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September 07, 2007
Immigrant Displacement Of American Workers Booms
Amid The Job Bust
U.S. payrolls contracted by 4,000
in August—blindsiding
economists who had
been expecting growth of 115,000.
The
“other” employment survey—of households
rather than businesses—painted an even bleaker picture:
a job loss of 316,000.
That’s a scary data point, one that
may force
Ben Bernanke to cut the Federal Funds rate even
before the next
FOMC meeting.
But before pulling what may be an
inflationary trigger, the
Fed Chairman should ponder the explosive job gains
registered by Hispanics.
Here are the August job numbers
from the household survey:
 |
Total: -316,000 (-0.22 percent
from July) |
 |
Non-Hispanic: -584,000 (-0.46
percent) |
 |
Hispanic: +268,000 (+1.32
percent) |
More than a quarter of a million
Hispanics found jobs in August, the largest monthly
increase since March 2004, and the third highest
since the start of the Bush Administration in 2001.
Meanwhile, the nearly 600,000 reduction in
non-Hispanic employment was the biggest hit this group
took since April 2005.
Bottom line: Worker displacement
catapulted to a record high in August.
The VDare.com Worker Displacement
Index (VDAWDI)
quantifies the displacement of non-Hispanic workers by
Hispanics since the start of the Bush Administration.
Calculated by dividing the index of Hispanic employment
growth by the index of non-Hispanic growth (January
2001=100.0). Because so many Hispanics are recent
immigrants, VDAWDI is a good measure of how immigrants
have fared
relative to native-born workers during that time.
The graph tells the story best:

The
blue line reflects Hispanic employment growth; red is
non-Hispanic job growth; and yellow is VDAWDI - the
ratio of Hispanic to non-Hispanic job growth...
VDAWDI rose to a record 124.2 in August from 122.0 in
July. This marked the largest percentage gain in the
worker displacement index since March 2004. There have
been only three months since January 2001 in which
displacement rose by a larger percent.
As
the graph makes clear, August was merely an extreme case
of the displacement that has gone on for years. Just
look at the job growth figures for the period from
January 2001 to August 2007:
 |
Total: +8.016 million (+ 5.82
percent from Jan. 2001) |
 |
Non-Hispanic: +3.537 million
(+2.91 percent) |
 |
Hispanic: +4.481 million (+27.8
percent) |
In
other words: in August 2007, 16 percent of
U.S. workers were Hispanic.
Yet
more than half (56 percent) of the jobs created since
January 2001 went to Hispanics.
To
paraphrase
Brecht, George Bush is dissolving the American
workforce and electing a new one.
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email
him) is President of
ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis. |