I guess we can agree to disagree.
I am pro-legal immigration, but not unrestricted. I think we should only allow a merit-based legal immigration.
Your chart doesn’t say to me that immigration is the problem so much but rather having a too generous welfare system. Immigration to this country should be a privilege, and not being a ward of the state.
We should strive, as a matter of policy, to recruit the hard working worthiness of immigrants as but one test of quality.
Unfortunately, the whole thing has been a woke-fest of diversity of surface features and non-Christian religions since Ted Kennedy got his immigration “reform” passed in the 60s.
It has nothing to do with being “pro-immigration.” It has to do with numbers and need. We don’t need 1.1 million legal permanent immigrants a year. We have a surplus of labor. Mass immigration depresses wages and takes American jobs.
I am all for having a merit based system. Right now we have a kinship system with only 12% coming thru merit. We are mainly bringing in low skilled immigrants who cost more in welfare benefits than they provide in taxes.
The average age of incoming immigrants is 31.
An analysis of the Census Bureau’s American Community Survey shows that immigrants (legal and illegal) are coming to the United States at significantly older ages than in the past. The average age and the share arriving at or near retirement increased significantly in the last two decades. These findings have implications for the often-made argument that immigration makes the country significantly younger. The findings also have implications for public coffers because prior research indicates that younger immigrants tend to have a more positive lifetime fiscal impact than older immigrants. The nation’s overall immigrant population is also aging rapidly.
Among the findings:
The average age of newly arrived legal and illegal immigrants has increased from 26 in 2000 to 31 in 2017. The newly arrived are those who have lived in the country for 1.5 years or less at the time of the survey.
Older age groups have seen the largest increases. The share of newly arrived immigrants who are 50 or over nearly doubled, from 8 percent to 15 percent; the share 55 and over more than doubled, from 5 percent to 12 percent; and the share 65 and older roughly tripled, from 2 percent to 6 percent.
On an annual basis, 276,000 immigrants 50 and older now settle in the country, including 213,000 immigrants 55 and older, and 113,000 who are 65 and older.
The rise in the age at arrival for immigrants is a broad phenomenon affecting immigrants from most of the primary sending regions and top sending countries.
Several factors likely explain the rising age of new arrivals, including significant population aging in all of the top immigrant-sending regions of the world, an increase in the number of green cards going to the parents of U.S. citizens, and a decline in new illegal immigration prior to 2017.
Aging of Overall Immigrant Population
Looking at all immigrants, the number of working-age (18-64) immigrants increased by 42 percent between 2000 and 2017, but the number over the age of 64 increased by 108 percent.
The average age of all immigrants increased from 39 years to 45 years between 2000 and 2017. This is more than twice as fast as the average age increase for the nation’s overall population.
Because the population of immigrants 65 and older has grown so fast, the share of all immigrants who are of retirement age now matches that of the native-born — 16 percent.
The increase in the age at which immigrants are arriving contributed to rapid aging in the overall immigrant population, though the primary reason immigrants are aging is simply the natural aging of immigrants already in the country.