Immigrants in the Workforce, State by State and Industry By Industry

National Journal

Shift­ing demo­graph­ics na­tion­wide are chan­ging the face of Amer­ic­an em­ploy­ment. Im­mig­rants make up 13 per­cent of the pop­u­la­tion and 17 per­cent of the work­force, but their em­ploy­ment pat­terns con­trast with those of their U.S.-born coun­ter­parts across in­dus­tries and states. Un­der­stand­ing these dif­fer­ences na­tion­ally and with­in each state is vi­tal for poli­cy­makers as they con­sider strategies to boost their eco­nom­ies and de­vel­op their work­forces. To help give them the clear pic­ture they need, The Pew Char­it­able Trusts pro­duced first-of-their-kind data on the like­li­hood of im­mig­rant work­ers be­ing em­ployed in 13 ma­jor in­dus­tries, com­pared with U.S.-born work­ers, in all 50 states and the Dis­trict of Columbia.  

Pew’s on­line in­ter­act­ive tool builds on these data to com­pare the work­force dis­tri­bu­tion of im­mig­rants re­l­at­ive to U.S.-born work­ers across all states and with na­tion­al fig­ures.  Fol­low­ing are some key takeaways that can help guide ex­plor­a­tion of the in­ter­act­ive and in­form strategies for poli­cy­makers to make use of the data:

At the na­tion­al level, im­mig­rant work­ers are dis­trib­uted dif­fer­ently across in­dus­tries than their U.S.-born coun­ter­parts. Im­mig­rants are more likely than U.S.-born work­ers to hold jobs in six of the 13 ma­jor in­dus­tries ex­amined, in­clud­ing man­u­fac­tur­ing and ad­min­is­trat­ive ser­vices.

The dis­tri­bu­tion of im­mig­rants across in­dus­tries dif­fers from state to state, but some trends are wide­spread throughout the states, and some in­dus­tries dis­play pat­terns of re­gion­al clus­ter­ing. For ex­ample, im­mig­rants are more likely than U.S.-born work­ers to be em­ployed in con­struc­tion in the South­ern states.

Im­mig­rants are less likely than the U.S.-born to be em­ployed in sev­en in­dus­tries at the na­tion­al level, but they may be more likely to work in one or more of those sec­tors in in­di­vidu­al states. For ex­ample, im­mig­rants na­tion­wide are less likely than U.S.-born work­ers to be em­ployed in edu­ca­tion ser­vices and pro­fes­sion­al, sci­entif­ic, tech­nic­al, and man­age­ment ser­vices, but in sev­er­al states, im­mig­rants are more likely to work in those sec­tors.

The dis­tri­bu­tion of im­mig­rant and U.S.-born work­ers across in­dus­tries can dif­fer, re­gard­less of the size of a state’s im­mig­rant pop­u­la­tion. In Montana, a state with a small for­eign-born pop­u­la­tion, im­mig­rants are more likely than the U.S.-born to work in five sec­tors, in­clud­ing edu­ca­tion ser­vices; health care and so­cial ser­vices; leis­ure and hos­pit­al­ity; man­u­fac­tur­ing; and pro­fes­sion­al, sci­entif­ic, tech­nic­al, and man­age­ment ser­vices. In Cali­for­nia, which has a large im­mig­rant pop­u­la­tion, for­eign-born work­ers have a great­er like­li­hood of be­ing em­ployed in six sec­tors com­pared with U.S.-born work­ers, in­clud­ing two—leis­ure and hos­pit­al­ity and man­u­fac­tur­ing—that are also ob­served in Montana.

These data—par­tic­u­larly when con­sidered in the con­text of in­form­a­tion about em­ploy­ment, gross do­mest­ic product, and na­tion­wide demo­graph­ic changes and factors that dis­tin­guish im­mig­rants and U.S.-born work­ers—can be used to in­form de­cisions on policies and in­vest­ments de­signed to spur eco­nom­ic growth amid a chan­ging work­force. Such choices in­clude wheth­er to provide work­ers with skills-based train­ing; set stand­ards for oc­cu­pa­tion­al cre­den­tials; provide lan­guage classes for non­nat­ive Eng­lish speak­ers; and man­date the use of the fed­er­al on­line em­ploy­ment eli­gib­il­ity veri­fic­a­tion sys­tem known as E-Veri­fy. 

Reprinted with permission from Route Fifty. The original story can be found here.

http://www.nationaljournal.com/next-america/population-2043/immigrants-workforce-state-state-industry-industry

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