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Fwd: The deterioration in the economic situation of immigrants - CEPR



CENTER FOR ECONOMIC AND POLICY RESEARCH

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: April 18, 2006
CONTACT: Lynn Erskine, 202-293-5380 x115

STUDY FINDS WIDENING EARNINGS GAP BETWEEN IMMIGRANT AND U.S.-BORN WORKERS

Washington, DC: A new report by economists John Schmitt and Jonathan
Wadsworth finds that the earnings gap between immigrant and U.S.-born
workers increased substantially between 1980 and 2000.

"It's not the border that's broken but the U.S. labor market," said John
Schmitt, economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research.
"There is a widening economic gap between immigrants and U.S.-born
workers which reflects the broader deterioration in wage and working
conditions for less-skilled and low-wage workers."

The report, "Changing Patterns in the Relative Economic Performance of
Immigrants to Great Britain and the United States, 1980-2000," was
written by John Schmitt, economist at the Center for Economic and Policy
Research, and Jonathan Wadsworth, economist at the Centre for Economic
Performance, London School of Economics.  Schmitt and Wadsworth analyzed
data from the Decennial Censuses of 1980, 1990, and 2000 to assess
changes in the pace of the economic assimilation of immigrants. Overall,
they found that immigrant workers in the U.S. lagged farther behind
U.S.-born workers in 2000 than they had in the previous two decades.

In 2000, male immigrants earned, on average, 18.4 percent less per hour
than U.S.-born men. (The gap was only 9.3 percentage points in 1980.)
Female immigrants earned, on average, 10.7 percent less per hour than
U.S.-born women. (The gap was only 3.4 percent in 1980.) Even after
controlling for age and education, the immigrant-earnings gap for men
and women increased between 1980 and 2000.

The economists also examined the number of years it took the average
immigrant to match the earnings of the average U.S.-born worker. They
found that the length of time had increased substantially between 1980
and 2000. In 1980, male immigrants achieved rough earnings parity with
U.S.-born male workers after 16-20 years. By 2000, it took male
immigrants over 30 years. In 1980, immigrant women typically took 11-15
years before achieving earnings parity with U.S.-born female workers. By
2000, it took them 21-30 years.

Part of the deterioration in the economic situation of immigrants stems
from the decline in the educational attainment of immigrants relative to
U.S.-born workers over the period. Even after controlling for the drop
in their education rates, however, immigrants generally fared worse in
2000 than they had 10 and 20 years earlier.

For the majority of workers in the United States, wage growth for the
last 25 years has not kept pace with productivity.

To read the report, see:
http://www.cepr.net/publications/immigration_2006_04.htm

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