The nearer future will have better prospects than others. Declining population due to having less kids will be everywhere except parts of mid east and Africa. These so called advanced states instead of limited vetted immigration and making it family friendly as safe economically and politically they just chose immigration. Look up world population by 2021. By then even the Chinese population will have peaked and will decline significantly while Africa population is growing since expansion if modern medicine and industrial nations. Back in the 1650s when the population of the guidestones it only represented about 15 percent of I remember.
Think Europe has unmanaged unvetted mass immigration now, wait till 2021. Again instead of family planning and raising tax payers they let in tax absorbers, crime and non assimilating invaders with their own agenda currently.
Some US states the young may have more opportunities by 2030 as the last of the boomers retire while a handful of others will see increased migration to their states and cities and being priced out of housing will only get worse.
- The “Graying” of America: By 2030, all baby boomers will be 65 or older, meaning more than 20% of the population will be in retirement age.
- Primary Growth Driver: Starting around 2030, annual deaths are projected to outpace natural births. Consequently, immigration will overtake natural increase as the main driver of U.S. population growth.
- California: 40,371,905
- Texas: 33,953,682
- Florida: 25,340,931
- New York: 19,661,940
- Pennsylvania: 13,219,514
- Illinois: 12,554,615
- Ohio: 11,946,012
- Georgia: 11,842,355
- North Carolina: 11,723,465
- Michigan: 10,260,476
- New Jersey: 9,603,043
- Virginia: 9,106,039
- Washington: 8,368,938
- Arizona: 8,058,952
- Massachusetts: 7,299,301
- Tennessee: 7,590,861
- Indiana: 7,084,058
- Maryland: 6,419,864
- Missouri: 6,343,328
- Colorado: 6,355,831
- Wisconsin: 6,027,048
- Minnesota: 5,971,043
- South Carolina: 5,882,796
- Alabama: 5,320,630
- Kentucky: 4,677,728
- Louisiana: 4,663,822
- Oregon: 4,395,387
- Oklahoma: 4,313,502
- Utah: 3,805,418
- Connecticut: 3,669,635
- Nevada: 3,481,097
- Iowa: 3,337,264
- Arkansas: 3,188,322
- Kansas: 3,022,790
- Mississippi: 2,974,284
- Nebraska: 2,091,411
- Idaho: 2,134,619
- New Mexico: 2,149,754
- West Virginia: 1,746,302
- Hawaii: 1,517,281
- Maine: 1,421,300
- New Hampshire: 1,415,872
- Montana: 1,194,135
- Delaware: 1,108,483
- Rhode Island:
