WASHINGTON — Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, which led to the steepest drop in U.S. employment since the Great Depression, immigrants had higher employment and lower unemployment rates than their U.S.-born counterparts. These trends shifted, albeit in different ways at the state level, with immigrants—especially women—experiencing higher rates of unemployment than U.S.-born workers.
A new Migration Policy Institute (MPI) issue brief, Immigrant and Other U.S. Workers a Year into the Pandemic: A Focus on Top Immigrant States, examines unemployment trends from the last quarter of 2019 to the first one of 2021, focusing on the ten states with the largest immigrant populations: California, Texas, Florida, New York, New Jersey, Illinois, Massachusetts, Washington, Georgia and Virginia.
At the peak of the economic recession in the second quarter of 2020, immigrants experienced steeper drops in their employment level than U.S.-born workers, both at the national level and in nearly all top immigrant destination states. In the 10 states with the largest immigrant populations, foreign-born workers saw the biggest employment losses early in the public health crisis in Massachusetts. And five of the 10 states experiencing the greatest job loss among all workers are also states with the largest immigrant populations: California, Florida, New York, Illinois and Massachusetts. The differing state employment trends found by authors Julia Gelatt, Jeanne Batalova and Christopher Levesque have been shaped by a range of factors, including:
“In the face of the pandemic, state governments faced a stark choice: whether to restrict economic activity to slow the spread of infections and, in doing so, inflict economic pain on their businesses and residents, or to keep the economy open, despite the risks to the health of workers and consumers,” the authors write.
“As the pandemic abates, public health restrictions ease and the U.S. economy recovers, the number of job openings is rising and unemployment is falling — for immigrant and U.S.-born workers alike. Still, it remains to be seen how much the nature of work has shifted during the pandemic, due to factors such as changing consumer preferences and accelerated automation.”
The issue brief, including detailed state and industry data, can be found here: www.migrationpolicy.org/research/covid19-recession-us-immigrant-workers.
And for more of MPI’s work on the economic and other fallout of the COVID-19 crisis, visit: www.migrationpolicy.org/coronavirus.
You can also browse monthly unemployment data before and during the pandemic by nativity, gender, race/ethnicity and more with our interactive data tool, which is updated regularly: bit.ly/UnemployTool.
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The Migration Policy Institute (MPI) is an independent, non-partisan, non-profit think tank in Washington, DC dedicated to analysis of the movement of people worldwide. MPI provides analysis, development and evaluation of migration and refugee policies at local, national and international levels.