12%
12%
12%
According to the U.S. Census 2000, approximately 12.3% of the U.S. population identified as African American.
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The population of individuals who identified as Hispanic or Latino origin represented twelve percent of the total respondents who reported only one race on the 2000 Census.
The richest 20 percent of the South American population control around 60-70 percent of the region's wealth.
It is estimated that about 20-30% of the American population were Loyalists during the American Revolutionary War.
As of the latest estimates, the Black or African American population in the United States makes up approximately 13-14% of the total population.
According to the latest census data, more than 90 percent of the population of Bolivia and Guatemala is of Amerindian descent.
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According to the US census of 2010 the African American population in the US is about 13%. The largest so-called minority population are Hispanics which compose about 15% of the US population.
According to census.gov, the 2008 ACS population esimate of African-American people in the US is 36,969,063 which is 12.4%.
In the 1700s, the African American population in the 13 colonies varied across regions. Estimates suggest that by the mid-18th century, around 20% of the total population in the Southern colonies were African Americans, the majority of whom were enslaved. In the Northern colonies, the African American population was smaller but still present, largely as free individuals.
The state of Georgia has a population of 9.68 million people. Of these, 30.6 percent list themselves as black or African American. The white population is 60.8 percent, and the Asian population is 3.3 percent.
As of the 2010 census, 69.4 percent of Colorado's population is white. 4.4 percent of the population is African-American, 1.6 percent is Native American, 3.0 percent is Asian, 0.2 percent is Hawaiian or Pacific Islander, 2.8 percent of the population is two or more races, 21 percent is Hispanic or Latino.
African-American people are citizens of the United States with total or partial ancestry from Africa. In 2010, there were 38.9 million African-Americans in the U.S., constituting about 12.5 percent of the population.
There are approximately 35,000 African American millionaires in the United States. People who identify themselves as black or African Americans make up 13.2 percent of the total population.
The population of individuals who identified as Hispanic or Latino origin represented twelve percent of the total respondents who reported only one race on the 2000 Census.
More than 30,000 pysicians are African Americans, that is 4 percent according to the Census Bureau.
About 10% of them were African American.
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