METROPOLIS
First International Conference
Milan, Italy
© Copyright, Fondazione Cariplo - I.S.MU. Milano.
Stampato a Milano nel mese di Agosto 1997
Tipomonza - Via Merano, 18 - Milano
Working group 1
Immigrant Integration in the PostIndustrial
Metropolis:
A View from the United States
Roger Waldinger
Department of Sociology, Lewis Center for Regional Policy
Studies, UCLA, USA
This paper is designed to stimulate discussion
of the relationship between urban economic change, and the
integration of immigrants. As such, the paper is not intended to
be a survey of the literature or a summary of findings, but
rather a sketch of the major research questions and relevant
controversies. However, let me begin with a disclaimer. My
knowledge of the state of research in the various countries
involved in Metropolis is highly imperfect and uneven. Moreover,
I am an immigration specialist, not an urban specialist. What
follows, hence, has an unavoidable slant toward the United States
and may not provide an accurate view of cutting edge issues in
the areas with which I am less familiar.
Urban processes: though patterns of
spatial distribution differ from country to country, immigrants
have been disproportionately concentrated in urban areas. Within
a given country, major urban areas have proven quite different in
their attraction to immigrants. Among countries, there is also
variation in the degree to which the primate cities (where there
is one) have attracted a disproportionate immigrant presence.
Nonetheless, the initial generalization about the urban presence
of immigrants and their descendants generally holds true.
Therefore, the question of the relationship between new ethnic
populations and the urban economic base is central to both
research and policy agendas. That question is also troubling
because the relationship between urban economic and demographic
bases which held during the initial, post-war age of migration
has drastically changed. At the earlier period, cities had a
thriving manufacturing economy, that allowed them to serve as
staging grounds for unskilled, newcomer groups. The U.S.
experience was one in which the old factory-based economy allowed
for a multi-generational move up the totem pole. Immigrant
children could do better if they just hung on through the high
school years, after which time well-paying manufacturing jobs
would await them. The third generation would continue on through
university and beyond, completing the move from peddler to
plumber to professor. Though we know less about the historical
experience of immigrants in European countries (for example,
France or the United Kingdom), the available literature points to
a roughly similar story. However, the past twenty-five years have
seen a transformation of urban economies and social structures in
ways that make a repeat of the past unlikely. There are various
interpretations of the new urban reality, and my task here is not
to adjudicate among them, but to describe them, and sketch out
some implications for ethnic integration:
The skills mismatch: This argument
emphasizes the decline of manufacturing and its replacement by
services. For the most part, the concern here is with employment
and the shifting distribution of jobs by skill. Earlier,
manufacturing jobs were plentiful and offered opportunities to
workers with low or modest levels of schooling. But those jobs
have now declined (due to suburbanization, relocation to
lower-cost, domestic areas, internationalization) and the advent
of the post-industrial metropolis, as such well-known U.S.
academics as William J. Wilson and John Kasarda have contended,
has robbed urban areas of their absorptive capacity. Changes in
technology and communications, argues John Kasarda, decimated the
"traditional goods-processing industries that once
constituted the economic backbone of cities, and provided entry
level employment for lesser skilled African Americans." In
return for the eroding factory sector, cities have gained a new
economy dominated by "knowledge-intensive white-collar
service industries that typically required education beyond high
school and therefore precluded most poorly employed inner city
minorities from obtaining employment." Thus, on the demand
side, the "very jobs that in the past attracted and socially
upgraded waves of disadvantaged persons...were
disappearing;" on the supply side, the number of
"minority residents who lack the education for employment in
the new information processing industries [was] increasing."
