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Immigration See other Immigration Articles Title: Births to Immigrants at All-Time High : Nearly 1/4 of Mothers Are Foreign-Born, 1 in 10 is an Illegal Alien WASHINGTON -- While many advocates of high immigration argue that today's immigration is no different from the previous great wave a century ago, the data tell a different story. A new analysis of birth records from the Center for Immigration Studies shows that immigrants (legal & illegal) accounted for a larger share of births in 2002 than in 1910, during the peak of the last great wave of immigration. The children born to immigrants are arguably the most important long-term legacy of immigration and are a key measure of its magnitude. The new report provides detailed information on births to immigrants for every state and many counties, including estimates for births to illegal aliens. The study, entitled ''Births to Immigrants in America, 1970 to 2002,'' is embargoed until Thursday, July 7, at 10 a.m. EDT. Advance copies are available to the media. On the release date, the entire study will be available on line at http://www.cis.org. The Center will formally release the report at a press conference on Thursday, July 7, at 10 a.m. at the Center's Washington, D.C., office at 1522 K Street N.W. WASHINGTON (July 7, 2005) A new analysis of birth records by the Center for Immigration Studies shows that in 2002 almost one in four births in the United States was to an immigrant mother (legal or illegal), the highest level in American history. In addition, nearly ten percent of all births in the country were to illegal-alien mothers. This is important for at least two reasons: first, it is currently U.S. government policy to award American citizenship to all persons born on U.S. soil, even the children of tourists and illegal aliens. In addition, the number and share of children born to immigrants is now so large that it may overwhelm the assimilation process. The new report, Births to Immigrants in America, 1970-2002, by the Centers Director of Research, Steven A. Camarota, is on line at http://www.cis.org/articles/2005/back805.html. Among the findings: In 2002, 23 percent of all births in the United States were to immigrant mothers (legal or illegal), compared to 15 percent in 1990, 9 percent in 1980 and 6 percent in 1970. Even at the peak of the last great wave of immigration in 1910, the share of births to immigrant mothers did not reach the level of today. And after 1910 immigration was reduced, whereas current immigration continues at record levels, thus births to immigrants will continue to increase. Our best estimate is that 383,000, or 42 percent, of births to immigrants are to illegal alien mothers. Thus births to illegals now account for nearly 1 out of every 10 births in the United States. The large number of births to illegals shows that the longer illegal immigration is allowed to persist the harder it is to solve, because these U.S. citizen children can stay permanently, their citizenship can prevent a parents deportation, and once adults, they can sponsor their parents for permanent residence. The issue of births to illegals also shows that a temporary worker program would inevitably result in the permanent addition of hundreds of thousands of people to the U.S. population each year, exactly what such a program is supposed to avoid. The dramatic growth in births to immigrants has been accompanied by a significant decline in diversity. The top country for immigrant births C Mexico C increased from 24 percent of births to immigrants in 1970 to 45 percent in 2002. Research shows that one of the biggest challenges immigrant-receiving countries face is the assimilation of the children of immigrants, who will have much higher expectations than their parents, said Camarota. With immigrants accounting for such a large, and growing, share of births, America is headed into uncharted territory. We simply dont know how these children will assimilate but it is clear that the stakes for America are enormous. Among the new reports other findings: In 2002, births to Hispanic immigrants accounted for 59 percent of all births to immigrant mothers. No single cultural/linguistic group has ever accounted for such a large share of births to immigrants. Immigrant mothers are much less educated than native mothers. In 2002, 39 percent lacked a high school degree, compared to 17 percent of native-born mothers. And immigrants now account for 41 percent of all births to mothers without a high school degree. The states with the most dramatic increase in births to immigrants in the last decade are Georgia, North Carolina, Nevada, Nebraska, Arkansas, Arizona, Tennessee, Minnesota, Colorado, Delaware, Virginia, and Maryland. Immigrants account for such a large percentage of births because they have somewhat higher fertility and are more likely to be in their reproductive years than natives. Nevertheless, the differences with natives are not large enough to significantly affect the nations overall age structure. Immigrants who have arrived over the past two decades, plus all of their U.S.-born children, have only reduced the average age in the United States from 37 to 36 years. Looking at the working-age (15 to 64) share of the population also shows little effect from immigration. With or without post-1980 immigrants and all their U.S.-born children, 66 percent of the population is of working age. While immigration has little effect on the nations age structure, each year new immigration (legal and illegal), plus births to immigrants, adds some 2.4 million people to Americas population, making for a much larger population and a more densely settled country. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Grumble Jones, 1776, Zipporah, Eoghan (#0)
What do they know or care about the sacrifices, sweat, beliefs, customs and faith that built this nation? Not that I recognize it anymore, since $$ has become the prime motivating factor of life for so many. We are already descending rapidly, as Tonelson put it, The Race to the Bottom.
The means of defense against foreign danger historically have become the instruments of tyranny at home. James Madison
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