Immigrants Fill 3 Out of 10 of New Jobs
According to the Los
Angeles Times, the nonpartisan Pew Hispanic Center
reports that immigrants have accepted three out of every ten new jobs
created in the past year, or 378,496 out of a net increase of 1.3 million.
It is particularly striking that noncitizens filled 28.5% of the new
positions, but comprise only 9% of all workers nationwide.
These numbers could reflect changing demographics with immigrant Latino
and Asian populations growing rapidly within the U.S. while native birthrates
decline. The Pew study found that although Latino immigrants were gaining jobs,
Latinos as a whole were experiencing a decline in wages, compared to whites and
African Americans.
These numbers may have
political ramifications in this election year, as non-voters have obtained a
significant proportion of the new jobs. The
statistics may fuel the debate about immigrant workers in the U.S., the quality
of the new jobs, and the affects of globalization.
Both President Bush and Democrats support more liberal immigration
policies. The President’s
proposed guest-worker program would allow current and future undocumented
workers to live in the U.S. for up to six years.
Democrats propose providing legal status to those workers already present
while denying entry to future guest workers.
Although the Pew study does not
specify how many of the newly employed immigrants are undocumented, advocates
for restricting immigration believe it supports their position that American
employers prefer undocumented workers. But
some economists maintain that the seemingly disproportionate share of immigrants
in the workforce creates only a minimal impact in the national economy.
They explain that this economic turnaround tends to contain low-skilled
and low wage jobs, unlike the growth of industrial jobs paying above-average
wages that ushered in past economic recoveries.
Furthermore, workers have experienced less wage growth in this stage of
the recovery than in the past.
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