National Data | January Jobs: Immigrants Displace Natives At Record Rate

By Edwin S. Rubenstein

02/05/2011

The U.S. unemployment rate fell unexpectedly to 9.0% in January, a 21-month low, while nonfarm payrolls rose by a surprisingly meager 36,000 jobs. Snowstormsprobably had some effect on the anemic job numbers, given that sectors like construction and transportation and warehousing shed jobs. As a result, some economists said they would largely disregard the latest government report.

Not this economist. The "other" employment survey — of households rather than businesses — found that 117,000 jobs were created last month, with all the gains accruing to Hispanics — a group overrepresented in occupations normally impacted by weather.

In the month of January:

VDARE.com’s American Worker Displacement Index (VDAWDI) rose to a record in January as Hispanics gained jobs at about 16-times the rate of non-Hispanics:

Since the official end of the recession in June 2009 non-Hispanics have lost 1.2 million jobs while Hispanics have gained 490,000 positions.

Some of the MSM called the unexpectedly large decline in the unemployment rate a sign of a reinvigorated labor market. We beg to disagree: unemployment is down because people have given up looking for jobs. Those too discouraged to look are not in the labor market — and therefore not counted as unemployed.

Who are the discouraged workers? As a group, they are the native-born. Over the past year the foreign born labor force has grown while the native born labor force has declined:

Employment Status by Nativity, Jan. 2010-Jan. 2011

(numbers in 1000s; not seasonally adjusted)

Jan-10

Jan-11

Change

% Change

Foreign born, 16 years and older

Civilian population

35,440

36,294

854

2.4%

Civilian labor force

23,924

24,517

593

2.5%

Employed

21,090

21,928

838

4.0%

Employment/population ratio

59.5

60.4

0.9

1.5%

Unemployment rate (%)

11.8

10.6

-1.2

-10.2%

Not in labor force

11,515

11,777

262

2.3%

Native born, 16 years and older

Civilian population

201,292

202,410

1,118

0.6%

Civilian labor force

129,032

128,019

-1,013

-0.8%

Employed

115,719

115,671

-48

0.0%

Employment/population ratio

57.5

57.1

-0.4

-0.7%

Unemployment rate (%)

10.3

9.6

-0.7

-6.8%

Not in labor force

72,360

74,391

2,031

2.8%

Source: BLS, "The Employment Situation — January 2011," February 4, 2011. Table A-7. PDF

Over the past 12 months:

For a year now data on immigrant and native employment has been a part of the monthly Employment Report. Over this period we have not seen a single reference in the MSM to the burgeoning opportunity gap between these two groups.

Native displacement remains one of the greatest stories never told.

Edwin S. Rubenstein is President of ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis.

< Previous

Next >


This is a content archive of VDARE.com, which Letitia James forced off of the Internet using lawfare.