Fiscal Policy Institute. Working for a Better Life. A Profile of Immigrants in the New York State Economy

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Fiscal Policy Institute Working for a Better Life A Profile of Immigrants in the New York State Economy

In an overheated atmosphere, Fiscal Policy Institute set out to take a calm look at the real role of immigrants in New York

economic Immigrant contribution is greater than the share of state population Immigrant share of population 21% Immigrant share of working-age population 26% Immigrant share of labor force 26% Immigrant share of GDP for New York 22% 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% Source: FPI analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS. Working age is 16-64 years old.

economic Immigrant contribution represents nearly a quarter of the New York State economy New York State GDP in 2006: $1.02 trillion 22.4% Foreign-born $229 billion 77.6% U.S.-born $791 billion Source: FPI calculation based on Bureau of Economic Analysis estimate of Gross Domestic Product by State and ACS PUMS. See Working for a Better Life, Appendix B, for details.

3 distinct stories of immigration in New York State New York City 3.0 million immigrants Upstate 340,000 Downstate Suburbs 740,000 Downstate Suburbs Nassau Suffolk Westchester Rockland Putnam Sources: American Community Survey 2005 and New York City Department of City Planning corrected figures, as accepted by the Census Bureau.

Upstate New York Immigrants Play a Key Role in Fields Important to Future Growth

Immigrant contribution to the upstate economy Immigrant share of population 5.1% Immigrant share of working-age population 5.9% Immigrant share of labor force 5.3% Immigrant share of wage & salary income 5.8% 0% 1% 2% 3% 4% 5% 6% Source: FPI analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS. Working age is 16-64 years old.

Source: FPI analysis of 2000 Census microdata. Map created by the Regional Plan Association. New York State Immigration and growth go hand in hand New York City Hudson Valley Downstate Suburbs Rocheste r Ithaca

Immigrants are especially important to four sectors that are critical to upstategrowth &culture Health Care 35% of doctors Higher Education 20% of professors Research & Development 20% of computer software engineers Farming 80% of seasonal farm workers Source: FPI analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS.

Immigrants in upstate New York live in families at the same income levels as U.S.-born residents Share of individuals in families with income in immigrant families in U.S.-born families Significant difference? under $20,000 20% 20% no $20,000-39,999 20% 20% no $40,000-59,999 19% 17% no $60,000-$80,000 14% 15% no over $80,000 28% 28% no Source: FPI analysis CPS March supplements covering years 2001-2005. Data is from a 5-year pool, with incomes in 2005 dollars (CPIU). Immigrant families are those in which any adult was foreign-born. Distribution weighted by family size. Results given are the midpoint of a 90 percent confidence interval, with standard deviations derived by bootstrapping at 100 resamplings. See Working for a Better Life for details.

What would you guess are the top 10 countries immigrants to upstate NY come from? 1. Canada 2. India 3. Germany 4. Mexico 5. Italy 6. China 7. Korea 8. Jamaica 9. Poland 10. Bosnia and Herzegovina Source: FPI analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS.

Undocumented workers play a particularly large role in upstate New York farming, working tough jobs at low wages. Of 41,000 seasonal farm workers, it is estimated that roughly two thirds are undocumented 2,000-2,500 foreign farm workers come legally to work in New York on H2A visas Of 19,000 year-round farm workers, a much smaller portion are undocumented Source: Prepared for FPI by Max Pfeffer, professor of development sociology, Cornell University, based on the Census of Agriculture and studies of undocumented farm workers in New York State. See Working for a Better Life for details.

Overall level of diversity upstate White 86% e Black 7% 7% Asian 2% Hispanic 4% American Indian less than 1% Other 1% Source: FPI analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS.

Downstate Suburbs Growing, and Growing More Diverse

Immigrant contribution to the downstate suburbs Immigrant share of population 18% Immigrant share of working-age population 23% Immigrant share of labor force 23% Immigrant share of wage & salary income 20% 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% Source: FPI analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS. Working age is 16-64 years old.

Median family income in Nassau, Suffolk, Westchester, Rockland, and Putnam counties Families with at least one immigrant adult: $71,000 Families with only U.S.-born adults: $86,000 Source: FPI analysis of CPS March supplements covering the years 2001-2005. Data is from 5-year pool, with incomes in 2005 dollars (CPIU).

Day laborers attract a lot of attention, but day laborers are less than a half of one percent of immigrants, and a small portion even of undocumented immigrants. Based on Valenzuela & Meléndez estimate of 6,000-8,000 day laborers hired through shape-up sites in the entire New York metropolitan area, including New York City and suburbs in New York and New Jersey. See Working for a Better Life for further details.

A good number of construction workers, maids, and grounds maintenance workers are immigrants. But the top occupation of immigrants in the downstate suburbs is registered nurse (29% of RNs are foreign born) 41% of all physicians and surgeons are foreign-born 22% of accountants are foreign-born Source: FPI analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS.

