07/05/2004
Employment of Citizens and Non-Citizens |
||||
in the Nation and Swing States |
||||
|
2003-Q1 |
2004-Q1 |
Change |
% Change |
|
(Millions of workers) |
|
||
All States |
|
|||
All Workers |
136.07 |
137.39 |
1.33 |
1.0% |
Citizens |
124.67 |
125.62 |
0.95 |
0.8% |
Non-citizens |
11.40 |
11.77 |
0.38 |
3.3% |
Swing States (a) |
|
|
||
All Workers |
47.24 |
48.22 |
0.98 |
2.1% |
Citizens |
44.55 |
45.32 |
0.77 |
1.7% |
Non-citizens |
2.70 |
2.91 |
0.21 |
7.8% |
Percentage Non-citizen |
|
|||
All states |
8.4% |
8.6% |
28.5% |
|
Swing states |
5.7% |
6.0% |
21.5% |
|
|
||||
Source: Rakesh Kochhar, "Latino Labor Report, First Quarter, 2004: Wage Growth |
||||
Lags Gains in Employment," Pew Hispanic Center, June 2004. |
||||
https://www.pewhispanic.org/site/docs/pdf/Labor___Report___2004_1___Final.pdf |
||||
|
||||
Note: The 18 swing states are: Florida, New Mexico, Wisconsin, Iowa, Oregon, |
||||
New Hampshire, Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio, Nevada, Tennessee, Pennsylvania, |
||||
Maine, Michigan, Arkansas, Washington, West Virginia and Arizona. |
Labor Force and Employment Growth of |
||||
Hispanics and Non-Hispanics, 2003-04 |
||||
|
2003-Q1 |
2004-Q1 |
Change |
% Change |
Labor Force |
||||
Hispanics |
18,288,430 |
18,974,619 |
686,189 |
3.8% |
Non-Hispanics |
127,016,470 |
127,389,040 |
372,570 |
0.3% |
Employment |
|
|||
Hispanics |
16,733,596 |
17,438,375 |
704,779 |
4.2% |
Recent immigrants (a) |
728,248 |
1,476,553 |
748,305 |
102.8% |
All Other Hispanics |
16,005,348 |
15,961,822 |
-43,526 |
-0.3% |
Non-Hispanics |
119,334,052 |
119,956,617 |
622,565 |
0.5% |
% Hispanic |
||||
Labor Force |
12.6% |
13.0% |
64.8% |
|
Employment |
12.3% |
12.7% |
53.1% |
|
a. Year of entry 2000 or later. |
||||
Source: Rakesh Kochhar, "Latino Labor Report, First Quarter, 2004: Wage Growth |
||||
Lags Gains in Employment," Pew Hispanic Center, June 2004. Table 3. |
||||
https://www.pewhispanic.org/site/docs/pdf/Labor___Report___2004_1___Final.pdf |
Median Weekly Wages for Hispanics |
||||
and Non-Hispanics, 2002-04 |
||||
(Wages are in 2003 Dollars) |
||||
|
Non-Hispanic |
Non-Hispanic |
Non-Hispanic |
|
Hispanics |
Whites |
Blacks |
Others |
|
2002-Q1 |
$403 |
$597 |
$477 |
$546 |
2003-Q1 |
$402 |
$579 |
$476 |
$579 |
2004-Q1 |
$395 |
$593 |
$474 |
$581 |
% change, |
||||
2002-2004: |
-2.0% |
-0.7% |
-0.6% |
6.4% |
Source: Rakesh Kochhar, "Latino Labor Report, First Quarter, 2004: Wage Growth |
||||
Lags Gains in Employment," Pew Hispanic Center, June 2004. |
Edwin S. Rubenstein is President of ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis.
This is a content archive of VDARE.com, which Letitia James forced off of the Internet using lawfare.