Foreign-Born Population Tops 34 Million
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Tuesday, Nov. 23, 2004
WASHINGTON More than 34 million U.S. residents were born
outside the United States, with arrivals from Mexico driving much
of the growth in the foreign-born population since 2000, a private
research group says.
The foreign-born population grew at a clip of more than 1 million a
year between 2000 and 2004, even though the U.S. economy was
suffering, according to the analysis being released Tuesday by
Center for Immigration Studies, which favors stricter immigration
policies.
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That pace was roughly equal to the growth rate between 1996 and
2000, when the economy was on the upswing.
It is more evidence that stricter immigration enforcement after
the Sept. 11 attacks did little to stop the influx of immigrants,
said Steve Camarota, who wrote the report. Often the worst of
economic conditions in America are still better than the financial
situations in an immigrant's native country.
"There's a lack of appreciation of the fundamental role of
enforcement and failure to understand the limits of bureaucratic
capacity," Camarota said of the Bush administration's proposals
to address immigration.
Immigrants serve a vital need by taking jobs in fast-growing
sectors such as the construction and service industries, said Roberto
Suro, director of Pew Hispanic Center, a nonpartisan research
group.
Recent immigrants might be more willing to settle or relocate in
areas of the country, where jobs are plentiful, than unemployed
people born in the United States, he added.
"I'd be surprised if there was a one-to-one displacement of
immigrant and native-born workers," Suro said. "This is a big
economy in such a diverse population."
The report comes days after President Bush discussed immigration
with Mexican President Vicente Fox and other Latin American leaders
in meetings abroad.
Bush renewed a call for Congress to back a proposal he unveiled
last year that would allow millions of undocumented laborers to
work legally in the United States on temporary visas but would not
provide a path to citizenship.
Nearly 10.5 million U.S. residents are from Mexico. That is
close to one-third of the total U.S. foreign-born population, up
from about one-sixth in 1980.
Overall, more than 9 million immigrants in the United States are
illegal, with almost 2 million entering since 2000, Camarota
estimated.
The Census Bureau does not ask if someone is in the country
illegally. The last estimate of the undocumented population from
federal immigration officials, released in 2003, placed the number
at 7 million in 2000, most of them Mexican.
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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