A brief excerpt:
NOTE: Housing economist Tom Lawler has written extensively on demographics and the impact on household growth and housing demand. Last November, Lawler reviewed the most recent Census projections: Lawler on Existing Home Sales, Population Projections and Household Slowdown. Today he discusses the recent surge in Net International Migration.
From Tom Lawler:
One of the biggest demographic stories of the past two years has been the recent surge in net international migration (NIM). While this surge is not reflected in the latest Census Bureau’s “official” population estimates and one-year-ahead forecasts (so-called “Vintage 2023), that is because these estimates did not account for the rapid increase in “unauthorized” immigration over the past two years.
Estimates of NIM over the past few years vary considerably. For example, in its January 2024 demographic forecast update the CBO estimated that NIM was 3.267 million in 2023, up from 2.674 million in 2022 and 1.171 million in 2021. (These are calendar-year estimates). This contrasts markedly with Census’ Vintage 2023 NIM estimates of 1.139 million in the 12 months ending June 2023, 999 thousand in the 12 months ending June 2022, and 376 thousand in the 12 months ending June 2021.
Goldman Sachs, also incorporating data on unauthorized immigration, estimates that NIM in 2023 was 2.5 million, a bit below the CBO estimate but well above official Census estimates from the Population Division.
There is much more in the article.