The downstate suburbs are becoming diverse and global Asian 5% Blac k Hispanic 14% White 71% Source: FPI analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS.

New York City Immigration Fuels Growth and Builds the Middle Class

Immigrant contributions make up almost half of the New York City economy Immigrant share of population Immigrant share of working-age population Immigrant share of labor force Immigrant share of wage & salary income 37% 37% 45% 46% Sources: FPI analysis of ACS PUMS, and New York City Department of City Planning. Working age is 16-64 years old. 0% 5% 10% 15% 20% 25% 30% 35% 40% 45% 50%

Where does New York City rank for share of immigrants among America s 20 biggest cities? population foreign-born Los Angeles 3.7 million 40% San Jose 900,000 38% New York City 8.0 million 37% San Francisco 700,000 36% Houston 1.9 million 29% Dallas 1.1 million 27% San Diego 1.2 million 26% Phoenix 1.4 million 36% Chicago 2.7 million 29% Austin 700,000 18% Fort Worth 600,000 18% San Antonio 1.2 million 14% Charlotte 600,000 13% Philadelphia 1.4 million 11% Columbus 700,000 9% Jacksonville 800,000 8% Indianapolis 800,000 7% Detroit 800,000 6% Memphis 600,000 6% Baltimore 600,000 6% Sources: Source: 2005 ACS (American FactFinder). Populations are of city, not metropolitan region.

Immigrants to NYC come from all around the world Dominican Republic China Jamaica Mexico Guyana Ecuador Haiti India Trinidad & Tobago Colombia Ukraine Russia Korea Philippines Poland Italy Bangladesh Pakistan Peru Hong Kong Honduras El Salvador Cuba Barbados Greece Israel Romania Yugoslavia Panama Taiwan countries from which there are over 20,000 residents, in order from most (336,000) to fewest (20,700) Source: FPI analysis of ACS PUMS 2005.

and immigrants fit right in to the racial and ethnic mix of New York City 100% 90% 80% Hispanic 28% Other 2% Hispanic 31% Other 3% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% Asian 11% Black 24% Asian 23% Black 21% 20% 10% 0% White 35% White 23% All residents Foreign-born Source: FPI analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS.

Immigrants in NYC are more likely to live in families in the middle income brackets Living in families Families with Families with with income of immigrant adult only U.S.-born adults $20,000-$80,000 55% 44% FPI analysis of CPS March Supplements covering years 2001-2005. Data is from a 5-year pool, with incomes in 2005 dollars (CPIU).

Immigrants represent a significant portion of workers in virtually every occupation in New York City Business A quarter of of CEOs (8,000) 5 in 10 accountants 3 in 10 office clerks 3 in 10 receptionists 5 in 10 building cleaners Health Care 5 in 10 doctors 6 in 10 registered nurses 7 in 10 nursing aids Real estate 3 in 10 of brokers 4 in 10 property managers 4 in 10 architects 7 in 10 construction laborers Finance 3 in 10 financial managers 3 in 10 securities, commodities and financial service sales agents Source: FPI analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS.

31 percent of commuters are immigrants Percent of commuters who are Commuters to New York City, by type of work foreign-born Management, business, and financial 24% Professional and related 34% Service 39% Sales and related 27% Office and administrative support 28% Construction and extraction 33% Installation, maintenance and repair 29% Production 49% Transportation and material moving 40% All 31% Chart shows inbound commuters to New York City from New Jersey, Connecticut, and other parts of New York State. Source: FPI Analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS. Universe: those 16 and older who live in NY, NJ, or CT, and who report New York City as place of work.

The debate often turns on illegal immigration, and on undocumented immigrants, NY is a yellow state Source: Jeffrey S. Passell, Unauthorized Migrants: Numbers and Characteristics, Pew Hispanic Center, 2005

Source: Jeffrey S. Passell, Unauthorized Migrants: Numbers and Characteristics, Pew Hispanic Center, 2006 There isn t a bright line between legal and illegal. In the U.S., 14.6 million people in undocumented families Other adults 3% U.S. citizen childre Undocumented children 12% Adult women 27% Adult men 37%

How many undocumented immigrants are in New York City? Estimated undocumented residents in New York City: 535,000 Estimated undocumented workers 374,000 Portion of New York City workers who are undocumented: 10% Source: Prepared for FPI by Jeffrey S. Passel, Pew Hispanic Center, 2007. Based on Pew Hispanic Center data from March 2000-2006, CPS with legal status assigned. Occupations included in this table have an average of at least 5,000 workers and the share of undocumented exceeds the New York City share of undocumented workers. For more information, see Working for a Better Life, Appendix A.

