Al Jazeera America
By Haya El Nasser
September 22, 2015
Immigration
rates to the U.S. have rebounded to their pre-recession levels and the
country’s percentage of foreign-born now is at its highest in more than a
century, when
boatloads of eastern and southern Europeans arrived at Ellis Island.
But
the face of immigration is dramatically different than it was just a
decade ago, when the bulk of the influx came from Mexico and Central
America. Asians now far outnumber
the number of immigrants from Latin America.
The
shift evidenced in the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey
released last week shows a wave of immigrants who are more educated,
reflecting the growing demand
for qualified high-tech and health workers in the U.S.
More
than 1 million immigrants arrived here from 2013 to 2014, double the
previous years and the largest number since 2006, the year before the
Great Recession officially
started.
About 42 million or 13.3 percent of the U.S. population is foreign-born.
“This is like early 2000s levels,” said Brookings Institute demographer William Frey. “We haven’t had that in a long time.”
More than 19 million of the foreign-born in the U.S. are Hispanic and about 11 million are Asian.
But
from 2013 to 2014, 526,000 or about half of the 1 million-plus
immigrants to the U.S. were Asian, outpacing the inflow of 368,000
Latinos.
There are big increases for all education levels but the largest ones are for immigrants with college and graduate degrees.
California showed the biggest upticks in Hispanics, Asians and foreign-born college graduates.
“Now
there are substantially more Asians than Latin Americans, which is very
consistent with our economy,” said Hans Johnson, senior research fellow
at the Public Policy
Institute of California, a non-profit, non-partisan research
organization. “The recovery of the U.S. and California economy is in
large part what’s attracted large flows in immigration.”
Mexico
used to be the leading country of origin. The influx from south of the
border has dipped and now China and India are the leading sources of
immigrants to California.
“It’s
a very different kind of immigration flow,” Johnson said. “The economy
is telling us that often, employers have to find highly skilled workers
outside of California
and outside the United States.”
About
half of working-age Asian adults already have college degrees when they
arrive in California, he said, compared to 14 percent of recent
immigrants from Latin America.
Nationally,
the biggest Asian countries of origin are India (171,000), China
(136,000) and Philippines (82,000). Among Latin American countries,
Mexico sent the largest
numbers (129,000), El Salvador (63,000), and Honduras (54,000).
That
is not likely to change the national debate over immigration, which
centers on the estimated 11 million undocumented immigrants in the U.S. —
most of them from Latin
America.
The
Migration Policy Institute estimates that 1.5 million Asians are here
illegally — about 285,000 each from China and India. But more than half
of the undocumented or
about 6 million are from Mexico.
Educated
immigrants are more likely to enter the U.S. on an H1B visa, a
non-immigrant status designed to allow U.S. employers to hire foreign
professionals.
“India
and China are still significant senders of illegal immigrants,” said
Steven Camarota, director of research for the Center for Immigration
Studies (CIS), a Washington,
DC-based research institute that advocates for controlled immigration.
“It’s a smaller share but it’s not trivial.”
Immigration
from Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East grew the most since
2010. Even though the influx from Mexico has slowed, immigration from
other Latin American
countries, such as the Dominican Republic, El Salvador and Guatemala is
growing, he said.
The population of Mexican-born had declined from 2000 to 2012. It picked up in 2013 and grew much faster again in 2014.
“It’s
really up a lot,” said Camarota, who analyzed the data. “If you have
two or three years of more Asians than Hispanic, it doesn’t change the
immigration population
very much. But it certainly means that if it keeps up, it will.”
Frey’s
analysis of the Census numbers show that California, Texas and New York
gained the most Asian immigrants. Top destination states for Latino
immigrants are California,
Florida and New York.
“For
the last few years, immigration didn’t go down much for college grads,
high-skilled workers but it was down for less-skilled folks,” Frey said.
“There are big increases
for all categories but the bigger increases are for immigrants with
some college.”
Less
educated immigrants headed for Texas, Florida, and Virginia. College
graduates were more likely to go to California, New York, and
Washington, D.C., suburbs in Maryland
and Virginia.
“It’s
important to put the facts out there so that people realize that when
they’re talking about immigration, that more commonly than not in
California and the U.S.,
they’re often talking about college graduates,” Johnson said. “The face
of immigration is changing. … They’re not all locating in the
traditional Chinatowns of Los Angeles and San Francisco.”
For more information, go to: www.beverlyhillsimmigrationlaw.com
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