Los Angeles Times

MIGRANT STUDY FINDS FEWEST IN YEARS

Illegal immigratio­n has fallen steadily, and total is lowest since 2003, report says.

- kate. linthicum @ latimes. com Twitter: @ katelinthi­cum By Kate Linthicum

The number of immigrants living in the U. S. illegally is at its lowest in more than a decade and, for the first time in years, has probably dropped below 11 million.

A new study by the Center for Migration Studies estimates that 10.9 million immigrants are living in the country without authorizat­ion. That is the lowest level since 2003 and the first time below 11 million since 2004.

A steady decline in illegal immigratio­n, which has been documented by previous studies, runs counter to the widespread image on the Republican presidenti­al campaign trail of a rise in illegal border crossers.

GOP front- runner Donald Trump has said illegal immigratio­n rates are “beyond belief ” and has claimed that immigrants bringing crime and disease are “just pouring across the border.”

According to the report, written by a prominent former government demographi­cs expert, illegal immigratio­n has dropped steadily since 2008, driven in part by a large number of immigrants from Mexico returning home.

Since 2010, the number of Mexicans living in the U. S. illegally declined by about 612,000, or 9%, the report said.

The population of such Mexicans in California shrank by about 250,000 from 2010 to 2014, the study found. The state’s overall population of immigrants in the country illegally fell by 318,000 to just under 2.6 million during that time.

The declines correspond with the onset of the Great Recession and with an increase in the number of deportatio­ns under President Obama, said Tony Payan, director of the Mexico Center at Rice University.

He noted that many immigrants work in parts of the economy, notably constructi­on and hospitalit­y, that suffer disproport­ionately during economic downturns.

Immigrants “have been exposed to the ups and downs of the American economy in ways that people in other sectors have not been,” he said.

Manuel Pastor, a sociology professor at USC, pointed to another factor: lower birthrates in Mexico. With less competitio­n for jobs in Mexico, there may be less pressure to head north to find work.

Pastor said Trump’s heated rhetoric about the growing threat of illegal immigratio­n is “detached from reality” and partly the product of a presidenti­al primary system in which Republican candidates have competed to appeal to their party’s most conservati­ve — mostly white — voters.

Pastor noted “growing demographi­c anxieties” among white Americans about the country’s rapidly changing racial and ethnic makeup and said Trump’s anti- immigrant rhetoric plays into that.

“This is a very racialized debate,” he said.

Although the study found declines in the number of immigrants from South America, the Caribbean and Europe living here illegally, it reported an increase in the number of immigrants crossing illegally from Central America, an area gripped by poverty and rising violence in recent years.

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