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Statistics
Don't Lie: Immigration and Recession
Steven
Camarota
The
economic downturn and the September 11 attacks appear to
have had no lasting impact on the pace of immigration
nationally.
While
there is some evidence that immigration may have slowed
slightly in 2001, new legal and illegal immigration
remain at record-setting levels. For the most part,
immigration appears to be largely unconnected to
national or state job markets. Although unemployment has
increased significantly overall and among foreign-born
immigrants, the pace of legal and illegal immigration
continues to match that of the late 1990s.
* Since
2000, 2.3 million new adult immigrant workers (legal and
illegal) have arrived in the
United
States,
almost exactly the same as the 2.2 million who arrived
during the three years prior to 2000, despite a dramatic
change in economic conditions.
* At
the state level, there seems to be no clear relationship
between economic conditions and trends in immigration.
Immigration levels have matched or exceeded the pace of
the late 1990s in Texas, New Jersey, Virginia, Maryland,
Illinois, Arizona, Washington, North Carolina, Georgia,
and New York -- even as all these states experienced a
significant increase in unemployment.
*
Nationally, about half (1.2 million) of those who
arrived in each three-year time period (1997-2000 and
2000-2003) are estimated to be illegal aliens. These
figures are only for those in the workforce who were
captured in Census Bureau data.
*
Looking only at the net increase in employment, the
number of foreign-born adults (legal and illegal)
holding a job has grown by 1.7 million since 2000, while
among natives, the number working actually fell by
800,000.
*
Although the number of foreign-born adults holding a job
has increased since 2000, the number unemployed also
increased, by 600,000, and the unemployment rate among
the foreign-born rose from 4.9 to 7.4 percent.
* It is
the very rapid growth in the foreign-born population
that makes it possible for the number of immigrants
holding jobs and the number unemployed to increase at
the same time.
* The
total foreign-born population (not just those in the
workforce) has grown by 3.5 million since 2000.
* As a
share of the total population, the foreign-born now
account for almost one in eight residents of the
United
States,
the highest percentage in more than eight decades.
Immigration is a complex process driven by a variety of
factors, many of which have little to do with prevailing
economic conditions in the United States. This does not
mean that economic factors are irrelevant. However, the
continued high rates of immigration show that
immigration is driven mostly by the higher standard of
living in the United States compared to
immigrant-sending countries, not by demand for labor in
this country.
Indeed,
the fact that immigration has not slowed significantly
since 2000, even though unemployment has increased
significantly, indicates that immigration levels are not
primarily driven by the labor needs of the United
States. Rather, immigration is a complex process driven
by a variety of factors, many of which have little to do
with the job market in the United States. It is
America's higher standard of living that drives most
immigration, and the disparity in living standards does
not disappear during downturns in the business cycle.
Given
what they face in their home countries, prospective
immigrants often feel that even being unemployed or
having to rely on assistance from the government or
family members in this country is still better than life
back home. Therefore, immigration is not a
self-regulating process that rises and falls with the
economy. In contrast, during the previous Great Wave of
immigration at the turn of the last century, immigration
levels were very sensitive to economic conditions in the
United States. This is primarily because the disparity
in living standards between the United States and
immigrant-sending countries today is much larger than it
was in the past. Since it is a government program,
immigration could, of course, be reduced by changing the
selection criteria for legal immigrants and increasing
efforts to enforce the law. So far, however, neither
Congress nor the president has chosen to do this.
Steven A. Camarota is the Director of Research at Center
for Immigration Reform and the author of its report,
"Immigration in a Time of Recession: An Examination of
Trends Since 2000," (www.cis.org/articles/2003/back1603.html)
from which this essay is adapted.
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