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  1. #1
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    Study: Hispanic Influx Created Jobs, Depressed Wages

    http://abclocal.go.com/wtvd/story?secti ... id=3778270

    ASSOCIATED PRESS


    (01/03/06 -- RESEARCH TRIANGLE PARK) - A study designed to gauge the economic impact of the Latino population in North Carolina suggests Hispanic immigration created work but caused a drain on wages.

    The study says low-wage Hispanic workers depressed wages in North Carolina by nearly $2 billion in 2004. However, the study also says their presence also created nearly 90,000 jobs for others.

    It's billed as the first investigation of Latino economic impact in a state with one of the country's fastest-growing populations.

    The study by members of the Frank Hawkins Kenan Institute of Private Enterprise says Hispanic residents filled about a third of the new jobs created in North Carolina in the last decade and make up about 30 percent of the jobs in the construction industry.

    It's also estimated that there are about 601,000 Hispanics living in the state, with about 45 percent lacking legal status in the United States.
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  2. #2
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    The Kenan Institute is part of UNC Flagler School of Business. Below's the press release.

    Press Release
    January 3, 2006

    North Carolina's Hispanic immigrants contribute more than $9 billion to the economy, cost state budget a net $102 per Hispanic resident, a new study shows

    Raleigh, N.C. -- North Carolina's rapidly growing Hispanic population contributes more than $9 billion to the state's economy through its purchases, taxes and labor, while costing the state budget a net $102 per Hispanic resident in health care, education and correctional services, according to a new study by researchers at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

    If recent migration trends continue, the total economic impact of Hispanic spending in the state could increase to $18 billion by 2009.

    These were among the key findings and conclusions of the first major comprehensive study of the state's Hispanic population and its economic impact conducted by the Frank Hawkins Kenan Institute of Private Enterprise at UNC-Chapel Hill for the North Carolina Bankers Association (NCBA), in cooperation with the Mexican Consulate of Raleigh, N.C. The study assessed the economic impact of the state's growing Hispanic population and identified potential business opportunities provided by this fast-growing market.

    "This study quantifies for the first time the enormous economic contributions made by our state's Hispanic population, as well as pointing to a wide range of public policy issues and business opportunities to be explored," said NCBA President and CEO Thad Woodard. "North Carolina policymakers and business leaders now have a wealth of data and information on which to make decisions about both challenges and opportunities offered by this increasingly significant segment of our state's population and economy.

    Results of the study were released Jan. 3 at the 2006 Economic Forecast Forum sponsored by NCBA and North Carolina Citizens for Business and Industry.

    "Immigrants from Latin America, authorized and unauthorized, are dramatically changing North Carolina's demographic and economic landscape," reported study authors John D. Kasarda, director of the Kenan Institute, and James H. Johnson Jr., director of the institute's Urban Investment Strategies Center. Both are professors at UNC's Kenan-Flagler Business School. "Hispanics live in every one of the state's 100 counties and contribute to all sectors of the economy."

    Among the study's findings:

    North Carolina's Hispanic population totaled 600,913, or 7 percent of the state's total population, in 2004. The average Hispanic household contains 3.7 people (compared to 2.4 people in the average non-Hispanic household) and earns about $32,000 annually (compared to $45,700 for non-Hispanics).

    Hispanics accounted for 27.5 percent of the state's population growth from 1990 to 2004 and 57 percent of the total enrollment growth in North Carolina Public Schools between school years 2000-2001 and 2004-2005.

    Hispanics filled one in three new jobs created in North Carolina between 1995 and 2005, with significant concentrations in the construction industry (29 percent of the labor force).

    North Carolina Hispanics' after-tax income totaled an estimated $8.3 billion in 2004. With about 20 percent of that total sent home to Latin America, saved or used for interest payments, the remaining spending had a total economic impact of $9.2 billion on the state. Much of that spending occurs in the major metropolitan areas along the Interstate 40/Interstate 85 corridor, but it also supports businesses in every part of the state.

    Hispanics annually contribute about $756 million in taxes (direct and indirect) while costing the state budget about $817 million annually for K-12 education ($467 million), health care ($299 million) and corrections ($51 million) â€â€
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