Title: GENERAL DEMOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
1GENERAL DEMOGRAPHIC INFORMATION
NC Latino Growth in NC
- Dr. H. Nolo MartÃnez
- Director
- Hispanic/Latino Affairs
- Office of the Governor
2Population and Size Composition
- In March 2000, 32.8 million Hispanics lived in
the United States.
- 12 of the U.S. population is Hispanic.
- People of Mexican origin comprise approximately
66 of the U.S. Hispanic population.
3Percent Distribution of Hispanic by Type 2000
4Age
- One-third of Hispanics are under age 18.
- Among Hispanics, Mexicans have the largest
proportion of people under age 18 (38 percent).
- The Hispanic population is younger than the
non-Hispanic White population.
5U.S. Immigration Data
- The leading source countries for legal
immigration are
- Mexico (91,000),
- Vietnam (78,000),
- the Philippines (59,000), and
- the republics of the former Soviet Union
(44,000).
- Undocumented immigration total approx. 300,000
annually, according to the INS. 50 of these
undocumented immigrants arrive in the U.S.
legally and overstay their non-immigrant visa.
6Current Occupation for Men by Hispanic Origin
2000
Hispanic
Non-Hispanic White
Managerial, professional
7Current Occupation for Women by Hispanic Origin
2000
Hispanic
Non-Hispanic White
Managerial, professional
Technical sales
8Top States in Percentage Growth of Mexican
Population
9Large scale Immigration from Mexico
- 8 million in 2000
- Highly concentrated 78 in 4 states
- 22 of all HS dropouts in US labor force were
born in Mexico
- Most natives do not face significant job
competition from Mexican immigrants
10NC Hispanic Demographic Growth
- Hispanic population in NC has grown from 76,745
in 1990 to over 379,000 in 2000
- NC Metro Growth (now) 44,000 Charlotte, 34,000
Raleigh, 100,000 Triangle
- NC Rural Growth (future)
- LATINO POPULATION BY COUNTY IN www.ayudate.org
11Growth by Ethnic Group
12NC Latinos by County
13Education in North Carolina
- 4th fastest growing enrollment in US
- 160 languages
- 46,000 LEP students in Public Schools
- In 2000, 41.4 of Hispanic w/ HS diploma
14The New Melting Pot
Ranked by percentage increase of
immigrants from 1995 to 1999
For states with a foreign-born pop. of at least
50,000 in 1995, Urban Institute
15NC Hispanic Market Boom (numbers count)
- Highest growth of Mexican and Mexican American
population in US 655 (300,000)
- 95 of construction workers in Charlotte are
Latinos
- Highest number of guestworkers (H2A) in the US (
10,000)
- Highest birth rate in rural and metropolitan
counties (45-50 in many counties)
- Highest percent growth in school system ( 415)
(44,000 in 2001)
- Latinos are much younger than the total
population in NC. Latinas in their peak
childbearing years
- Latino Credit Union membership (3,500 in 1 year)
16 Poder Hispano
- National Latino buying power in 1998 was 404
billion annually - among top 20 largest consumer
markets in the world
- In 1997 Hispanic buying power in NC was 2.3
billion (pop. estimated at 100,00), a 177 jump
from 1990
- NC Hispanic buying power is increasing at the
third highest rate in the nation
17 Habla Español ?
- Spanish is the first language of approximately
90 of Hispanics, the only language of about 60
of NC Hispanic workers
- Hispanics prefer advertising messages in Spanish
- English-only business is a barrier to attract
Latino clients
1830 years Latinos in NC
Period 70-80s
Period 80-90s
Period 90 - 2000
19The essentials
20Heroes o Criminales?
- 10 billion dollars per year contribution to the
US economy (American Academy of Sciences)
- 8 billion dollars send to Mexico every year
(Mexicos third source of income)
- Millions of undocumented workers pay taxes
(suspense file). Since 1937, 265 billion
collected wages
- Fund grows 17 billion annually since 1990
21Heroes o criminales?
- Keep inflation down (Allan Greenspan)
- Cheap labor (Only game in town Poultry
Federation)
- Best medicine for NC aging population
- Tom Ridge calls them technically criminals
- Presidente V. Fox calls them heroes
22The other illegals
- Since 1986 is a crime to hire foreigners without
documentation
- According to INS, 75 of Latino workers in NC are
illegal (Tom O'Connell, NO)
- No match letters. What of illegal
business/industry in NC?
23Complete Story
- The revolving door is part of being an illegal
immigrant and an employer in NC
- The actions of one (illegal worker) do not
condone the actions of the other (illegal
employer)
- But media continues to focus on crime of the
worker
- Who are the offenders, why are these violating
the law, how we can stop both parties from
conducting criminal activity
24Immigrants and the Economy
- Immigrants do not take away jobs from American
workers. Instead, they create new jobs by forming
new businesses, spending their incomes on
American goods and services, paying taxes and
raising the productivity of U.S. businesses. - The perception that immigrants take jobs away
from American workers is based on the mistaken
assumption that there is only a fixed number of
jobs in the economy.
25Immigrants and the Economy
- Immigrants pay more than 90 billion in taxes
every year and receive only 5 billion in
welfare. Contributions to the public treasury
added to the economy surplus. - International aid vs. Money transfers
- Law of Supply and Demand
26Legal Status
- Local communities are where the effects of
immigration are felt most
- Lack of documentation and insurance often deters
Hispanic from seeking services
- Fear of immigration authorities create great
potential for confusion no matter what the system
(QRT presence)
27Pro-immigration Conditions (prior to 9.11.2001)
- Unions and AFL-CIO
- Alan Greenspan
- Restoration of 245i
- Mexico-US Relations (Bush, Helms, NC Commerce, NC
Elected Officials, Mexican Consul in NC)
- Elections (Jorge y Alberto)
28Immigration Reform
- INS backlogs have skyrocketed, families have been
separated, businesses have lost valuable
employees and eligible people must leave the
country (often for years) in order to adjust. - Increase the number of Mexicans granted Temporary
work permit
- Put many of these workers on a path toward a
green card, which provides permanent legal
residence and is a step toward U.S. citizenship
29Border Security (245i)
- Some illegal immigrants stay in the US while
their green card is being processed
- Limited to Nov. 30, 2002
- Border security tied to legislation
- Boost the pay of border patrol agents
- Hire more
- Establish foreign student tracking system
- After 2003 passports be tamper-resistant
- Visitor documents-machine readable with biometrics
30Current and Future Challenges (taxation without
representation)
- Mainstream NC vs. underground lifestyle
- Easy target (essential workers)
- In-state tuition for non-citizens
- Drivers license issues
- Workers compensation
- Home ownership potential (the American dream)
- Financial security
- State contracts
- One North Carolina vs. segregation
31Enforcement bias (bad ideas)
- Equate immigration enforcement with protecting
national security
- Deputize local police officers as agents of the
Immigration and Naturalization
- INS actively promoting such partnerships
- Federation for American Immigration Reform
- INS agents have wider latitude