From Center for Immigration Studies <[email protected]>
Subject New from the Center for Immigration Studies, 7/15/19
Date July 15, 2019 12:57 PM
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What's Happening at the Center
In their latest analysis, Steven Camarota and Karen Zeigler find that both legal and illegal immigrants are coming to the United States at significantly older ages than in the past. The average age of all immigrants increased from 39 to 45 years between 2000 and 2017. This is more than twice as fast as the average age increase for the nation's overall population. The number of working-age (18-64) immigrants increased by 42 percent but the number over the age of 64 increased by 108 percent. These findings have implications for the often-made argument that immigration makes the country significantly younger. The findings also have implications for public coffers because prior research indicates that younger immigrants tend to have a more positive lifetime fiscal impact than older immigrants.

Immigrants Are Coming to America at Older Ages ([link removed])

Featured Posts

Fact Sheet on HR 1044, Fairness for High Skilled Immigrants Act ([link removed])
By Jessica Vaughan
This bill would dramatically change our employment green card distribution system by eliminating a safeguard that prevents green card numbers from being monopolized by citizens of one or two countries, and rewarding the Big Tech employers who have replaced Americans.

House to Vote on Misnamed "Fairness for High Skilled Immigrants Act" (H.R. 1044) ([link removed])
By John Miano
A better solution to green card backlogs would be to end the dishonest policy of "dual intent", and instead force employers to say upfront whether they're hiring a temporary guestworker or a permanent immigrant.

Why Is HUD Attacking Its Own Proposed Rule to Bar Illegal Aliens from Housing Assistance? ([link removed])
By Andrew Kloster
Some employees of HUD appear to be undermining their own leadership by cutting the funding for the agency's proposed rule limiting housing assistance to "non-mixed" households, or those without illegal immigrants.

Mexico Heightens Immigration Enforcement ([link removed])
By Jason Peña
The U.S. and Mexican governments appear to be cooperating more on border and interior enforcement. Recently Mexican authorities deported a large number of Haitian immigrants back to Haiti after a riot broke out between enforcement officials and the migrants.

More Blog Posts
* Restrictionists Have Interesting Allies on HR 1044 – such as Ilhan Omar ([link removed])
* U.S. Grants Legalization, with No Path to Citizenship, to Some Migrants ([link removed])
* Pelosi's Questionable Take on the Census Citizenship Question ([link removed])
* Is the President Using All the Chess Pieces Available to Him on "Fair Trade" Matters? ([link removed])
* UNICEF Chief: Developed World "Must" Welcome All Migrants Because "Migration Is Not a Choice" ([link removed])
* Mexico Reportedly Deporting Migrants at Highest Rate Since 2006 ([link removed])
* Hispanic Caucus Backs Bill that Sends Mexicans to the Back of the Bus ([link removed])
* View from the Left: HR 1044 is – like Trump’s Tax Bill – a Gift to the Haves ([link removed])
* Second Thoughts about a Letter to the Editor on Immigration Story ([link removed])
* Mexican Consul’s Opposition to Florida’s Sanctuary City Ban ([link removed])
* Guatemala Launches Inquiry into Migrant Rights Amid Crackdown ([link removed])

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