A second version of the skills mismatch
argument emphasizes the spatial mismatch. In the U.S.
version of this argument, the problem concerns the
suburbanization of employment, and the continued confinement of
ethnic minorities, black Americans, in particular, to inner
cities. Within the inner cities, the job structure has been
transformed as described in the paragraph above. But the suburbs
have been growing much faster than inner cities, with "much
of the growth occur(ing) in booming edge cities at
the metropolitan periphery. By 1990, many of these edge
cities had more office space and retail sales than the
metropolitan downtowns." Not only do the suburbs offer more
jobs, but they provide a much richer supply of low-skilled jobs,
in part due to the relocation of manufacturing, but importantly,
because the expanding suburban population base has given rise to
a large, diversified service and retailing sector where
educational requirements are relatively low. A version of the
spatial mismatch hypothesis might apply to European cities,
though possibly in very different ways given the different
relationship between inner city and suburban ring. Clearly, the
key issue has to do with the relationship between the spatial
distribution of the ethnic population, and the spatial
distribution of the jobs to which they are best matched. In some
European cities, the ethnic population may be in the suburbs and
the jobs in the central cities. In other cases, the situation may
more closely resemble the United States. The intensity of the
problem is also related to the constraints on spatial
redistribution. Few groups are likely to experience levels of
housing discrimination as extreme as those encountered by U.S.
blacks.
Both types of mismatch formulations are related
to the underclass hypothesis developed in the United
States by William J. Wilson and applied, with important
modifications, to a number of other countries. This hypothesis
contends that urban job erosion has been paralleled by an outflow
of the more skilled, better educated members of the U.S. black
population. These two shifts have undermined the institutional
infrastructure of urban black communities. The end result is a
pattern of concentrated poverty, in which poor, low-skilled
blacks are concentrated in urban communities with few jobs, few
institutions that can provide help, and few residents with
connections to either employers or helping institutions. As
Wilson has recently written: "neighborhoods that offer
few legitimate employment opportunities, inadequate job
information networks, and poor schools lead to the disappearance
of work. That is, where jobs are scarce, and where people rarely,
if every have the opportunity to help their friends and neighbors
find jobs, and where there is a disruptive or degraded school
life....many people eventually lose their feeling of
connectedness to work in the formal economy; they no longer
expect work to be a regular, and regulating force in their
lives." The underclass hypothesis flows logically from
the various mismatch formulations, but it is not clear, even in
the U.S., how well it applies to other ethnic minorities (for
example, Mexican Americans), or to various immigrant groups. It
may, however, provide a better fit with the situation of various
second generation groups.
Globalization: This view offers an
interpretation of urban trends that emphasizes the new sources of
urban growth and dynamism. From this perspective, the urban
economy has been reorganized around a complex of service
industries linked to the global economy. Urban areas remain
crucial for their role in assembling a highly skilled labor force
engaged in transactions where agglomeration and face-to-face
contacts remain important. But in this view, the growth of
services also involves a process of economic restructuring. The
idea of restructuring means that service growth at the top
simultaneously generates jobs for chambermaids and waiters,
investment bankers and lawyers, while positions in between these
extremes are slowly, but steadily, reduced. Restructuring also
results in a deployment of new labor force groups that attracts
immigrants from overseas to fill the expanded bottom-level jobs.
The coming of the hourglass economy thus creates the demand for
immigrant labor, but the relationship between cities and
immigrants works both ways. The arrival of the immigrants helps
explain why the past two decades have seen a new "urban
renaissance." The influx of foreign-born workers has given
the comatose manufacturing sector a new lease on life.
Immigrants, so the story goes, have been a more pliable labor
force, and so factory employers have not been obliged to keep
wages at parity with national norms. In contrast to nationals,
immigrant labor can also be deployed in more flexible ways,
thereby giving urban manufacturers the scope to customize
production and place greater reliance on sub-contracting. As yet
another plus, urban manufacturers can also draw on a large,
vulnerable population of illegal immigrants. Their presence has
given new meaning to the word exploitation, making "the new
immigrant sweatshop...(a) major U.S. central city employment
growth sector in the past decade." Immigration has also
propelled the service economy. According to Saskia Sassen, who
has researched New York: "immigration can be seen as a
significant labor supplier for the vast infrastructure of
low-wage jobs underlying specialized services, and the
high-income life-styles of its employees. Messenger services,
French hand laundries, restaurants, gourmet food stores, repair
and domestic services -- these are just a few examples of the
vast array of low-wage jobs needed for the operation of the
specialized service sector and its employees. Immigrants
represent a desirable labor supply because they are relatively
cheap, reliable, willing to work on odd shifts, and safe." Immigrants
are also a permissive factor in the continued expansion of the
labor supply for newly created professional and managerial jobs.
