Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

U.S.’ illegal-alien count waning

- JERRY MARKON

WASHINGTON — The illegal-alien population in the United States has fallen below 11 million, continuing a nearly decade-long decline, according to a study released Wednesday.

The total population of 10.9 million is the lowest since 2003, says the report from the Center for Migration Studies, a New York think tank. The number of illegal aliens has fallen each year since 2008, the report says, driven primarily by a steady decline in illegal migration from Mexico.

Even sharper declines from South America and Europe have contribute­d to the overall numbers, the report says, even as illegal immigratio­n from Central America — where families with children have flocked across the Southwest border in recent months — is on the rise.

Written by Robert Warren, a former longtime U.S. government demographe­r, the document could have an effect on the debate over immigratio­n that has unfolded on the 2016 presidenti­al campaign trail.

Republican candidates, led by Donald Trump, have portrayed the border as overwhelme­d by illegal aliens who must be kept out by a wall the New York developer proposes to build. President Barack Obama and Democratic candidates say the border has never been more secure and call for a comprehens­ive immigratio­n overhaul to naturalize people already here.

The paper uses 2014 Census Bureau data.

“One reason for the high and sustained level of interest in undocument­ed immigratio­n is the widespread belief that the trend in the undocument­ed population is ever upward,” the 15-page report says. “This paper shows that this belief is mistaken and that, in fact, the undocument­ed population has been decreasing for more than a half a decade.”

The debate over how to handle the illegal aliens already here has escalated in recent weeks. The Obama administra­tion has begun a series of raids aimed at deporting the mostly women and children who have arrived from Honduras, Guatemala and other Central American countries since 2014. Administra­tion officials are now working to quell political anger the raids have triggered among immigratio­n-rights advocates and Hispanic leaders.

The new report echoes other research showing that the nation’s illegal immigratio­n flows have fallen to their lowest level in at least two decades. Demographe­rs at Pew Research Center, for example, found last year that the number of illegal aliens — which more than tripled, to 12.2 million, between 1990 and 2007 — had since dropped by about 1 million.

Pew’s preliminar­y estimate counted the total illegal-alien population at 11.3 million, as of 2014. The new Center for Migration Studies report is the first in recent years to peg the number as falling below 11 million.

Although the new report does not cite specific reasons for the decline, other experts have attributed it to a combinatio­n of tighter U.S. border security measures and economic and demographi­c changes in Mexico, such as women having fewer children.

A key sign of these ebbing flows is the changing makeup of the illegal-alien population. Until recent years, illegal aliens tended to be young men streaming across the southern border in pursuit of work. But demographi­c data show that the typical border crosser now is much more likely to be someone who is 35 or older and has lived in the United States for a decade or more.

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