Jeffrey S. Passel Pew Hispanic Center Washington, DC Unauthorized Immigration: Measurement, Methods, & Data Sources Unauthorized Immigration: Measurement,

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Presentation transcript:

Jeffrey S. Passel Pew Hispanic Center Washington, DC Unauthorized Immigration: Measurement, Methods, & Data Sources Unauthorized Immigration: Measurement, Methods, & Data Sources Immigration Data Users Seminar Migration Policy Institute & Population Reference Bureau Washington, DC16 October 2008

Unauthorized Immigration Methodology -- Description of Residual Method -- Who is Authorized/Unauthorized? -- Key Assumptions -- Microdata Status Assignments Data Sources -- Microdata -- Government Data Sources: Census, CPS, ACS (esp ) -- Other Surveys and Sources

Estimation Methods

Residual Estimates of Unauthorized Immigrants Unauthorized Population = Total Foreign-Born (Census) minus Legal Foreign-Born (Estimate)

Residual Estimates of Unauthorized Immigrants Widely Used: – OIS 05–07; Warren 80–00 – Passel (et al.) 80–08 – Binational Study 96 Unauthorized Population = Total Foreign-Born (Census) minus Legal Foreign-Born (Estimate)

Equations for Estimates of Unauthorized Immigrants Unauthorized=Total minus Legal ImmigrantsImmigrantsImmigrants Note: All populations are for post-1980 entrants.

Equations for Estimates of Unauthorized Immigrants Unauthorized=Total minus Legal ImmigrantsImmigrantsImmigrants Less Estimated Undercount Note: All populations are for post-1980 entrants.

Equations for Estimates of Unauthorized Immigrants Unauthorized=Total minus Legal ImmigrantsImmigrantsImmigrants Less Estimated Undercount Unauthorized=Counted minus Counted Legal CountedImmigrantsImmigrants Note: All populations are for post-1980 entrants.

Counted=Census minus Counted Legal Non-Immigrants ImmigrantsForeign-BornNon-Immigrants Unauthorized=Total minus Legal ImmigrantsImmigrantsImmigrants Less Estimated Undercount Unauthorized=Counted minus Counted Legal CountedImmigrantsImmigrants Equations for Estimates of Unauthorized Immigrants Note: All populations are for post-1980 entrants.

Residual Estimate Using March 2008 CPS Supplement Note: In millions

Residual Estimate Using March 2008 CPS Supplement Note: In millions

Residual Estimate Using March 2008 CPS Supplement Note: In millions

Residual Estimate Using March 2008 CPS -- Continued Note: In millions

Residual Estimate Using March 2008 CPS -- Continued Note: In millions

Residual Estimate Using March 2008 CPS -- Continued Note: In millions

Residual Estimates of Unauthorized Immigrants Total=Counted plus Missed UnauthorizedUnauthorizedUnauthorized ImmigrantsImmigrantsImmigrants Some Assumptions: a. Estimated Undercount % Undercount for Legal Immigrants – based on adjusted A.C.E. by age-sex-race times 1.75 for recent entrants % Undercount for Unauthorized Immigrants – 1.83 times specific rates for legals b. Internal Migration -- Census/CPS rates for F-B

Residual Estimate Using March 2008 CPS -- Continued Note: In millions

Residual Estimate Using March 2008 CPS -- Continued Note: In millions %

Residual Estimate Using March 2008 CPS -- Continued Note: In millions %

Components of Legal Immigrants: a.Refugee Arrivals (ORR, INS, State) b.Asylum Approvals (INS) c.Cuban-Haitian Entrants, Amerasians, Northern Iraq parolees (ORR) d.Other Entrants, Other Parolees (INS) e.IRCA Legalizations approved -- SAWs & LAWs (INS) f.INS New Arrivals, except Amerasians in d. g.Adjustments to LPR Status, except from statuses in a.-e. (INS) h.Pre-1980 Entrants (Census/CPS counts) Who Are the Legals?

Not Legal or Non-Immigrants Overstays (40–45%) & EWIs Quasi-Legals, including: a.TPS & DED (esp. El Salvador, Nicaragua) b.NCARA & ABC beneficiaries c.Asylum Applicants d.Adjustment Applicants (incl. K, V visas) e.245(i) Beneficiaries Overlapping Categories ~1 Million or so Probably ~1 Million or so Quasi...the Unauthorized?

Change in Residual Estimates March 2008 vs. March 2006 CPS Note: In millions CPS ±0.300 ±0.494 (1.6 s.e.)

