
Census Bureau: Record High Of Immigrants Living In The United States
Recently,
the Census Bureau reported that the foreign-born population has reached a record
high of 32.5 million. This accounts for 11.5 percent of the
The Center for Immigration Studies, a group who favors tighter limits on immigration, believe that there has been no immigration slowdown and that the United States has not done enough to ramp up border enforcement, despite a reported increase in arrest. In the 1990’s when the foreign-born population rocketed to 30 million from 20 million, the immigrant population grew 1 million per year. Jeffery Passel, who studies immigration at the Urban Institute, said that although there are new restrictions on certain immigrants, longer waits for some visas and other targeted actions, there is little appetite for an across-the-board crackdown on immigration, because the country increasingly depends on foreign-born labor and residents.
The
immigrant population makes up more than 60 percent of the labor force growth
from 2000 through 2002. The new immigrant workers were recent arrivals, not the
immigrant population who were already living in the
The Department of Homeland Security immigration bureaus estimate that the undocumented immigrant population (which is not part of the Census Bureau report) was between 7 million and 8.5 million in 2000, which is up from 3.5 million 10 years earlier.
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