A data release from the 2020 Census reveals that the Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander communities are incredibly diverse and complex.
There are 20.6 million people who identify as Asian, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander alone (not in combination with another race), making up 6.2% of the nation’s population, according to the 2020 Census. However, if you include people who are of mixed race, Asian and some other race, the total jumps to 24 million.
But it’s not until these numbers are broken down that the incredible diversity of this population becomes clear.
Using recently released data from both the 2020 Census and the American Community Survey’s (ACS) 5-year estimates, Census workers were able to detail the diversity of the racial and ethnic composition of this population and its geographic distribution.
RACE
The 2020 Census shows:
- 19.9 million people identified as Asian alone and 4.1 million people identified as Asian in combination with another race.
- Roughly 690,000 people identified as Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander (NHPI) alone but almost 900,000 identified as NHPI in combination with another race.
- Race and Hispanic origin are measured separately by the Census Bureau: 267,330 identified as both Asian alone (race) and Hispanic, and 67,948 people identified as both NHPI alone (race) and Hispanic
Among NHPI (alone or in combination) individuals, there were roughly 620,000 who identified as Native Hawaiian, 212,000 as Samoan, 156,000 as Chamorro, 65,000 as Tongan, and roughly 50,000 as Fijian.
In acknowledgement of the diversity of languages spoken in the United States, the Census Bureau disseminated materials for the 2020 Census in 59 different languages other than English, including 23 languages that originated in Asia: Bengali, Burmese, Chinese, Khmer, Gujarati, Hindi, Hmong, Ilocano, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Lao, Malayalam, Marathi, Nepali, Punjabi, Sinhala, Tagalog, Tamil, Telugu, Thai, Urdu, and Vietnamese.
- 73.2% of those who identified as Asian alone were U.S. citizens, by birth or naturalization.
- 85.9% of those who identified as NHPI alone were U.S. citizens, by birth or naturalization.
- 31.3% of the roughly 44 million foreign-born people in the United States were born in Asia.
The Asian and NHPI population was not evenly distributed across the United States, according to the 2020 Census:
- Only three states — Hawaii, California, and New Jersey — had 10% or more of their population identify as Asian alone.
- Hawaii, Alaska, and Utah were the only states where at least 1% of the population identified as Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander alone.
- Hawaii, Washington, and Nevada are the three states with the highest percentage of the population who identify as Asian in combination with another race.
- Hawaii, Nevada, and Alaska are the three states with the highest percentage of the population who identify as NHPI in combination with another race.
- The largest Asian alone population in the Chicago and Atlanta metro areas is Asian Indians (229,003 in the Chicago metro area and 136,931 in the Atlanta metro area).
- One of the largest Asian groups in in the Houston metro area was Vietnamese (136,813).
- The Los Angeles metro area is home to roughly 35,000 NHPI alone individuals, including 11,752 Samoans and 4,569 people who identify as Chamorro.
- The largest Asian alone population in the Minneapolis metro area was Hmong (83,132).
- The largest Asian alone population in the Seattle (124,204) and Boston (152,274) metro areas was Chinese, excluding Taiwanese.
- The largest Asian alone population in the San Diego metro area was Filipino (155,522).
- In the Salt Lake City metro area, the NHPI alone population (18,291) was significantly larger than any detailed Asian alone group.
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