The Day

Census figures show economic gap narrows with citizenshi­p

- By MIKE SCHNEIDER

Orlando, Fla. — Foreign-born residents had higher rates of full-time employment than those born in the United States last year, and naturalize­d immigrants were more likely to have advanced degrees than the native-born, according to figures released Monday by the U.S. Census Bureau.

The new figures show that the economic gap between the native-born and the foreign-born in the United States appears to narrow with citizenshi­p.

Immigrants who weren’t citizens had higher rates of poverty, lower income and less education compared with native-born citizens last year. But immigrants who were citizens had less poverty, close to equal earnings and higher rates of advanced degrees than native U.S. citizens.

“Naturalize­d citizens tend to have lived in the country longer than non-citizens . ... They tend to have higher levels of education and they tend to work in profession­s that have higher pay than non-citizens,” said Stefan Rayer, a demographe­r at the University of Florida. “Often times, these characteri­stics are interrelat­ed, that is more education leading to higher earnings and lower rates of poverty.”

Naturalize­d immigrants had a fulltime employment rate of about 83 percent last year, non-citizens had about 81 percent and native citizens had 77 percent.

“Some immigrant groups have to be employed to stay in this country — those on work visas, which would raise the proportion,” Rafer said.

About 1 in 6.5 naturalize­d immigrants have a master’s degree or higher, while that is true for only about 1 in 8 native-born citizens and non-citizens.

The 2018 Current Population Survey figures offer a view of immigrants’ education levels, wealth and jobs as the U.S. engages in one of the fiercest debates about the role of immigratio­n in decades.

Stopping the flow of immigrants into the U.S. has been a priority of President Donald Trump’s administra­tion, which has proposed denying green cards to immigrants who use Medicaid and fought to put a citizenshi­p question on the decennial census questionna­ire.

Monday’s figures also look at difference­s between naturalize­d immigrants and those who aren’t citizens. In 2018, the U.S. had 45.4 million foreign-born residents, or about 1 in 7 U.S. residents.

Education appears to play a role in narrowing the income gap between the native-born and the foreign-born.

Overall, naturalize­d immigrants had a slightly smaller median income than the native-born — $50,786 compared with $51,547 — but noncitizen immigrants trailed them both with a median income of $36,449.

But naturalize­d immigrants with a college degree surpassed college-educated natives’ income, and both naturalize­d immigrants and noncitizen­s with advanced degrees had higher median incomes than U.S. natives with advanced degrees.

“Immigrants with advanced degrees, whether naturalize­d or not, may be more clustered in occupation­s with higher pay than the native population,” Rayer said.

About half of the U.S. foreign-born came from Latin America, less than a third came from Asia and 10 percent came from Europe. European immigrants’ median age — 50 — was roughly six years older than other immigrants.

More than a quarter of noncitizen immigrants were in service jobs, while almost a quarter of immigrants who were citizens were in profession­al jobs, according to the Census Bureau figures.

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