Associated Press
Aug. 10, 2006
http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/0810ImmigrationJobs10-ON.html
The report comes as Congress and much of the nation are debating immigration policy, a big issue in this fall's midterm congressional elections.
The Pew Hispanic Center found no evidence that increases in immigration led to higher unemployment among Americans, said Rakesh Kochhar, who authored the study.
Kochhar said other factors, such as economic growth, played a
larger role than immigration in setting the job market for
Americans.
The study, however, did not look at whether wages were affected by
immigration. Advocates for tighter immigration policies argue that
immigrant workers depress wages for American workers, especially
those with few skills and little education.
Immigration supporters argue that foreign workers often take jobs
that Americans don't want and won't take.
The Pew Hispanic Center is a nonpartisan research organization that
does not advocate policy positions. The center studied census data
on the increase in immigrants from 1990 to 2000, and from 2000 to
2004, for each state. It matched those figures with state employment
rates, unemployment rates and participation in the labor force among
native-born Americans.
The U.S. had 28 million immigrants - legal and illegal - age 16 and
older in 2000, an increase of 61 percent from 1990. By 2004, there
were 32 million.
Among the study's findings:
• Twenty-two states had immigration levels above the national
average from 1990 to 2000. Among them, 14 had employment rates for
native-born workers above the national average in 2000, and eight
had employment rates below the national average.
• Twenty-eight states and the District of Columbia had immigration
levels below the national average from 1990 to 2000. Among them, 16
had above average employment rates for native-born workers in 2000,
and 13 had below average employment rates.
• Twenty-four states had immigration levels above the national
average from 2000 to 2004. Among them, 13 states had employment
rates for native-born Americans above the national average in 2004,
and 11 had employment rates below the national average.
• Twenty-six states and the District of Columbia had immigration
levels below the national average from 2000 to 2004. Among them, 12
had employment rates for native-born Americans above the national
average, and 15 had employment rates below the national average.
Immigrants tend to be younger and have less education than American
workers. The study, however, found "no apparent relationship between
the growth of foreign workers with less education and the employment
outcome of native workers with the same low level of education."
However, Steven Camarota, director of research for the Center for
Immigration Studies, said his research shows that many young workers
with little education are hurt by competition from immigrants.
"Employment for less educated natives has declined, and their wages
have declined," said Camarota, who advocates stricter immigration
policies. "There is no shortage of less educated workers in the
United States."
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On The Net:
Pew Hispanic Center: http://pewhispanic.org/reports/report.php?ReportID
69
Center for Immigration Studies: http://www.cis.org/