[Research by Edwin S. Rubenstein]
February’s employment data released last Friday was rapturously received by the Regime Media (which now includes the born-again Leftist Drudge Report, see image above). Missing as usual: the immigration dimension. Immigrants took ALL the much-vaunted jobs increase. And American worker displacement is soaring.
The U.S. economy added 379,000 jobs in February according to the Payroll Survey, nearly double the consensus estimate of 200,000 [U.S. labor market roars back; full recovery still years away by Reuters, March 5 2021].
The “other” survey, of Households, shows a 208,000 total job gain for February. Helpfully—and for how much longer under the Biden Regime? —the Household Survey disaggregates immigrant (legal and illegal) and native-born American employment. In February, immigrants took it all.
Our analysis of the February Household Survey finds:
This means that the New VDARE American Worker Displacement Index (NVDAWDI), our name for the ratio of immigrant to native-born American employment growth indexes since Jan. 2009, rose to 116.5 from 114.6 in January, a 1.66% rise.
So the displacement of native-born American workers, after pausing in December and January, came back big-time last month.
The Leisure and Hospitality sector—a major employer of immigrants—gained 61,400 jobs after dropping by a nearly identical number in January. Restaurant activity, another immigrant-prone sector, also recovered smartly in February.
As new COVID cases decline and vaccination-related immunity rises, these sectors will push immigrant share of total employment still higher.
Another metric—the immigrant share of total employment—also shot upwards dramatically in February.
Our analysis shows 17.30% of all jobs were held by immigrants—well above January’s 17.05%, and the highest share since February 2020, the last pre-pandemic month, when immigrants held 17.53% of all jobs.
After some gyrations, the immigrant share of employment had been falling steadily before the pandemic started.
Each 1% rise in immigrant employment share represents a transfer of about 1.5 million jobs from native-born to immigrants.
The year-over-year rise in the foreign-born working-age population continued last month.
Note carefully what this chart shows. Unlike our other charts, which show absolute values, this one compares each month to the same month in the preceding year. So the immigrant workforce population grew by 417,000 in February 2021 compared to February 2020.
Of course, this bad news (for American workers and the GOP) were relatively good when juxtaposed to the 724,000 year-over-year growth recorded in January. (Record snow and cold in Texas may have contributed to the respite).
But although our chart ticks down, it means that the immigrant workforce population still grew in February 2021.
And this is in remarkable contrast to the 15-month net exodus of working-age immigrants beginning before Covid and coming to an abrupt end in December 2021. This shows up in our chart in red. It far exceeds the net exodus during the 2008 Great Recession or the brief net exodus during Trump’s first year, when his mere presence seems to have jawboned illegals into fleeing.
We’ve previously labelled this “The Trump Triumph.” It seems to have been achieved entirely by a relentless, extremely unTrumpian, Executive branch campaign of detailed regulatory change.
Of course, this is now being undone by the Biden Regime.
A more detailed picture of how American workers have fared vis-à-vis immigrants is published in Table A-7 of the monthly BLS Report:
Employment Status by Nativity, Feb.2020-Feb. 2021 |
|||||
(numbers in 1000s; not seasonally adjusted) |
|||||
|
Feb-20 |
Feb-21 |
Change |
% Change |
|
|
Foreign born, 16 years and older |
||||
Civilian population |
42,956 |
43,373 |
417 |
0.97% |
|
Civilian labor force |
28,719 |
27,946 |
-773 |
-2.69% |
|
Participation rate (%) |
66.9 |
64.4 |
-2.5pts. |
-3.74% |
|
Employed |
27,697 |
25,862 |
-1,835 |
-6.63% |
|
Employment/population (%) |
64.5 |
59.6 |
-4.9pts. |
-7.60% |
|
Unemployed |
1,022 |
2,084 |
1,062 |
103.91% |
|
Unemployment rate (%) |
3.6 |
7.5 |
3.9pts. |
108.33% |
|
Not in labor force |
14,237 |
15,428 |
1,191 |
8.37% |
|
|
Native born, 16 years and older |
||||
Civilian population |
216,673 |
217,545 |
872 |
0.40% |
|
Civilian labor force |
135,516 |
132,062 |
-3,454 |
-2.55% |
|
Participation rate (%) |
62.5 |
60.7 |
-1.8pts. |
-2.88% |
|
Employed |
130,320 |
123,660 |
-6,660 |
-5.11% |
|
Employment/population (%) |
60.1 |
56.8 |
-3.3pts. |
-5.49% |
|
Unemployed |
5,196 |
8,402 |
3,206 |
61.70% |
|
Unemployment rate (%) |
3.8 |
6.4 |
2.6pts. |
68.42% |
|
Not in labor force |
81,157 |
85,483 |
4,326 |
5.33% |
|
Source: BLS, The Employment Situation, February 2021. Table A-7, March 5, 2021. PDF |
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From February 2020 to February 2021:
As we go to pixel, the Border Patrol has not yet released its monthly estimate of border crossings, but leaks suggest it is surging [Number of Illegal Border Crossings Now 6 Times What Obama Team Considered “Crisis,” by Jay Carafano, Heritage, March 4, 2021].
This apparently is beginning to rattle the Biden Regime: White House says it must ‘work more’ to discourage illegal migrants coming to US, by Emily Jacobs, NY Post, March 8, 2021.
But why should it care? Its proposed immigration legislation will displace and immiserate the Historic American Nation far worse.
Peter Brimelow [Email him] is the editor of VDARE.com. His best-selling book, Alien Nation: Common Sense About America’s Immigration Disaster, is now available in Kindle format.