As Harrison and Bluestone argue, "the provision of ...
services to the office workers becomes the major economic
activity for the rest of the city." In their view: "the
high cost of living in cities containing corporate headquarters
requires that professional households include more than one wage
earner in order to sustain a middle-class life style. This, in
turn, forces this new aristocracy to consume more and more of the
services that workers in an earlier generation would have
produced for themselves." By furnishing the "large
cohort of restaurant workers, laundry workers, dog walkers,
residential construction workers, and the like," immigrants
lower the costs of keeping a high skilled labor force in place.
Thus were it not for the foreign-born, the advanced service
sectors in New York or Los Angeles would have to pay their
highly-skilled workers even more, and thus lose out in the
broader competitive game. To some extent, the globalization
hypothesis represents an abstraction from urban trends of the
late 1970s and early to mid-1980s, when cities like New York,
London, or Tokyo were in a state of vigorous expansion. But that
earlier boom has now collapsed, and all three cities have since
faced much more uncertain futures. It is also not clear whether
specialization or diversification are the key to urban growth.
New York and London are far more specialized in services and
finance than Tokyo that retains a stronger manufacturing base,
and for that reason may encounter greater difficulties in
generating future growth or rebounding from recessionary periods.
The globalization hypothesis also emphasizes the centrality of
the very largest cities, but, on the global scale, the cities
mentioned above are far from the largest. Even if the global
scale is reduced to the ranks of advanced societies, it is not
clear that the largest cities are the most competitive.
Globalization also implies increased competition among
metropolitan areas, and it may be that the salient feature of the
current situation is the instability of the urban
hierarchy, not the placement of cities on the hierarchy at any
one time. In that case, it would be important to know how cities
that vary in their immigrant density, or in the relative size of
their immigrant population, rate in terms of global
competitiveness.
New Forms of Urban Agglomeration: The
two hypotheses outlined above imply that manufacturing is a
declining activity in metropolitan areas. This is almost
certainly true in relative employment terms, but there are
various reasons to think that manufacturing may prove to be a
more persistent urban phenomenon, as suggested by the writings
associated with "flexible specialization" and "new
industrial districts." Here the argument is that
manufacturing is shifting from mass to flexible production. The
advantage goes to small producers, capable of responding quickly
to shifts in demand, and linked, through networks, to sources of
labor, supply, information, and capital. As Saxenian has argued: "in
these systems, which are organized around horizontal networks of
firms, producers deepen their own capabilities by specializing,
while engaging in close, but not exclusive relations with other
specialists. Network systems flourish in regional agglomerations
where repeated interaction builds shared identities and mutual
trust while at the same time intensifying competitive
rivalries." In this view, the regional factor in
economic growth is increasing in importance. Competitive
differences among regions are linked to regional differences in
the cultures and social structures supportive of new, more
cooperative, more flexible work arrangements. This body of
research is more concerned with manufacturing than with services,
though given trends in technology, the boundary between
manufacturing and services is less clear than ever before. In
general, the research emphasizes historical factors that produce
regional advantage. This raises questions as to whether the
"flexible specialization" or "industrial
district" model can be imported or adopted by regions with
varying historical experiences. Though the classic industrial
district was once a big city phenomenon, it is not clear that it
still is. Many of the industrial districts described in the
literature are found in areas of smaller or medium-sized cities.
The very large, primate cities with large immigrant
concentrations do not appear to harbor thriving industrial
districts. The immigrant-employing industries of the
labor-importing period were concentrated in the mass production
sector. Some of the persistent immigrant-employing manufacturing
industries have characteristics that are reminiscent of flexible
specialization, for example, the clothing industry, but these
also hark back to the days of the sweatshop. In other cases, as
in Los Angeles or Silicon Valley, high technology firms that
appear to belong to local "industrial districts" have
nonetheless recruited immigrants, deploying their foreign-born
workers in low-skilled, repetitive, poorly paid jobs, differing
little from the immigrant role in the mass production industries
during the post-war economic heyday.
Economic Integration: the comments above
outline obviously bear on many of the likely research and policy
concerns relating to the economic integration of immigrants and
their descendants. Clearly, the underlying theme is one of new
difficulty, in which the engine that previously propelled
lower-skilled members of the society up the social ladder no
longer works, or no longer works with similar force. However,
this formulation emphasizes the problems encountered by all of
the less skilled members of the society, not those of
distinctive, or distinctively-perceived, ethnic backgrounds.
