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U.S. CITIES:
As Latinos Go So Goes the United States
Mary Sanchez
Pundits have discussed the "browning" of America for a good two decades now. By that they mean the growth and geographic spread of the Latino population in the U.S.
But the unveiling of the latest U.S. Census figures marked a tipping point: Latinos are a demographic that cannot be ignored or taken for granted. Exceeding almost all prior estimates, the number of Hispanic Americans now tops 50 million people, comprising 16 percent of the population. By 2050, they will likely be one-third of the nation's population.
And that, mi amigo, portends opportunity. So enough talk of "browning." Let's rework the lingo. Hispanics are golden, as in golden opportunity. That is, if we seize rather than squander this moment as a country. Our destiny as a nation is tied up with Latinos' destiny as an ethnic group. All Americans have an interest in seeing them integrated into national life and prospering along with everybody else.
First, we need to get past the misconceptions and generalizations rattling around about Hispanics. The unprecedented 43 percent growth in the Latino population in the last decade did not come primarily from immigration. The largest factor in that increase was childbirths. "Compared with 2000, the Hispanic birth rate increased 14 percent, while both the U.S. population and black birth rates declined 2 percent," according to a
So let's move away from viewing Latinos merely as newcomers. Nearly three in four Hispanics are U.S. citizens, not interlopers "taking" something from America and "our way of life," as one hears too often from politicians and commentators who have something to gain from frightening listeners.
Latinos, even those several generations removed from their immigrant forbearers, maintain a strong work ethic. A new report out by the
Soak that in. Hispanics are the worker bees of the nation, and they will continue to be in the future. They're also highly entrepreneurial. Hispanic-owned companies grew by 43.7 percent from 2002 to 2007, compared to 14.5 percent among other groups. As a relatively young population, they will comprise a larger and larger proportion of the working population, especially as older Americans retire.
Things have changed a bit since the heyday of European immigration a century ago. More and more, to prosper, to enter the middle class, that Holy Grail of the American psyche, you need an education. A college education, ideally.
To thrive, Latinos -- like all Americans -- need to be educated and trained. Problem is, only 44 percent of Hispanic students finish high school. And even if they get to college, they have lower completion rates. A 2010 report by the
Yet, like a rerun of past episodes of anti-immigrant backlash, the current upheaval in the U.S. economy has only seemed to make some Americans more narrow-minded. Movement to undercut, not enhance Latinos' shift toward solidly middle-class status can be seen in efforts to make English the official language, which often eliminate bridge programs for people still gaining fluency. The same attitude can be seen in instances where aging baby boomers, their children already out of the nest, quash government efforts that aid low-income minority communities with higher proportions of school-age children.
That's a mood we need to defuse. As
Bravo.
We can fret about the future demographics of the country all we want, but the bottom line is inescapable. As the fortunes of Latinos go, so go the fortunes of the country.
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As Latinos Go So Goes the United States
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