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Immigrants in Massachusetts

So, a lot of ink was spilled when the Census Bureau released data a couple years ago that showed Boston was losing population.

Subsequently, it was discovered that, in fact, population had increased.

Same thing happened on a state-level, if memory serves me correctly.

In fact, Massachusetts has gained population, over the past fifteen years.

However, as a lot of people point out, accurately, this is only because of “immigration” from foreign-born individuals. If you only count those people who were born and lived here, we’ve had a net loss in population.

Well, I always felt there was an underlying racism to this argument, since it always seems to come from the usual suspects (a lot of the time, commenters on the Boston Herald’s message boards, for example). (Also, because I’ve never heard anyone say, “Those lousy Canadians are taking all our jobs!”)

Turns out, the truth is a bit more interesting.

Here are the immigration patterns for the past thirty-plus years.

Foreign-Born Change: Top Ten Countries 1980-2000

Rank Country 1980 Country 1990 Country 2000

1 Canada 78,211 Portugal 70,814 Portugal 66,627

2 Portugal 75,077 Canada 52,438 Dominican Republic 46,744

3 Italy 55,461 Italy 38,288 Canada 40,247

4 U.K. 30,610 U.K. 26,807 China 39,255

5 Ireland 23,155 China 20,367 Brazil 36,669

6 Greece 17,801 Ireland 20,224 Haiti 33,862

7 Poland 16,923 Dominican Republic 19,514 Vietnam 30,457

8 Soviet Union 16,170 Haiti 18,804 Italy 28,319

9 Germany 15,158 Soviet Union 15,350 India 28,086

10 China 9,868 Germany 14,229 U.K. 25,403

All Others 162,548 All Others 276,898 All Others 397,314

Total 500,982 Total 573,733 Total 772,983

Okay, first thoughts … what’s up with Portugal???

Second thoughts - wow, there’s a lot of Dominicans coming to Massachusetts.

Third thoughts - if you add up the #’s from the top ten, the number of people coming from Western Europe still outweigh the number of people coming from “non-Western European” countries.

It’s amazing to see the number of Vietnamese, Haitian, and Brazilian people, especially considering that 30 years ago, none of them were in the top 10.

Here’s one organization’s projection of what Massachusetts’ population will look like, in the year 2050:

White, not Hispanic — Mexican — Other Hispanic — Black — Asian — Other
5,148,885 — 184,729 — 2,969,510 — 894,846 — 1,303,070 — 162,823

This is data from the fairus.org website. FAIR is an “immigration reform” organization, which I gather from their site to mean becoming more strict in immigration policies (they want to lower the # of legal immigrants to 300,000 per year, for example).

But that’s not important. What is important is, wow, there’s a lot of different people in Massachusetts. And they come from places you might not expect or assume.


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2 Responses to “Immigrants in Massachusetts” »»

  1. Comment by Anon | 06/29/08 at 6:22 pm

    One big feeder for immigration here in Boston of course is college students. I suspect that a fair number of foreign students end up staying in the Boston area after graduating from college.

    The reason that a lot of folks are coming to Massachusetts from Portugal is because there are already a lot of Portuguese here already. Immigrants tend to go where their family and friends already are.

    Also, many Brazilians that are in the Boston area are actually second and third generation Europeans (typically Italians).

  2. Comment by Michael Oliver | 06/29/08 at 7:03 pm

    Hi John,
    Were seeing the same thing here immigration is a huge boost to the Tucson AZ ecomomy and real estate markets. We see a lot of people originally from Mexico, Asia, and India. I think that by these groups of people deciding to settle in the Tucson area its a great thing but as always there is a disagreement as to is this a “good” or “bad” thing to occur.

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