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Title: Immigrants and Labor Force Trends: The Future, Past, and Present
Citation Type: Miscellaneous
Publication Year: 2006
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Abstract: Debates on immigration policy often discuss calibrating immigration levels to meet the labor needs of the nations economy. Indeed, it is clear that immigration strongly affects US labor markets over the past thirty years, foreign-born workers have grown to record numbers, and currently about one out of every seven US workers was born outside the country. Trends suggest that unless immigration laws are changed drastically, immigrants will form an increasing share of the workforce over the next thirty years. Foreign-born workers are well-represented in occupations predicted to grow most over the next decades, suggesting such workers will remain in demand. As a result, immigrants are expected to form about one third of the low-skilled labor force over coming decades, and up to 18 percent of college-educated workers. Immigrants are also expected to assist in addressing the needs of an aging population by providing services to the elderly, altering worker-to-retiree ratios, and providing tax revenues that support programs for the aged. While the future of the countrys economy is uncertain, it seems quite clear that immigrants will play a large role in the future workforce.
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Authors: Batalova, Jeanne; Lowell, B.Lindsay; Gelatt, Julia
Publisher: Migration Policy Institute
Data Collections: IPUMS USA, IPUMS CPS
Topics: Migration and Immigration
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