Thus, the question needs refinement in order to specify the
factors impinging on foreign-born populations and their
descendants. Even this formulation requires further modification
and attention to internal differences among both the immigrants
and their descendants. Leaving aside the second generation, for
the moment, it is clear that the foreign-born population is
highly diverse. The axes of variation are several, not one,
having to do with country of origin, timing of migration,
circumstances of migration (whether economic migrant or refugee),
skill level, and so on. Moreover, the degree of concern
associated with the foreign-born as opposed to their descendants
will vary from country to country, depending on whether the
foreign-born population is long established, in which case the
focus primarily switches to the second generation, or whether
immigration is ongoing at reasonably high levels, in which case
matters of immigrant adjustment gain priority. For labor migrants
of the traditional type, any one of the scenarios of urban
economic change outlined above spells bad news. The worst may be
the skills mismatch, since it suggests that the immigrants no
longer have a function in urban economies. For many of the labor
migrants of the 60s and 70s, who now find themselves
redundant, the skills mismatch hypothesis may ring a depressingly
true note. But the skills mismatch view seems likely to overstate
the case. Skill requirements have indeed gone up in the United
States, but only to a modest degree, with the tendency toward
skill deepening having slowed substantially since 1960.
Consequently, people with modest levels of schooling have
continued to fill a surprising number of jobs. In 1990, for
example, persons with twelve years or less of schooling held
close to half of all jobs in New York City and an even higher
proportion in Los Angeles. Because the U.S. is not the only
postindustrial economy to attract immigrants of a traditional
type, there seems to be a sustained demand for low-skilled labor,
notwithstanding the tenets of the mismatch hypothesis. The
globalization hypothesis would help explain the persisting scope
for low-skilled immigration, but it too has disturbing
implications, since it suggests that the immigrants move into an
ethnic mobility trap, in which there are few, if any
opportunities to move ahead. As with the skills mismatch
hypothesis, the globalization hypothesis offers, at best, an
incomplete account, entirely neglecting the role of high-skilled
immigrants, who have played a modest but significant role in
immigration to the United States ever since the enactment of the
Hart-Celler Act in 1965. Notwithstanding charges that
Americas immigrants are of "declining quality,"
the 1990 Census found that a college degree was as common among
all immigrants as among natives (1 out of 5). Moreover, the high
skilled are often present at levels well above the U.S. average,
with the college graduate share ranging from 27 percent among
Russians to 65 percent among Indians. Consequently, a good
proportion of the recent arrivals to the United States begins,
not at the bottom, but in the middle-class or above. In
contemporary Los Angeles, for example, coveted professional
occupations have become immigrant concentrations. More than 35
percent of the pharmacists in the L.A. region are foreign-born,
as are more than 25 percent of the dentists, and more than 20
percent of the engineers, various computer specialists, and
physicians. Regardless of how the structure of urban economic
opportunities is changing, one suspects that the immigrants will
adjust in distinctive ways. One possibility is that they will
enjoy fewer options than most, even after taking lower levels of
schooling into account, since native workers and native employers
will engage in discriminatory practices. While immigrants may be
stigmatized, with a cost attached to that stigma, they may also
be distinctive in other ways that promote more fruitful
adaptations to restructuring. We do know that immigrant
communities develop through the mobilization of informal
recruiting chains and networks, and these may assist immigrants
in responding to the new circumstances. Because getting a job
remains very much a matter of whom one knows, immigrants and
members of ethnic minorities get hired through networks. The
repeated action of network recruitment leads to ethnic employment
concentrations, or "ethnic niches" as I have labelled
them elsewhere. The process of niche formation can
often be a story of ethnic disadvantage turned to good account,
enabling social outsiders to compensate for the background
deficits of their groups and the discrimination that they
encounter. The networks that span ethnic communities comprise a
source of "social capital" providing social structures
that facilitate action, in this case, the search for jobs and the
acquisition of skills and other resources needed to move up the
economic ladder. Networks between ethnic incumbents and
job-seekers allow for rapid transmission of information about
openings from workplaces to the communities. And the
networks provide better information within workplaces,
reducing the risks associated with initial hiring. Once in place,
ethnic hiring networks are self-reproducing, since each new
employee recruits others from his or her own group.