±0.295 ±0.485 (1.6 s.e.) Change in Residual Estimates March 2008 vs. March 2006 CPS Note: In millions CPS ±0.300 ±0.494 (1.6 s.e.) 26.9 CPS

±0.295 ±0.485 (1.6 s.e.) Change in Residual Estimates March 2008 vs. March 2006 CPS Note: In millions CPS ±0.300 ±0.494 (1.6 s.e.) 26.9 CPS Diff = ±0.692 (1.6 s.e.)

Unauthorized Clearly at New High -- Trend Uncertain Millions of Unauthorized Immigrants Living in the U.S

11.9 Million in March 2008 (Analytic estimates) million -- 26% (625,000 per year) million -- 16% (390,000 per year) 1980s 1.6 million -- 13% million – 31% (725,000 per year) Recent Cohorts Are Smaller Large In- & Out-Flows million – 13% (500,000 per year)

Status Assignments, Geographic Data, Characteristics

Types of Data/Estimates Analytic Estimates -- Counted in Census/CPS -- Corrected for undercount -- Totals by Country/Region -- 6 States (CA,TX,NY,FL,NJ,IL) & Balance -- Some Demographic Information: Age & sex Period of Entry Status Assignments in Survey Totals May Differ

Status Assignments (I) Legal Temporary Immigrants -- Students, Diplomats, H1-B -- Intracompany, Outstanding -- Uses occupation, period of entry, relationship, other -- No targets; understated Refugees/Asylees -- Country of Birth -- Period of Entry -- Demographic targets

Status Assignments (II) Naturalized Citizens -- In US = 6 years, MexicoPotential illegal or natz. Cent. Am.Potential illegal or natz. OtherAccept as natz. -- No demographic targets Definite Legal Immigrants -- Naturalized from above -- Entered US before Definite legal occupation -- All others are Potential Illegals

Undocumented Immigrants -- Targets for 6 States & US balance: <18 Legal & Undoc 18–64 Undoc M & F For Mexico & Other(s)* State Total -- Random assignments by Occupation -- Initial ps from IRCA LPS -- Household edits for consistency -- Adjust ps and iterate til targets hit -- Targets are ~80% of potential -- Relatively insensitive to initial ps -- Adjust weights for undercount Status Assignments (III) Undocumented Immigrants -- Targets for 6 States & US balance: <18 Legal & Undoc 18–64 Undoc M & F For Mexico & Other(s)* State Total -- Random assignments by Occupation -- Initial ps from IRCA LPS

Legal Status Data Legal Immigrants as Remainder Dataset with Legal Status Variable Other Variables Created -- Nuclear Families (MHUs) -- Family Legal Status (hierarchy) -- Household Legal Status (hierarchy) Use of Data -- Geography (All States; Metro Areas) -- Detailed Country Data -- Families & Other Characteristics

Immigration Measurement Issues (I) Problematic Components -- Legal Nonimmigrants, including K & V Visas -- Refugees/Parolees (?) -- Backlogs -- Emigration Categorical Issues -- Definition of Resident, especially Mexicans & Nonimmigrants -- Gross Flows, including between categories

Immigration Measurement Issues (II) Data Issues -- Reliance on Census/CPS/Controls -- Lack of Direct Coverage Measure -- Emigration Measures -- Interpretation of Entry Date Government/Survey Issues -- Better Models (Census Bureau) -- Consistent Controls -- More Micro-Data (esp. OIS) -- Direct Collection of Legal Status

Data Sources

Data on U.S. Immigrants Current Population Survey (CPS) -- Monthly -- Supplements, especially March Census -- Public-Use (PUMS & IPUMS) 5% & 1% American Community Survey (ACS) (C2SS) & 2001– –2007 1% of U.S. Other Data -- Mexican Migration Project -- New Immigrant Survey (NIS); Pew Surveys -- OIS (INS) Data on Legals

Current Population Survey Universe: Civilian, Noninstitutional (-4M) Sample Size (State-based design) -- Monthly: 45,000 Households -- March 1994–2001: 50,000+ HHs -- March 2001–: 80,000 HHs Weighting Issues –1995: Many problems, special wts –2001: 90-based weights (caution) (SCHIP)–: 00-based weights (OK) -- Reweighted March 2000, monthly 2000–2002: Caution with March New Controls every year (!) – Vintage (?) Key Variables -- Birthplace; Citizenship; Year of Entry

New CPS Figures in 1990s -- Steady Upward Trend Evolution of Numbers

Through 1990sCPS Measurements Steady Growth of Mexican-Born Mexican-Born Population in millions

New CPS Figures in 1990s -- Steady Upward Trend Census 2000 Number Much Higher Evolution of Numbers

