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Asian people are poised to surpass Hispanic people as the largest immigrant group by 2065, a Pew study finds. Photograph: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
Asian people are poised to surpass Hispanic people as the largest immigrant group by 2065, a Pew study finds. Photograph: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

Asians to surpass Hispanics as largest group of US immigrants by 2065: study

This article is more than 8 years old

Foreign-born residents poised to make up record 18% of 441 million US residents in 50 years’ time, Pew report finds

In a major shift in immigration patterns, Asians will surge past Hispanics to become the largest group of immigrants heading to the US by 2065, according to estimates in a new study.

An increase in Asian and Hispanic immigration also will drive US population growth, with foreign-born residents expected to make up 18% of the country’s projected 441 million people in 50 years, the Pew Research Center said in a report being released on Monday.

This will be a record, higher than the nearly 15% during the late 19th century and early 20th century wave of immigration from Europe.

Today, immigrants make up 14% of the population, an increase from 5% in 1965.

The tipping point is expected to come in 2055, when Asians will become the largest immigrant group at 36%, compared with Hispanics at 34%. White immigrants to America, 80% back in 1965, will hover somewhere between 18% and 20% with black immigrants in the 8%-9% range, the study said.

Currently, 47% of immigrants living in the US are Hispanic, but by 2065 that number will have dropped to 31%. Asians currently make up 26% of the immigrant population but in 50 years that percentage is expected to increase to 38%.

Pew researchers analyzed a combination of Census Bureau information and its own data to develop its projections. Part of the reason for the shift is that the fertility rate of women in Latin America and especially Mexico has decreased, said Mark Hugo Lopez, Pew’s director of Hispanic research.

In Mexico, Lopez said, women are now having around two children, when back in the 1960s and 1970s, they were having about seven children per woman.

“There are relatively fewer people who would choose to migrate from Mexico, so demographic changes in Mexico have led to a somewhat smaller pool of potential migrants,” he said.

“At the same time we’ve seen a growing number of immigrants, particularly from China or India, who are coming for reasons such as pursuing a college degree or coming here to work temporarily in the high-tech sector.”

Despite the increase in Asian immigrants, Hispanics will still make up a larger number inside the United States, Lopez said.

“Hispanic population growth is coming from people born here in the United States,” he said. “It is really US births that are now the driver of Hispanic population growth, and that’s a recent change from what we saw in the 80s and 90s.”

By 2065, no racial or ethnic group will hold a majority in the US, with whites holding 46% of the population, Hispanics at 24%, Asians at 14% and blacks at 13%. Currently, the country is 62% white, 18% Hispanic, 12% black and 6% Asian.

Pew also asked Americans surveyed for one word to describe immigrants in the US today. Twelve per cent said “illegal”; “overpopulation” was at 5%; “legality (other than illegal)” at 4%; and “jobs”, “deportation”, “Americans” and “work ethic” at 3% each.

Forty-nine percent offered general descriptions, and of those 12% were positive, 11% negative and 26% neutral, according to the report.

Americans also said immigrants are likely to make the US better, with 45% agreeing with that statement and 37% saying they make the country worse; 18% said they don’t have much of an effect one way or the other.

The survey was conducted online from 10 March to 6 April 2015. The survey’s margin of sampling error is plus or minus 2.4 percentage points.

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