While the development of an ethnic niche
provides a group with privileged access to jobs, one classic
example -- that of small business -- suggests that it can do far
more. Ethnic businesses emerge as a consequence of the formation
of ethnic communities, with their sheltered markets and networks
of mutual support. Though individual firms often die off at an
appalling rate, business activity offers a route to expansion
into higher profit and more dynamic lines. Retailers evolve into
wholesalers; construction firms learn how to develop real estate;
garment contractors gain the capital, expertise, and contacts to
design and merchandise their own clothing. As the ethnic niche
expands and diversifies, the opportunities for related ethnic
suppliers and customers also grow.
With an expanding business sector comes both a
mechanism for the effective transmission of skill and a catalyst
of the entrepreneurial drive. From the standpoint of ethnic
workers, the opportunity to acquire managerial skills through a
stint of employment in immigrant firms both compensates for low
pay and provides a motivation to learn a variety of different
jobs. Employers who hire co-ethnics gain a reliable workforce
with an interest in skill acquisition -- attributes that diminish
the total labor bill and make for greater flexibility. Thus, a
growing ethnic economy creates a virtuous circle. Business
success gives rise to a distinctive motivational structure,
breeding a community-wide orientation towards small business and
encouraging the acquisition of skills within a stable, commonly
accepted framework.
Thus far, my discussion has exclusively focused
on low-skilled immigrants, and it is true that these are the
newcomers who traditionally dominated the migrant flows. However,
the circulation of high-level labor has increased worldwide. This
type of movement does not necessarily fall under the rubric of
"immigration", with its implication of settlement and
eventual membership in the host society itself. Many of the
high-level migrants are purely transitory, heading back to the
home country after a brief sojourn, or on to another stop on the
international circuit. Numerically, however, they are of growing
importance, and it is useful to understand how and why global
economic integration changes the international circulation of
labor. Though some high-level migrants are sojourners, many
belong to the classical "immigrant" category, either by
design, as with the countries actively engaged in recruiting high
level immigrants, or by default, when a sojourn ends up lasting a
lifetime. More than 160,000 foreign engineers and scientists, for
example, immigrated to the United States as permanent residents
between 1966 and 1984, and annual rates of immigration among
engineers and scientists appear to have grown in recent years.
There is a still larger foreign-born presence in the production
pipeline, with American universities housing an ever-growing
foreign student population. Between 1954-55 and 1993-94, for
example, the foreign-student population grew from 34,232 to
449,749. For many, indeed most foreign-students, a stay in
American higher education is often a prelude to permanent
residence in the United States. Once on campus, foreign students
make connections to U.S. citizens and employers that in turn
provide the means and the incentives to settle in the U.S. for
the long term.
With numbers like these, immigrant
professionals have become an important presence in certain
branches of American industry. In 1980, for example, when
immigrants made up just under seven percent of total employment,
the foreign-born accounted for nearly one of out of every ten
engineers. In 1982, foreign citizens accounted for 10 percent of
all the new B.S./M.S. entrants to the U.S. engineering work
force, and 36 percent of the new entrants among engineering and
computer scientist Ph.D.s, a share that would certainly be
augmented were naturalized citizens taken into account. A 1985
National Science Foundation survey of 305 companies found that
foreign citizens and naturalized U.S. citizens accounted for one
fifth of their scientific and engineering employment. Tabulations
from the 1990 Census of Population show that Asians, a largely
foreign-born population, comprise 7 percent of all engineers, but
14 percent of those with Masters degrees and 22 percent of those
with doctorates. The advent of high-level immigration raises a
different, though not utterly distinctive, set of issues from
those concerning migrants of the labor type. For the most part,
employment, as such, is not in danger as high-level migrants find
themselves favorably situated relative to the changing labor
market trends. The more important issue, rather, has to do with
the full use of the human capital of these high level migrants.
It may be the case that, for all their education, the training is
somehow inappropriate to the demands of host society employers.
