Size of U.S. Unauthorized Immigrant Workforce Stable After the Great Recession: Declines in eight states and increases in seven since 2009
In a new Pew Research Center study, Jeffrey S. Passel and D’Vera Cohn report that there were 8 million unauthorized immigrants in the U.S. working or looking for work in 2014, making up 5% of the civilian labor force, based on estimates using Census data. The number was unchanged and the share was down slightly since 2009, the year the Great Recession officially ended.
The stability in the unauthorized immigrants in the U.S. workforce echoes that for the unauthorized immigrant population overall. Both groups had grown rapidly during the 1990s and early 2000s. Compared with their sizes at the start of the recession in 2007, the unauthorized immigrant workforce was slightly smaller in 2014 and the overall unauthorized immigrant population was markedly smaller.
From 2009 to 2014, when the number of unauthorized immigrant workers was stable, eight U.S. states saw declines:
1. Alabama
2. California
3. Georgia
4. Illinois
5. Kansas
6. Nevada
7. South Carolina
8. Rhode Island
Seven U.S. states experienced increases in the number of unauthorized immigrants in their workforces:
1. Louisiana
2. Minnesota
3. New Jersey
4. Pennsylvania
5. Utah
6. Virginia
7. Washington
Most states that experienced change in their unauthorized immigrant workforces also experienced change in their total unauthorized immigrant populations.
Looking at 2014 estimates, states with the largest number of total unauthorized immigrants in their workforces also were among those states with the largest overall populations of unauthorized immigrants. They included California, with 1.7 million unauthorized immigrant workers; Texas, with 1.1 million; and New York, with 600,000. States where unauthorized immigrants accounted for the largest share of the workforce included Nevada (10.4%); California (9.0%) and Texas (8.5%). (See the chart here for the top states.)
KJ
