Will Asian American immigration (like Hispanics did in the 2000s) peak/slow soon?
Immigration from Latin America has already reached its peak I think (since the 2000s, the proportion foreign born among Hispanic/Latino Americans has fallen). Return migration has also been a factor. So, Hispanics/Latinos are already following the trend of past immigrants from Europe, where the immigrant experience is slowly receding and the American-born generation is the newer face of the ethnicity.
Is the trend for Asians going to follow soon? Asian immigration is now the fastest growing source for the US. Do you foresee it continuing to be high for a decade or two, or more or is it close to peaking? Countries like Japan stopped sending large immigrant shares once it got wealthy in the 60s, 70s and 80s, and now many East Asian waves have peaked (eg. Vietnamese refugees after the Vietnam war wave was over, South Korea isn't sending as much as South Korea got rich). China still sends a lot, but there's the potential that it may slow down (either restrictions get tighter due to political issues, or richer Chinese people stay home) The Indian/South Asian wave of immigration has grown a lot in the 2000s too and might still continue to grow the US population for a while, unless something changes on either end (either more restrictive policies or if the sending country gets richer so fewer want to leave any more). |
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asian immigration will slow but continue to show gains. economic prosperity in their home countries will continue and asian birth rates just arent that high. this country will be mexico 2.0 in 100 years. which is fine by me.
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Birthrates are very high. Unfortunately, at a young age folks are having kids, from what I've observed. Some of these folks don't have a pot to piss on, yet they have 5 kids before age 26. :shrug: Lesson to be learned is that this isn't the middle ages, so a high amount of children are not required for a healthy life. Things like medicine and healthcare improvements have made childhood survival higher, so people need to stop having so many kids. 2 would be fine, so one can enjoy life and not be strangled in debt or live pay-check to pay-check. Also to not further strangle the social services, which hate to say it folks, we pay for! This is just some of the stuff I've observed. |
Birthrates are dropping in the US's fastest growing immigrant groups; Hispanics and east Asians. Even in their home countries. Mexico, Vietnam and China have ageing populations.
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So when U.S. restricts certain groups (or qualifications) they usually end up in Canada. That's why Persians were big in the U.S. in the 70's and then big in Canada immediately thereafter, following U.S. restrictions. |
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Asians are the biggest immigrant cohort right now, and given the fact there are billions of Asians, probably biggest cohort going forward. The future of the U.S., long-term, is probably more Asian than Hispanic. |
I simply don't see Asian immigration slowing down for a LOOOOOOONG time.
Even if the economy continues to improve in their home countries, they will come to Western countries. 1. There are just WAY too many people in India and China, unlike Mexico 2. There is still a massive wealth gap between Asia and the USA. As long as that exists and there is a chance for enterprising people to move here and advance themselves, they will keep coming. 3. America's legal framework is still better than what they have going on in India. Plus, despite the latest onslaught by nutty socialists, property rights are still fairly strong here. People in Asia probably find that appealing. |
Immigration from Asia will likely slow. I wonder if immigration from Africa picks up. Also likely that climate changes induce migration in the near future. It’s probable the US will get a sizable share of these groups.
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I suspect most future Asian immigration will be from India and the Philippines.
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they like the nw, who doesnt? the only thing is theres not much jobs here. they probably wont want to go to places where theres a big earthquake. i guess who knows
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I don't see immigration slowing down but rather a transfer in regions. Basically more Central America rather than Mexico and India rather than East Asia. Also there are some groups such as Bangladeshis, who like Africans are rather small in numbers but could grow a lot due to chain migration.
Economic prosperity does not necessarily lead to decline. In the case of India as people enter the middle class it becomes easier to immigrate. |
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I do think 2nd generation Chinese and Indian Americans could see a decline in birthrates in California but new immigrants will offset that decline. |
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A lot of articles from Neoliberal sources claim that Asian immigrants are going to Canada for tech jobs instead of the US due to a "xenophobic climate" but I am sort of skeptical of that. |
The other factor is automation which could favor Asian immigration. Jobs that are done by immigrants from Latin America are more likely to be automated.
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I doubt a typical U.S. Asian is exposed to more xenophobia than their Canadian equivalents. And I doubt most immigrants are doing rigorous analyses of immigration options; they're headed to family or jobs and probably couldn't say much about the differences between Topeka and Toronto, Hartford or Hamilton. They might know the U.S. has more guns, blacks, rich folks, loud folks, warm weather, and that's about it. |
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There's tons of crime, violence, poverty, corruption there. Not that the US doesn't have its problems but quality of life is way better overall. |
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At some point it will slow. But I believe that the Indian immigration wave will continue for a very long time.
If you go to any suburb in the New York or Philadelphia metro regions, you'll notice that Indians and South Asians are quickly dominating entire towns and regions, displacing formerly white neighborhoods. I've heard lots of contention due to this, as Indians and South Asians are culturally very different than most American born people. It's kind of a culture clash that I don't see resolving any time soon. This started mainly with Obama, as entire extended families came to the US together. I know more cases than I can count of multiple generations and sides of families, upwards of 10 people living in 3 bedroom apartments and homes. |
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