Or perhaps other attributes, language, culture, what have you,
keep a limit on progress. To the extent that higher-level
immigrants are also distinctive ethnically, discrimination is
always a possibility. The claim that high-skilled immigrants
encounter a "glass ceiling" that curbs their career
development is heard with increasing frequency. Indeed, such is
the case in the United States. Today the "glass
ceiling" is a byword for concern about the integration of
immigrant professionals, implying that well-educated newcomers
start out in favorable positions, but gradually find themselves
on a second-class career track. For example, the 1995 report of
the Federal Glass Ceiling Commission described the situation
faced by Asian and Pacific Islanders, a heavily foreign-born
population, as an "impenetrable glass ceiling." A 1992
report by the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights found that: "the
perception that there is a "glass ceiling" barring most
Asian Americans from attaining top management positions
(especially upper level management positions) for which they are
qualified was perhaps the concern most frequently voiced by Asian
American...individuals and advocacy groups..."
Though resource constraints prevented a full
investigation of the issue, the Commission was "convinced
that the problem [of the glass ceiling] is a serious one and that
it pervades both private corporations and government
agencies."
For the children of immigrants, the scenario
looks somewhat different, shaped, as it is, by a complex of
interacting social, economic, and psychological factors. Although
partaking largely, when not fully, in the culture of the host
society, members of the second generation are often visibly
identifiable, interacting with a mainly white society still not
cured of its racist afflictions. In the United States, one
influential view contends that, in the past, the manufacturing
economy allowed for a three, possibly four generational sequence
of modest steps that took the immigrants descendants far
beyond the bottom-most positions to which their ancestors had
been originally consigned. By contrast, today occupational
segmentation has "reduced the opportunities for incremental
upward mobility through well-paid, blue-collar positions".
The declining viability of small business reduces the
possibilities for advancement through the expansion of businesses
established by the immigrant generation, and, the general
stalling of mobility reduces the chances for ethnic succession.
Whereas the descendants of the "new immigration" of the
1880-1920 period were able to move up as the descendants of still
earlier immigrant waves moved on to more lucrative pursuits,
those prospects are unlikely to be repeated by the children of
immigrants who enter adulthood on the eve of the 21st century.
The advent of the hourglass economy appears to
confront the immigrant children with a cruel choice: either
acquire the college and other advanced degrees needed to move
into the professional/managerial elite, or else accept the same
menial jobs to which the first generation was consigned. However,
the latter possibility is not in the cards. As Herbert Gans
writes: "if the young people are offered immigrant jobs,
there are some good reasons why they might turn them down. They
come to the world of work with American standards, and may not
even be familiar with the old-country conditions..by which
immigrants..judged the urban job market. Nor do they have the
long-range goals that persuaded their parents to work long hours
at low wages; they know they cannot be deported and are here to
stay in America, and most likely they are not obliged to send
money to relatives left in the old country. From their
perspective, immigrant jobs are demeaning; moreover, illegal jobs
and scams may pay more and look better socially -- especially
when peer pressure is also present ."
With formulations such as these, we return to
the "skills mismatch" argument, though in this case,
the mismatch concerns the aspirations of immigrant children and
the requirements of the jobs that they seek.. While plausible,
this scenario is too crude, ignoring both inter-ethnic
differences within countries and inter-country variations. Second
generation options are likely to be shaped by the circumstances
of their parents, and these will vary greatly. The greatest
problems are likely to be encountered by the children of
low-level, manual workers, especially those dislocated by
industrial restructuring. In the United States, for example,
Mexicans, the single largest immigrant group, but also the least
skilled, are even more heavily represented among the children of
immigrants. Absent the Mexicans, todays second generation
looks little different from the rest of the American population
in socio-economic characteristics, and in many respects it
appears to be advantaged. Moreover, the declining demand for less
educated labor may threaten the prospects for second generation
advance,; but it need not be determining. Immigrant offspring of
the past altered their attitudes toward school and behavior in
school when they realized that more education would yield
dividends. There is no reason to assume that todays second
generation will not do the same. Indeed, immigrants and the
children of immigrants comprise 41 percent of the first year
students enrolled in the City University of New York -- a rate
that leaves immigrant children over-represented in the third
largest public system of higher education in the United States by
a factor of almost 50. The New York experience is not unique.
