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November 03, 2006
October Job Data
Show Record Immigrant Displacement Of Americans
The conventional wisdom is that
employment picture brightened in October. Some
92,000 new payroll jobs were added, and job growth
for August and September was revised upward by a
cumulative 139,000. October’s unemployment rate, 4.4
percent, was the lowest in more than five years.
For what it's worth, this good news
probably comes too late to
help Republicans in the
federal elections on Tuesday.
And maybe that's fair. From
our perspective here at VDARE.COM, the October job
pop was
really a bust.
We refer, of course, to
the "other" employment survey, of
households rather than businesses, which gives some
indication of the immigrant share of job growth. The
household survey showed that a whopping 437,000 new
positions were created in October. But the gains were
overwhelmingly skewed toward Hispanics—our
proxy for immigrants, because about 40 percent of
them are foreign-born.
Here are month’s gains by racial
group:
 | Total: +437,000 (+0.30
percent) |
 | Hispanic: +292,000 (+1.49
percent) |
 | Non-Hispanic: +145,000 (+0.12
percent) |
More than two-thirds of October’s
new jobs went to Hispanics, who represent just 14
percent of
the U.S. labor force.
As for that declining unemployment
rate, we notice that
 | Among
white males, unemployment actually rose -
to 3.0 percent in October from 2.9 percent the prior
month. |
This is hardly new news. As our
readers know, we have compared month-to-month changes in
Hispanic and non-Hispanic employment for years.
Since the start of
Bush II’s administration (January 2001) Hispanic
employment has risen 3.730 million, or 23.1 percent.
Just 3.781 million jobs were filled by non-Hispanics, a
gain of only 3.1 percent.
October’s figures pushed
VDARE.COM’s American Worker Displacement Index –
VDAWDI, the ratio of Hispanic to non-Hispanic job
growth during the
Bush years – to a record high.

Unfortunately, the government does not publish monthly
data on
immigrant employment. Because so many
Hispanics are immigrants and the
children of immigrants, Hispanic employment is the
best proxy we have for impact of foreign-born workers on
month-to-month employment change.
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email
him) is President of
ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis. |