Better Coverage, Poor Estimates Census Come in Way Above CPS; Mexican-Born Population in millions

New CPS Figures in 1990s -- Steady Upward Trend Census 2000 Number Much Higher CPS Reweighted to Census Level -- Growth Continues Evolution of Numbers

Post-2000 Figures Track Better New, Redesigned CPS Shows Growth; Mexican-Born Population in millions

New CPS Figures in 1990s -- Steady Upward Trend Census 2000 Number Much Higher CPS Reweighted to Census Level -- Growth Continues Adjustment for Undercount Evolution of Numbers

Series and Improves Levels Adjustment for Undercount Aligns Mexican-Born Population in millions

Census 2000 Universe: U.S. Resident Population Sample Size (Random Representative) -- Full Sample: 1-in-6, 16 Million Households -- Public-Use 5%: 5+ Million HHs; 14M Persons -- Public-Use 1%: 1+ Million HHs; 2.8M Persons Weighting Issues -- No special issues -- Geography based on PUMAs -- States OK; some caution on Metro Areas Key Variables -- Birthplace; Citizenship; Year of Entry -- Caution on Born Abroad of American Parents

Census IPUMS ( Universe: U.S. Resident Population, 1800s-2000 Sample Size (Random Representative) -- Public-Use: Samples Vary by Census Weighting Issues -- No special issues -- Geography varies by Census -- States OK Key Variables -- Birthplace; Citizenship; Year of Entry -- Universal Variable Names & Codes -- Some special variables (Family links) -- Some loss of detail from full PUMS

ACS 2005– (Census Replacement) Universe: Household Population (expanded 2006) Sample Size (Random Representative) -- Full Sample: 250,000 HH/month; 3 Million/year Subsampling for nonresponse -- Public-Use 1%: 1.1 Million HHs; 2.9M Persons Weighting Issues merged monthly samples; 5 merged years -- Geography based on 2000 PUMAs -- States OK; some caution on Metro Areas Key Variables -- Birthplace; Citizenship; Year of Entry -- Measurement questions on rolling sample

ACS 2000–2004 Universe: Household Population Sample Size (Not Truly Random) -- Full Sample: 700,000 HH/year (nominal) Subsampling for nonsreponse ~500K HHs -- Public-Use: ~500K HHs (01-04); 130K (00) Weighting Issues merged monthly samples -- Geography only for States -- Representativeness at issue Key Variables -- Birthplace; Citizenship; Year of Entry -- Use caution for trends & comparisons (esp. 2000)

New CPS Figures in 1990s -- Steady Upward Trend Census 2000 Number Much Higher CPS Reweighted to Census Level -- Growth Continues Adjustment for Undercount New Data Source ACS -- Trend Data Generally Fits Evolution of Numbers

Offers New Source & Information American Community Survey Data Mexican-Born Population in millions

Websites -- ACS PUMS (SAS format; Pop & Housing separate) -- American Factfinder; DataFerrett (find w/ Google) -- Census PUMS (Not formatted); CPS? -- All CPS files (Supplements, monthly, reweighted) -- SAS, SPSS, Stata conversion programs -- All Censuses ( ), CPS, etc. -- Universal coding across years (some data loss) -- SAS & other extracts available -- Reports -- Datasets

Other Data Sources Mexican Migration Project -- Mexico-based samples (Representative?) -- Detailed Migration History New Immigrant Survey -- 1-year sample of Legal Admissions (8K?) -- Detailed Migration History -- Plans for Longitudinal Survey Other Surveys -- Pew Matricula Consular -- Other Specialized Surveys OIS (INS) Administrative Data -- Annual Green Cards ( ) -- Legals only; Limited socio-demographic data -- Naturalizations (1975-?) Mexican Sources

Other Methods/Data ACS/CPS Data on Year of Arrival -- CPS has only 2+ year intervals -- ACS has single years and larger sample -- Specialized study of year of arrival Mexican Data Sources -- Various Surveys & Census -- Departure Survey (ca. 2000) Apprehensions Data -- Events, not Flows -- Mostly not Immigrants but Labor Flows -- HIS has Unduplicated Data Indirect Indicator -- Total Mexican-Born Population -- Remittances (Augmented with Specialized Surveys?) -- Other Population/Labor Force Measures

For more information, contact: Jeffrey S. Passel, Ph.D. Pew Hispanic Center Pew Research Center Suite L St., NW Washington, D.C Jeffrey S. Passel, Ph.D. Pew Hispanic Center Pew Research Center Suite L St., NW Washington, D.C (202)