Nationwide, 74 percent of all college-age immigrants are enrolled
in some form of post-secondary schooling as opposed to 65 percent
among the native-born. Likewise, in-school rates for immigrant
18-21 year olds are above native-born levels. Movement into
higher education is a realistic prospect for many, precisely
because a large fraction of the immigrants do not start at the
bottom and a similarly substantial portion of immigrant offspring
do not seek positions that only represent "incremental
improvements" over low-skill jobs.
Policy Implications: as of this writing,
immigration policy in the United States seems to take two forms.
One involves restricting the flow of newcomers, with much talk
about reducing the number of legal immigrants, and action to keep
out or send home those foreign-born persons who come to the
United States illegally, or who came legally but declined to
return home at the appointed time. The second involves efforts to
punish those immigrants already residing in the United States,
whether legal or illegal, as long as they have been unable to
obtain U.S. citizenship, mainly by removing their eligibility for
most forms of public welfare.
But policies emphasizing control and punishment
are more or less irrelevant for the issues of interest here. To
be sure, more effective border enforcement would reduce the
number of very low-skilled immigrants who have been crowded into
highly competitive labor markets where they find dead-end jobs at
wages that are low and declining. However, even if undocumented
immigration could be reduced from roughly 300,000 net new illegal
arrivals a year to zero -- not a very likely prospect -- the
United States would still be the recipient of roughly 800,000
newcomers who arrive via the legal system. If the past is
prologue, then those newcomers will continue to converge on urban
areas, and in particular, on a handful of large cities that have
absorbed a disproportionate share of the immigrant flows. As
emphasized in this memo, the economies of urban areas have been
changing in ways that will impede the mobility of immigrants with
lower than average skills. At the moment, even lower skilled
immigrants do seem to find work. Their greater difficulty
involves finding work that pays well. And though not
satisfactory, that might be adequate, as long as the first
generation does not find itself extruded from the labor market,
and their children succeed in significantly moving ahead.
Clearly, there is evidence that a substantial portion of the
second generation is progressing beyond their parents, but their
ability to do so on a sustained basis depends on their ability to
complete and obtain decent secondary schooling, and then go on to
at least some post-secondary education. To a large extent, the
problems confronted by the children of immigrants are not all
that different from the problems faced by the much larger
population of children with U.S.-born, working-class parents. The
supply/demand equation for less skilled workers has turned highly
unfavorable, making extended schooling an imperative. Improving
the quality of secondary schooling and improving access to higher
education will do much for all of Americas working-class
families, including those with foreign-born children or parents.
If the children of immigrants do succeed in obtaining extended
education of adequate quality, then the key issue will be to
guarantee that they enjoy equal rewards for the skills that they
possess. This, of course, is the problem raised by the
"glass ceiling" controversy. Those analysts and
advocates who detect a "glass ceiling" concede that
higher-skilled immigrants are doing well, but then argue that
these better educated immigrants are not doing as well as they should.
It is not clear what normative expectations inform that
"should": is it reasonable to anticipate that the
foreign-born -- as opposed to their children -- will ever
catch-up with comparably schooled natives? Perhaps not, but it
would probably be better if the gap would get smaller rather than
larger. Given immigrations contribution to greater
diversity, it is not clear that affirmative action policies would
be beneficial -- especially since affirmative action now gives
foreign-born persons an entitlement that U.S.-born citizens with
a class, but no ethnic, disadvantage do not currently enjoy. A
better objective, rather, would be to ensure that majority groups
not be able to use ethnicity as a weapon against ethnic
minorities. Legal and political strictures against discrimination
are needed. At the very least, immigrants and their descendants
should be able to play the game on an equal footing. As I have
noted, some less-skilled immigrants are moving ahead through
business. There has been considerable interest in public efforts
to stimulate entrepreneurial development among ethnic minorities,
but, as I have argued elsewhere, governments do not appear to
have the resources or the foresight to pick winners and losers
from among competing small business. This is not to say that
governments should do nothing. Effective policies might be
developed along two lines: (1) build an infrastructure that
fosters small business development in general; and (2) enact and
enforce systemic policies of equal economic opportunity for
ethnic and racial minorities.
Back to index
Previous Section
Next Section
|