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October 09, 2007
Confirmation From Camarota: Immigration Moratorium Could Save Historic American Majority
The
Census Bureau recently
announced that the number of
non-white Americans has surpassed 100 million for
the first time. It estimated that on July 1, 2006,
minorities accounted for about one-third (33.6 percent)
of the U.S. population, while non-Hispanic whites made
up the remaining 66.4 percent.
As
recently as 1990, three quarters (76 percent) of
Americans called themselves
non-Hispanic white. In
1965, nine-tenths (88 percent) of the American
population was white.
When I
reported the 100 million milestone in May, I
estimated that 2038 would be the first year in which
present-day “minorities” would be in the
majority. As early as 2011, I found, most births will be
minority.
This
shift is essentially all caused by public
policy—specifically, the
Immigration Act of 1965 and the simultaneous
collapse of
law enforcement against illegal immigration. As a
result, the U.S. demographic balance has been completely
destabilized. The
U.S. federal government is literally doing what the
poet
Bertolt Brecht suggested only
satirically that the East German communist
government should do:
dissolving the people and electing new one.
My
method was crude—little more than an extrapolation of
2006
white and
minority population growth rates. I made no effort
to adjust for increased immigration or declining
fertility rates.
Yet
(ahem!) it turns out that my back-of-the-envelope
calculation is remarkably close to that of a new study
which makes all of these adjustments:
the CIS Backgrounder
100 Million More: Projecting the Impact of Immigration
On the U.S. Population, 2007 to 2060 by the
redoubtable
Steve Camarota.
Camarota’s major focus is immigration’s impact on
overall population growth and
age distribution. But, in a table discreetly placed
at the back of the report, he projects the
racial composition of the U.S. population at
different assumed rates of immigration. Applying these
figures to his population projections we can discern the
intimate link between immigration and minority
population growth.
[Table 1]
Camarota offers three projections.
 |
Net
immigration continues at the current rate of 1.25
million per year |
In this case, by the year 2060:
1.
Total population will increase by 167 million (+56
percent)
2.
The minority population will grow by 152 million (+149
percent)
3.
A majority of the U.S. population will be non-white (51
percent by 2050)
[Table 1.]
 |
Net
immigration at 2 million per year. |
Camarota thinks this is possible because the Census
historically underestimates immigration, especially
illegals.
In this case, by the year 2060:
1.
Total population will increase by 230 million (+77
percent)
2.
The minority population will grow by 204 million (+201
percent)
3.
Minorities will be 50.2 percent of the population by
2040 (and 57.6 percent by 2060).
My call that minorities would become the majority c.
2038 looks right on the money.
 |
Zero
net annual immigration, |
The minority share of the U.S. population will rise no
matter what, because immigration
has already pushed the minority population to
record levels, and because non-white mothers (immigrant
and
native born alike) have significantly more children
than their white counterparts. But a
moratorium would stabilize things.
In this case, by the year 2060
1.
Total population will increase by 62 million (+21
percent)
2.
The
minority population will grow by 64 million (+63
percent)
3.
By 2060, today’s minorities would still be in the
minority—46 percent of that year’s population.
A minority majority may never happen in America.
Birth rates are
notoriously unpredictable. And public policy could
shift, so that immigration reflects the
national origins of
current Americans.
Which was the conclusion that an
earlier generation of Americans reached when they
terminated the
last “Great Wave” of immigration in the
1920s.
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email
him) is President of
ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis. |