Where do undocumented immigrants work? Top occupations of undocumented workers Cooks Janitors & building cleaners Construction laborers Maids & housekeeping cleaners Waiters & waitresses Sewing machine operators Dishwashers Taxi drivers & chauffeurs Cashiers Retail salespersons Number in NYC 21,000 19,000 17,000 16,000 15,000 12,000 11,000 11,000 10,000 10,000 Portion of all in occupation 33% 19% 32% 28% 28% 35% 54% 20% 12% 12% Source: Prepared for FPI by Jeffrey S. Passel, Pew Hispanic Center, 2007. Based on Pew Hispanic Center data from March 2000-2006, CPS with legal status assigned. Occupations included in this table have an average of at least 5,000 workers and the share of undocumented exceeds the New York City share of undocumented workers. For more information, see Working for a Better Life, Appendix A.

The most visible symbol and source of New York City s comeback is that we re growing again. Our population is at an all-time high. Mayor Michael Bloomberg PlaNYC 2030 speech, December 12, 2006

8.4 New York City Population 1950-2005 8.2 8 7.8 in millions 7.6 7.4 7.2 7 6.8 6.6 6.4 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000 2005 Sources: Population of Counties by Decennial Census and New York City Department of City Planning

NYC Population Trends 1980 1990 2000 2005 1980-2005 Native-born 5.4 million 5.2 million 5.1 million 5.2 million -194,000 Foreign-born 1.7 million 2.1 million 2.9 million 3.0 million +1.3 million Total NYC 7.0 million 7.3 million 8.0 million 8.2 million +1.2 million Immigrant share of pop. 24% 28% 35% 37% trend Source: NYC Dept. of City Planning analysis of Census and ACS.

Business growth is fastest in immigrant neighborhoods Number of businesses 1994 Number of businesses 2004 Increase 1994-2004 Percent increase 1994-2004 New York City 192,405 210,783 18,378 9.6% Flushing 2,364 3,654 1,290 54.6% Sunset Park 1,090 1,606 516 47.3% Sheepshead Bay- Brighton Beach 1,421 1,900 479 33.7% Elmhurst 1,040 1,301 261 25.1% Washington Heights 1,807 2,129 322 17.8% Jackson Heights 1,284 1,468 184 14.3% Flatbush 888 984 96 10.8% Source: Center for an Urban Future, A World of Opportunity, analysis of NYS Labor Department data.

wages for immigrants are 10-20% lower except among top earners Hourly wages for NYC workers Difference Educational attainment Foreignborn U.S.-born between the two Less than high school $9.50 $10.38 9% High school $12.27 $14.53 18% Some college $14.53 $16.74 15% College $21.76 $25.94 19% All $13.85 $18.68 35% Source: FPI analysis of CPS outgoing rotation groups, 2001-2006. Universe: those in labor force, age 25 and older, who reported education level. Medians of 6-year pools (in 2006 dollars, using CPI-U deflator).

Immigrants come into a labor market with strongly racially defined dimensions Even after correcting for education: U.S.-born whites earn a good $2.50/hour more than any other group, U.S.-born or foreign-born Less than high school White immigrants get considerably better wages than black or Hispanic immigrants High school grads White immigrants earn more than black, Hispanic or Asian immigrants At least some college Statistics are not clear

If wages are lower, how can family income be in the middle? Labor Force Participation: Source: FPI analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS. Universe is all 16 and older. Foreign-born 64% U.S.-born: 60% 75% 66% 55% 55% Foreign-born U.S.-born Foreign-born U.S.-born 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Men Women

Immigrants also work slightly longer hours, and have more family members working Average hours worked per person Foreign-born U.S.-born 40.0 38.8 2 family members work 3 or more family members work Foreign-born families U.S.-born families 33% 23% 11% 5% Source: FPI analysis of CPS March Supplement data, 2001-2005. Non-zero answer to usual hours of work per week. Foreign-born families are those with at least one immigrant over the age of 18. Shares and counts are 5-year averages. Shares are of individuals; thus, 33 percent of all people in immigrant families were in families with 2 workers.

Immigrants join unions of immigrants are union members? What share of union members are immigrants? Education & Health 45% 46% Wholesale & Retail 12% 52% Leisure & hospitality 12% 53% Finance 21% 45% Professional & business 16% 50% Other services 9% 60% Construction 22% 50% Transp.& Utilities 41% 40% Manufacturing 19% 69% Public admininistration 59% 24% Information 19% 22% All 26% 44% Source: FPI analysis of CPS data 2003-2006. Medians of 4-year pools.

And when they do, all workers benefit Median wage selected industries Non-union Union Non-union Union Wholesale & retail $10.54 $13.09 $12.30 $13.00 Construction $12.90 $17.37 $16.43 $22.41 Transportation & Foreign-born U.S.-born utilities $13.70 $16.52 $15.07 $17.50 ub c admininistration $19.00 $16.83 $20.52 $16.98 All $12.33 $15.00 $16.92 $17.37 Source: FPI analysis of CPS data 2003-2006; data points are medians of 4-year pools. Universe is those in the labor force or reporting a wage. In 2006 dollars, using CPI-U deflator.

