NPR
 
 
 
 
Study  Shows The U.S. Attracts An Elite Muslim And Hindu Population

 
 
December 13, 20162:52 PM ET
Heard on _All  Things Considered_ 
(http://www.npr.org/programs/all-things-considered/2016/12/13/505370226) 

 
 
 
 
 
TOM  GJLETEN





 
Hindus  and Muslims who have migrated to the United States in recent years 
are  especially well-educated, according to a new survey from the Pew 
Research  Center. On average, Hindus in the U.S. have nearly 16 years of 
schooling,  significantly more than Jews, the next most highly-educated U.S. 
religious  group. Muslim Americans have nearly 14 years of schooling, which is 
well 
above  the U.S. average. 
The  high education levels of U.S. Hindus and Muslims are in stark contrast 
to the  schooling levels of those populations worldwide, where they are the 
two least  educated of all religious groups, with just 5.6 years of 
schooling on average.  The Pew data underscore how U.S. policies and world 
migration patterns have  produced a highly selective representation of the two 
immigrant groups. 
"Hindus  and Muslims in the United States are a pretty elite segment of the 
global Hindu  and Muslim population," says Conrad Hackett, a Pew 
demographic researcher. 
In  both cases, they are generally newcomers. Nearly nine out of ten Hindus 
in the  United States and two out of every three Muslims were born outside 
the country,  according to Hackett. 
With  their relatively high levels of education, they qualify for higher 
paying  positions. As immigrants, their experiences challenge the stereotype 
of  foreign-born workers competing with native-born workers for low-skill, 
low-wage  jobs. 
The  contrast between high Hindu and Muslim schooling levels in the United 
States and  their low levels worldwide, meanwhile, suggests that the U.S. 
story is  unique. 
"A  lot of people, when they look at Asian Americans and their relative 
success, say  there's something about Asian culture," notes Karthick 
Ramakrishnan, a political  scientist and immigration expert at the University 
of 
California, Riverside.  "[But] if you look at culture in Asia, it doesn't 
predict 
the same level of  success. So we have to look for answers elsewhere." 
The  answers largely lie in the unique U.S. immigration experience of 
Muslims and  Hindus, almost all of whom have come from distant countries in the 
Middle East  and South Asia. 
"They've  had to travel to the United States, perhaps at considerable 
cost," notes  Hackett, meaning they are likely to be among the most privileged 
part of the  population in their native countries. In this regard, their 
situation is  different from that facing immigrants from Mexico or Central 
America, who can  move to the United States more easily, with or without 
immigration papers. 
Without  the option of being able to come illegally across the southern 
U.S. border,  Hackett notes, Muslim and Hindu immigrants "have to deal with 
U.S. migration  policies, which in many cases favor people who have skills that 
they have  acquired through considerable education." 
The  Muslim and Hindu immigrants to the United States leave behind the more 
poorly  educated segment of their religious groups, who can't afford to 
immigrate or  don't qualify for immigrant visas. 
The  Hindu and Muslim stories contrast with that of Jews, who according to 
the Pew  survey are well-educated wherever they are found. Worldwide, Jews 
have an  average of 13.4 years of schooling, compared with 14.7 years for 
U.S. Jews.  (Christians worldwide have 9.3 years of schooling on average, while 
U.S.  Christians have 12.7 years.) 
The  disparity in schooling levels between Hindus and Muslims worldwide and 
those in  the United States may be diminishing, however. The Pew study 
found education for  Hindus and Muslims is improving around the world, with 
especially notable gains  for Hindu and Muslim women.

-- 
-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
  • [RC] Mu... BILROJ via Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community

Reply via email to