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California's population grew in 2023 for first time since 2020

Foreign legal immigration produced a surge in the population

FILE PHOTO: The South Tower of the Golden Gate Bridge appears above the evening fog as the suns sets on the Marin Headlands in Sausalito, California April 18, 2009. / REUTERS/Robert Galbraith/File Photo

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - The population of California grew last year for the first time since 2020, thanks to a drop in mortality and a rebound in legal foreign immigration, the state's Department of Finance said on Apr.30.

The population rose by 67,000 people or 0.17 percent in 2023 to a total of 39,128,162, the highest of any U.S. state.

Foreign legal immigration produced a net gain of 114,200 people in 2023, compared to 90,300 in 2022.

There were 118,400 more births than deaths in 2023, a rise from 106,700 in 2022 as the number of deaths declined from their COVID pandemic peak.

"With immigration processing backlogs largely eliminated and deaths returning to long-term trends, a stable foundation for continued growth has returned," the department said in a statement.

Domestic migration out of California also slowed, with the state's net domestic migration in 2023 dropping in two years to roughly one-fourth of its rate in 2021.

In a state plagued by lack of affordable housing and a high homeless rate, the department said California's housing growth in 2023 was 0.79 percent for a total of 14,824,827 units.

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