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May 07, 2006
April Jobs: Hispanics Up, non-Hispanics Down
[See also Paul Craig Roberts:
The Fading US
Economy]
Apologies to
T.S. Eliot, but April was one of the cruelest months
we’ve had in quite some time. Sure, the headline
number—138,000 additional payroll jobs—was good news for
the
financial
markets:
neither too hot, not too cold. In short, a sign that
the Fed may be finally "done."
But the
"other" employment
survey, based on
households rather than businesses, indicates that
the Fed’s work may just be beginning—toward added
stimulus rather than restraint. The household survey
reports a mere 47,000 jobs added last month.
Hispanics were the sole beneficiaries.
Here are the April employment
gains/losses by
racial group:
 |
Total: +47,000 (+0.03 percent) |
 |
Hispanic: + 91,000 (+0.47
percent) |
 |
Non-Hispanic -44,000 (-0.04
percent) |
 |
Black -28,000 (-0.18 percent) |
The data suggest a classic
displacement of non-Hispanic, primarily
unskilled minority workers, by Hispanics. This
perception is reinforced by the April pattern of labor
force participation rates:
 |
Hispanic: 68.9 percent (+0.1
point from March) |
 |
Non-Hispanic 65.7 percent
(unchanged) |
 |
Black: 64.4 percent (- 0.1
point) |
Because so many
Hispanics are immigrants or the children of immigrants,
Hispanic employment is the best proxy we have for
the impact of
immigration on employment. The ratio of Hispanic to
non-Hispanic employment growth is a strong indication of
how foreign-born workers fare relative to native-born
workers.
From the start of the
Bush Administration (January 2001) through April 2006:
 | Hispanic
employment rose 3.36 million (+20.8 percent) |
 | Non-Hispanic
jobs rose 2.55 million (+2.1 percent) |
The VDARE.com
American Worker Displacement Index (VDAWDI) tracks the
ratio of Hispanic to non-Hispanic job growth for all
months since January 2001:

The black line is
Hispanic job growth; pink is non-Hispanic, and yellow
the ratio of Hispanic to non-Hispanic (VDAWDI.)
In April 2006 VDAWDI
rose to a record 118.3
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email
him) is President of
ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis. |