Akhir 19, 1432 H/March 24, 2011, SPA -- The U.S. Hispanic population is tipped to break 50 million for the first time, the 2010 Census is expected to report on Thursday, with most growth over the last decade driven by Latinos, Reuters quoted analysts as saying. The U.S. Census Bureau is set to release first national findings from the 2010 Census later on Thursday. It is expected to show greater-than-expected growth for the Hispanic population, currently at around 47 million, analysts say. "I think it likely that they will top 50 million and will account for most of the nation's population growth over the last decade," said D'Vera Cohn, senior writer at the Pew Research Center think-tank, which has analyzed data from 48 states so far tallied. "This is a population that's young, whose growth is driven increasingly by births and not immigration. It's a population that's expanding into virtually every county of the country, and growing especially sharply in states where Latino's had not been a presence a decade or so ago," she added. A preliminary breakdown of returns for 48 states that have so far reported showed that 56 percent of the overall population growth over the past decade is because of Hispanic immigration and childbirth, Cohn said. Fast growth among the Hispanic population is also keeping the population stable in states that would otherwise have shown a decline since the last full census in 2000, including Massachusetts and New Jersey. "We are awaiting the results for New York, and its possible it could be true for New York as well," Cohn said.