Alaska’s population is set to decline by 14,000 residents by 2050, according to a new forecast from the Alaska Department of Labor, with Wrangell showing the highest rate of annual population loss over the period, dropping on average by 1.5% annually.
The community’s population is forecast to drop to under 1,400 people by 2050, continuing its steady decline from 2,369 residents in the 2010 U.S. Census and 2,039 in last summer’s state estimate.
The ongoing loss of working-age residents is a leading cause of the statewide population decline and persistent labor shortage in Alaska, including Wrangell, where the community’s average age, as of the state’s 2023 estimate, was 48.4 years old. Wrangell’s average age is one of the highest in Alaska, a wide 12 years older that the statewide average.
A higher-than-average death rate is also contributing to the population decline in Wrangell, according to the state report, issued this month. The community’s death rate last year per 1,000 residents was 14.1, second in the state only to the Yukon-Koyukuk Census Area in Interior Alaska at 14.4.
The number of deaths are predicted to nearly double Wrangell’s birth rate each year through 2050.
The state forecasts 1,988 residents in Wrangell at this time next year.
The department publishes population forecasts every two years, and the new document estimates the state will drop nearly 2% by 2050. The prediction, which reverses decades of optimistic forecasts by the department, is based upon more than a decade of outmigration from Alaska, rising death rates and falling birth rates.
The state’s forecast is critical for urban planners and others who need to calculate demand for schools, transportation, utilities, housing and commerce.
State Demographer David Howell said the department bases its forecast on a 30-year average and extends current trends into the future. That results in the state’s population falling from 736,812 to 722,806 residents by 2050.
“We’ve now had 11 straight years of negative net migration, and it’s just pushed that 30-year average down enough that our natural increase, which is just births minus deaths, can’t make up for the losses in net migration once we get about 10 years out in the projected period,” Howell said.
Younger Americans tend to be more mobile and are more likely to be the people who move into the state. With fewer people moving into the state, the state’s average age is rising, which means fewer new births.
By the mid-2030s, “our Baby Boomer population is really starting to hit these older ages, and so we’re seeing not only births declining, but also deaths increasing. So those two things come together, which ends up leading to population losses,” Howell said.
For at least two and a half decades, the department had expected Alaska’s population to grow significantly.
In 1998, for example, the Department of Labor expected the state would have more than 843,000 residents by 2018. In reality, the figure was 738,300 that year.
The department’s forecasts have grown more pessimistic with each new forecast since 2007, but this year’s is the first to predict a long-term decline.
A decline isn’t certain. The forecast is based upon existing trends and could be altered by unforeseen circumstances, such as a new oil boom on the North Slope or the arrival of climate-change refugees in large numbers, but Howell said that demographers don’t see signs of a large change in trends at the moment.
“We could have big swings in migration, oil booms, busts, that sort of thing. But if we average out to be that 30-year average, then (the decline) is the most likely scenario,” he said.
A missed estimate on birth rates could cause a steeper decline. The forecast keeps Alaska at an estimate of 1.9 children per woman, currently the third-highest in the country.
Howell said the state has always had a higher birth rate than the national average and declines in that area “seem to have bottomed out … but it’s hard to say what will happen going forward.”
The population declines wouldn’t be spread evenly across the state, the forecast indicates. Southwest Alaska, where the average age is relatively low, continues to have more births than deaths and outmigration through 2050. The Matanuska-Susitna Borough is forecast to continue growing in population.
But Southeast Alaska, which already is older on average than the rest of the state, is expected to lose significantly more population than the state as a whole, as are communities along the Gulf Coast and in the Interior. The Kodiak Island Borough is forecast to have Alaska’s second-highest average population loss per year out to 2050 — second to Wrangell.
The population decline also would change the state’s demographic mix, the forecast indicates. Alaska would become less white; the proportion of Alaska Natives would rise from about 22% to 25%, in part because Alaska Natives move out of the state less frequently than white residents do.
Howell said the number of Alaska Natives over 65 years old is also set to rise significantly; the forecast expects a 131% increase between 2020 and 2050.
The Alaska Beacon is an independent, donor-funded news organization. Alaskabeacon.com. Larry Persily of the Wrangell Sentinel contributed reporting for this story.
Reader Comments(0)