in 2021. Smoking has dropped to 14.4% of adults (down from about 22%). 

  •  Approximately 23% of adults ​were diagnosed with​ a mental illness in 2021. 

 Natural disasters  

  • The federal government declared 4,473 natural disasters between 1953 and 2022, often for fires and severe storms. More than one-third of the 90 disasters declared last year were fires.  

  • Since 1980, billion-dollar natural disasters have resulted in nearly 16,000 deaths and cost $2.5 trillion (after adjusting for inflation). 

 

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