Education levels of NYC immigrants 35% 30% 25% Share of foreign-born Share of U.S.-born 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% 8th grade or less More than 8th grade but no high school diploma High school diploma Beyond high school but no BA Bachelors Advanced degree Source: Fiscal Policy Institute analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS. Universe is New York City residents 25 years of age and older.

Education levels of NYC immigrants 35% 30% 25% Share of foreign-born Share of U.S.-born 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% 8th grade or less More than 8th grade but no high school diploma High school diploma Beyond high school but no BA Bachelors Advanced degree Source: Fiscal Policy Institute analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS. Universe is New York City residents 25 years of age and older.

Education levels of NYC immigrants 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% Foreign-born U.S.-born 0% 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 Source: FPI analysis of Census 1980, 1990, and 2005 ACS IPUMS. Census 2000 is not used because coding does not allow a consistent delineation of some downstate counties. Data for 1985, 1995, and 2000 are interpolated for chart. Universe: Immigrants who were 25 or older as of year of original immigration, and who immigrated during the decade immediately preceding the census. For 2005 ACS, those who immigrated since 2000.

Immigrants learn English 80% 70% 60% 20% Speak English "well" 20% 50% 40% 30% 18% 23% 27% Speak "very well" 29% 20% 10% 22% 22% Speak only English 27% 0% Less than 5 Years 5 to 9 Years 10 Years or More Years in the U.S. Source: FPI analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS. Universe: Immigrants 5 years of age and older.

and it makes a big difference in earnings Annual wage and salary income for immigrants in New York City High school completion or less Median Speak only English at home $25,000 Speak another language at home, but speak English very well $25,000 Speak another language at home and speak English well, not well, or not at all $19,000 More than high school Median Speak only English at home $43,000 Speak another language at home, but speak English very well $42,000 Speak another language at home and speak English well, not well, or not at all $28,600 Source: FPI analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS. Universe: Immigrant New York residents age 25 and older who reported positive wage and salary earnings for 2005.

Immigrants own homes 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 34% homeowner 38% homeowner 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 66% renter 62% renter 0% Foreign-born U.S.-born Source: Source: 2005 ACS (American FactFinder), tables B06013. Numbers and shares refer to total people living in households.

Immigrants become citizens Overall, 51 percent of immigrants in NYC are citizens 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% 81% 63% 35% 8% Less than 5 Years 5-14 Years 15-24 Years Over 24 Years Time in the U.S. Source: FPI analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS. Note that the data reflect only those immigrants still alive as of 2005, and who currently live in New York City.

Immigrants pay taxes New York City Legal immigrants paid on average $5,500 in total taxes, while native-born pay on average $6,000. (1994) Undocumented immigrants paid on average $2,200 in taxes on considerably lower incomes. (1994) Source: Immigrants in New York: Their Legal Status, Incomes, and Taxes, Jeffrey S. Passel and Rebecca L. Clark, 1998.

What taxes do undocumented immigrants pay? property tax (through rent) state and local sales tax payroll taxes (but they don t get Social Security or Medicare) city, state, and federal income tax they also do not receive the earned income tax credit

Ironically, if eventually the 11 million illegal residents of this country are required to correct past tax-paying errors, it is likely that the undocumented workers will end up receiving rather than paying the Treasury money. Bernard Wasow, Illegal Immigrants, Our Low-Income Taxpayers, The Century Foundation

What services are immigrants eligible to get? What should the answer be? Public Schools? All children are eligible for public school. Food Stamps? Legal immigrants are restricted for 5 years, with an exception made for children. Undocumented immigrants are never eligible. TANF? Federal restriction for 5 years for legal immigrants, appropriately made up for by NYS. Undocumented immigrants are never eligible. Medicaid? Varies by state. In New York, state-funded Medicaid & Family Health Plus available to all immigrants permanently residing under color of law. Emergency Medical Care? Everyone is eligible; some mechanisms for reimbursement.

There are costs associated with immigration, but getting it right yields enormous benefits. New York State GDP 22.4% Foreign-born $229 billion 77.6% U.S.-born $791 billion

In the end, we have to work it out How many children are growing up in families with at least one immigrant adult? Upstate New York: Downstate suburbs: New York City: New York State Average: 8% 31% 57% 34% Source: FPI analysis of 2005 ACS PUMS. Children are all under 18 years old.

Fiscal Policy Institute 11 Park Place, Suite 701 New York, NY 10007 212/721-7164 www.fiscalpolicy.org ddkallick@fiscalpolicy.org