-Caveat Lector-

THE NATION

Many New Jobs Going to Noncitizens

A study finds that immigrants are being hired for almost 3 in 10 positions,
which could limit the benefit to Bush.

By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar
Times Staff Writer
http://www.latimes.com/news/politics/la-na-jobs16jun16,1,4747410.story?coll=la-h
ome-politics

June 16, 2004

"....the findings suggested that a broader cross-section of American employers
had developed a preference for undocumented workers."


WASHINGTON - Immigrants are filling nearly three out of every 10 new jobs in the
rebounding U.S. economy, a development that may dilute the political dividend to
President Bush from an election-year recovery, a study to be released today
concludes.

The report by the nonpartisan Pew Hispanic Center found that workers who were
not U.S. citizens claimed 378,496 jobs out of a net increase of 1.3 million from
the first three months of 2003 through the first three months of this year.

The share of jobs going to noncitizens - 28.5% - was particularly notable
because workers who were not U.S. citizens accounted for fewer than 9% of all
those holding jobs in the United States.

"The proportion of new jobs captured by noncitizens was . much larger than their
share of overall employment," said the report, prepared by labor economist
Rakesh Kochhar. "Thus, the political impact of job gains may be damped by the
fact that noncitizens are benefiting disproportionately from the turnaround in
the labor market."

Roberto Suro, director of the center, said in an interview that "the turnaround
is being fueled to a substantial extent by the demand for immigrant labor. And
as a result, a substantial chunk of the new jobs are going to people who are not
voters."

The study is likely to sharpen the debate about the role of immigrant workers in
America, the quality of new jobs and the impact of globalization. Most
economists have tended to minimize the impact of large numbers of immigrants
entering the U.S. job market, but the Pew findings may bolster those who
challenge that view.

The high proportion of new jobs going to immigrants may reflect the fact that
the current recovery has thus far been different from most past upturns. In
recent months, as overall job growth has begun to improve, most of the new jobs
appear to have come in categories that require relatively low skills and pay
relatively low wages - the kinds of jobs for which many immigrants are strong
competitors.

In the past, the early stages of economic recoveries have been marked by growth
in industrial jobs that pay above-average wages.

Jared Bernstein, senior economist at the liberal Economic Policy Institute think
tank, said his analysis supported the idea that "the occupations that are
gaining are on the low end."

He added that his own research showed that the recovery had not paid much of a
dividend in terms of rising wages. "We see wage growth far less than you would
expect at this stage," he said.

The Pew report also found that, while Latino immigrants were gaining jobs, the
weekly earnings of Latinos as a whole - including the native-born and those who
were long-term U.S. residents - had declined in comparison to those of whites
and African Americans.

The center, which specializes in social and economic research on the U.S. Latino
population, based its findings on an analysis of government surveys used to
determine the unemployment rate. The study is the first to compare the job gains
of citizens and noncitizens in the current economic recovery.

The underlying data used in the report do not distinguish between legal and
illegal immigrants. However, a large proportion of Latino workers who arrived
recently are believed to be undocumented. An estimated 8 million to 12 million
U.S. residents are illegal immigrants.

Bush and Democratic congressional leaders are on record as favoring more liberal
U.S. immigration policies.

The president has proposed a guest-worker program open to illegal immigrants
already here and to migrants wishing to come in the future; guest workers could
stay for up to six years. Democrats favor granting green cards to illegal
immigrants already here, but restricting the entry of future guest workers.

The debate is taking place amid long-term demographic and economic shifts in the
United States. Latinos and Asians are the fastest-growing ethnic groups within
the American population, and immigrants are heavily represented in both
communities. At the same time, U.S. birthrates have long been in decline.

"Non-Hispanic population growth is basically at a standstill," Kochhar said.
That leaves immigration in an increasingly prominent role, both in the growth of
the U.S. labor force and in the total population. It may account for the
disproportionate share of new jobs going to immigrants, Kochhar said.

Proponents of restricting immigration said the findings suggested that a broader
cross-section of American employers had developed a preference for undocumented
workers.

"When we think about job creation - that it must be good for Americans - that
may not be what's going on exactly," said Steven Camarota, research director for
the Center for Immigration Studies, which favors curbs on immigration.

Others said the data were too narrow to support such sweeping conclusions.
Demographer Jeffrey Passel of the Urban Institute think tank noted that the U.S.
economy employed more than 130 million workers. In that context, a change of
some 400,000 jobs, or even 1.3 million, is relatively minor, he said.

"It may look like some group is going gangbusters, when it really is a rather
small change," Passel said.

But the Pew study suggested that Latinos, in strictly economic terms, may have
more to lose from immigration than other workers.

"Immigrant Latinos, especially the most recent arrivals, have captured the most
jobs," the report said. "Moreover, the improved employment picture has not
delivered higher wages to workers overall and to Latinos in particular."

The median, or midpoint, weekly earnings for Latinos dropped from $402 in the
first quarter of 2003 to $395 during the same period this year, after adjusting
for inflation. They lost ground when compared with African American and white
workers.

"The growth in the supply of labor has surely contributed to keeping wages
down," Kochhar said.

Latino unemployment actually increased in the first three months of this year,
but that may be the result of workers who had previously dropped out of the
labor force now returning to look for jobs, the report found.

The Pew study also looked at job creation in 18 states considered battlegrounds
in the presidential election.

While the pattern of noncitizens taking new jobs was not as sharp in those
states as in the nation as a whole, immigrants still claimed 21.5% of the job
increase, or about one out of every five.


If you want other stories on this topic, search the Archives at
latimes.com/archives.

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Copyright 2004 Los Angeles Times

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