02/08/2010
U.S. payrolls shrank by 20,000 jobs in January, deepening concern that relief from the deepest employment fall since the Great Depression would be slow to come.
But even as the economy floundered in its struggle to start creating jobs again, the unemployment rate fell, to 9.7 percent from 10 percent in December.
This apparent anomaly reflects two differing employment surveys. The survey of households, used to calculate the unemployment rate, reported a massive 541,000 rise in employment, and a 430,000 fall in unemployment. The labor force rose by 111,000.
That’s good news. Household employment usually leads payroll employment in signaling turns in the economic cycle. We can expect at least a temporary resumption of robust payroll growth in coming months.
But the job figures also show a resumption of American worker displacement: In January Hispanics gained jobs at nearly four times the rate of Non-Hispanics:
Total employment: +541,000 (+0.39 percent)
Hispanic employment: +217,000 (+1.11 percent)
Non-Hispanic employment: +324,000 (+0.27 percent)
People on the patriotic side of the immigration debate saw it coming. They warned that the Obama stimulus would benefit occupations disproportionately manned by immigrants. January’s pattern–with the 16 percent of the labor force that are Hispanics garnering 40 percent of the new jobs — seems to justify their "paranoia."
The VDARE.COM American Worker Displacement Index (VDAWDI) rose by 0.85 percent January, to a record 125.6:
The blue line tracks Hispanic job growth since January 2001; the pink tracks non-Hispanic job growth over that period, while the yellow, or VDAWDI, line tracks the ratio of Hispanic to non-Hispanic job growth since that date. All lines start at 100.0 in January 2001.
VDAWDI is calculated like this:
For every 100.0 Hispanics employed in January 2001 there are now 122.4
For every 100.0 non-Hispanics employed in January 2001 there are now 97.5
VDAWDI equals 125.6 (=100 X 122.3/97.5)
Hispanic employment is still the best proxy we have for the month to month impact of immigration on employment.
However, January’s employment report finally broke some new ground in immigration data transparency. A new table shows employment and unemployment data for immigrants and natives explicitly.
Unfortunately, the data are not seasonally adjusted, making month to month comparisons impossible. However, the displacement of native-born Americans by immigrants is clear in the year over year figures:
Employment Status by Nativity, Jan. 2009-Jan. 2010 |
||||
(numbers in 1000s; not seasonally adjusted) |
||||
Jan. 2009 |
Jan. 2010 |
Change |
% Change |
|
Foreign born, 16 years and older |
||||
Civilian population |
35,007 |
35,440 |
433 |
1.2% |
Employed |
21,375 |
21,090 |
-285 |
-1.3% |
Unemployed |
2,166 |
2,834 |
668 |
30.8% |
Unemployment rate |
9.2 |
11.8 |
2.6 |
28.3% |
Not in labor force |
11,466 |
11,515 |
49 |
0.4% |
Native born, 16 years and older |
||||
Civilian population |
199,731 |
201,393 |
1,662 |
0.8% |
Employed |
119,061 |
115,719 |
-3,342 |
-2.8% |
Unemployed |
10,843 |
13,313 |
2,470 |
22.8% |
Unemployment rate |
8.3 |
10.3 |
2.0 |
24.1% |
Not in labor force |
69,827 |
72,360 |
2,533 |
3.6% |
Source: BLS, "The Employment Situation — January 2010," February 5, 2010. Table A-7. PDF |
Several things stand out.
This is consistent with what we find in VDAWDI.
Labor force dropouts are not counted as "unemployed" although most are too discouraged to even look for work. Had they remained engaged in their job search, the native unemployment rate would have grown faster than the foreign-born rate.
Incredibly, despite the recession, it rose 1.2 percent in the past year, or 50 percent faster than the native population.
Coming at a time when many illegals are reportedly returning to Mexico, this highlights the continued role of legal immigration in driving population growth — and American worker displacement.
Only an immigration moratorium can protect the American worker.
Edwin S. Rubenstein is President of ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis.
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