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4.3% of Workers Unauthorized
(ILLEGAL) Migrants
http://www.azcentral.com/news/articles/0615immigrant-study.html
Billy House
Republic Washington Bureau
Jun. 15, 2005 12:00 AM
WASHINGTON - More
than 6.3 million foreigners are working in the United States without legal
authorization to be in the country, a new
study shows.
That number represents 4.3 percent of the nation's work force.
Overall, undocumented immigrants entering the United States now outpace
those who arrive legally, according to
the report released Tuesday by Washington-based Pew Hispanic Center.
The
report, based on the latest comprehensive population and labor data
from March 2004, estimates the total number of undocumented immigrants
living in the United States at about 10.3 million.
"And it's probably about 11 million by now," said Jeffrey Passel, the Pew
researcher who wrote the report.
Arizona, one of the highest-growth states for undocumented immigrants, has
attracted 500,000, or 5 percent, of the total number. That's the
fifth-highest total among all states.
But what's perhaps more groundbreaking in the Pew
study is that it goes beyond numbers in an attempt to flesh out
important characteristics of the undocumented-immigrant population.
The
study finds that undocumented immigrants are settling in increasingly
diverse groups of states beyond traditional destinations such as Arizona,
California, Texas, Florida and New York. They are generally younger than
U.S.-born workers, many belong to "mixed status" families, and the
stereotype of poorly educated manual laborers does not always fit, according
to the
study.
Here are some of the key findings:
• About 700,000 immigrants arrive in the country without legal authorization
each year, compared with about 610,000 legal immigrants.
Most of the nationwide total of undocumented immigrants are Mexican-born,
with about 2.4 million having arrived just since 2000.
That compares with 90,000 Mexican-born immigrants who have arrived legally
during the same period. (The total number of Mexican-born immigrants with no
legal status is about 5.9 million. Unauthorized immigrants from other Latin
American nations are estimated to be about 2.5 million.)
• The number of people in the United State living in "mixed status" families
in which the head of the household or the spouse does not have legal status
as of March 2004 reached 13.9 million, including 4.7 million children.
• Undocumented immigrants generally are less educated than other parts of
the population, with 49 percent not having completed high school, compared
with 9 percent of U.S.-born residents and 25 percent of legal immigrants.
• The education level of unauthorized immigrants arriving in recent years is
higher than the levels of those who have been in the country for a decade or
more. A quarter of these workers do have some college education, and another
25 percent have some high school education.
• These working but undocumented immigrants generally represent a younger
population, with 84 percent of the undocumented immigrants between the ages
of 18 and 64 under 45. That compares with about 60 percent of the
native-born population and legal immigrants that is under 45.
• There is a higher percentage of undocumented immigrants who are men likely
to be working in the labor force (92 percent) than native-born American men
(83 percent). In contrast, women who are undocumented immigrants are less
likely to work, 56 percent compared with 73 percent of native-born women.
• While 3 percent of undocumented workers are employed in agriculture, about
25 percent of all drywall and ceiling-tile installers in the United States
are undocumented immigrants, as are about a quarter of all meat and poultry
workers and a quarter of all dishwashers.
• The average family income in 2003 for undocumented immigrants in the
country for fewer than 10 years was $25,700, while those who had been in the
country for a decade or more earned $29,900.
The Pew
study also shows seven other states combine with Arizona to represent 68
percent of the total undocumented population: California (24 percent), Texas
(14), Florida (9), New York (7), Illinois (4), New Jersey (4) and North
Carolina (3).
But growing numbers of undocumented immigrants are settling in areas beyond
these more traditional areas.
Georgia, Virginia, Maryland, Massachusetts, Washington and Massachusetts
each have between 200,000 to 250,000 undocumented immigrants, the
study shows.
Nevada, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Ohio, Wisconsin and Tennessee each
have at least 100,000 undocumented immigrants.
Of the report's findings, Roberto Suro, director of the Pew Hispanic Center,
said, "The large number of U.S. citizen children born to parents with no
legal status highlights one of the thorniest dilemmas in developing policies
to deal with the unauthorized population." |