Sunday, September 25, 2011

CIS (Center for Immigration Studies): Most new jobs in Texas went to immigrants

From Will at The Other News:

The Center for Immigration Studies released today the shocking results of their analysis of Governor Rick Perry’s claims about the economic “success” of his home state of Texas. Most new jobs in the state went to immigrants!Here is the introductory section of the news release from CIS (emphasis mine):
Governor Rick Perry (R-Texas) has pointed to job growth in Texas during the current economic downturn as one of his main accomplishments. But analysis of Current Population Survey (CPS) data collected by the Census Bureau show that immigrants (legal and illegal) have been the primary beneficiaries of this growth since 2007, not native-born workers. This is true even though the native-born accounted for the vast majority of growth in the working-age population (age 16 to 65) in Texas. Thus, they should have received the lion’s share of the increase in employment. As a result, the share of working-age natives in Texans holding a job has declined in a manner very similar to the nation a whole.Among the findings:
*Of jobs created in Texas since 2007, 81 percent were taken by newly arrived immigrant workers (legal and illegal).
*In terms of numbers, between the second quarter of 2007, right before the recession began, and the second quarter of 2011, total employment in Texas increased by 279,000. Of this, 225,000 jobs went to immigrants (legal and illegal) who arrived in the United States in 2007 or later.
*Of newly arrived immigrants who took a job in Texas, 93 percent were not U.S. citizens. Thus government data show that more than three-fourths of net job growth in Texas were taken by newly arrived non-citizens (legal and illegal).
*The large share of job growth that went to immigrants is surprising because the native-born accounted for 69 percent of the growth in Texas’ working-age population (16 to 65). Thus, even though natives made up most of the growth in potential workers, most of the job growth went to immigrants.
*The share of working-age natives holding a job in Texas declined significantly, from 71 percent in 2007 to 67 percent in 2011. This decline is very similar to the decline for natives in the United States as a whole and is an indication that the situation for native-born workers in Texas is very similar to the overall situation in the country despite the state’s job growth.
*Of newly arrived immigrants who took jobs in Texas since 2007, we estimate that 50 percent (113,000) were illegal immigrants. Thus, about 40 percent of all the job growth in Texas since 2007 went to newly arrived illegal immigrants and 40 percent went to newly arrived legal immigrants.
*Immigrants took jobs across the educational distribution. More than one out three (97,000) of newly arrived immigrants who took a job had at least some college.
*These numbers raise the question of whether it makes sense to continue the current high level of legal immigration and also whether to continue to tolerate illegal immigration.
This is a devastating report, please read the whole thing. The results of this report also help explain Perry’s instate tuition for illegal aliens law in Texas—they are an important voting block for him.Texas is the third largest recipient of refugees in the US after California and Florida. Indeed, just a couple of days ago I reported on how your federal tax dollars were going to Catholic Charities of Fort Worth for job training for immigrants, here.
Read the full story here.

3 comments:

jeppo said...

To sum up, 81% of all new jobs created in Texas went to newly-arrived (since 2007) immigrants, of whom 93% are non-citizens of the US, and half of whom are in the country illegally.

Question: Who is hiring all these illegal aliens and why aren't they being prosecuted?

And not only has "the share of working-age natives holding a job in Texas declined significantly, from 71 percent in 2007 to 67 percent in 2011", but imagine the downward pressure on the wages of those working-age natives lucky enough to still have a job.

This is the "economic miracle" in Texas that Rick Perry keeps bragging about. Maybe for illegal aliens and the unscrupulous businesses that hire them it is, but for regular Americans not so much. An economic disaster is more like it.

Fortunately, the bloom is quickly coming off the rose as far as Perry's presidential campaign is concerned. Yesterday he got a paltry 15% in the Florida straw poll, and today a slightly less pathetic 17% in Michigan.

If the voters in Texas want to keep re-electing this guy as governor, hey it's their funeral. But hopefully Perrynomics will never be allowed to infect the other 49 states.

Always On Watch said...

Aside from the information here, I'm starting to think that Perry will not be getting the nomination.

Pastorius said...

I agree, AOW.