Quote:
Originally Posted by Buckeye Native 001
And I don't have the time, and while this hypothesis could be completely off base, does anyone know how much metros (CSA? MSA?) in the midwest increased or decreased in population from 2000-2010? While the inner cities might have lost population, I'd be surprised if their respective metros saw significant population loss.
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For the current definitions of metropolitan areas (MSA, not CSA) where the entirety of the constituent counties have been released (and which are known to be over 1 million):
St. Louis increased. 2,754,717 in 2010 (from 2,698,806).
Pittsburgh suffered a loss. 2,356,285 in 2010 (from 2,431,087).
Cleveland suffered a loss. 2,077,240 in 2010 (from 2,148,143).
Kansas City increased. 2,035,334 in 2010 (from 1,836,038).
Columbus increased. 1,836,536 in 2010 (from 1,612,694).
Indianapolis increased. 1,765,241 in 2010 (from 1,525,104).
Chicago still needs Wisconsin before MSA numbers can be calculated.
Cincinnati and Louisville need Kentucky to be released.
If I were to hazard a guess at the metropolitan area figures based on the counties released so far, all three have gained at a moderate pace.
Minneapolis and Milwaukee have probably gained (every census estimate says so, and the official numbers will as well barring some catastrophic irregularity). Detroit has most definitely lost.
Only three midwestern metros have lost population: Pittsburgh, Cleveland, and Detroit (not released yet).
The only other major (1 million plus) metropolitan area that lost population this decade that has been released so far is New Orleans.