Saturday, August 29, 2015

SKILLED IMMIGRANTS COMING FROM CHINA AND INDIA OVERTAKE LEGAL IMMIGRATION NUMBERS FROM MEXICO FOR THE FIRST TIME–IN 2013 147,000 IMMIGRATED FROM CHINA, 129,000 FROM INDIA AND ONLY 125,000 FROM MEXICO, WHERE 25% FROM CHINA AND INDIA ARE EDUCATED WITH BS DEGREES OR HIGHER VS ONLY 15% FROM MEXICO

Siddharth Jaganath wanted to return to India after earning his master's degree at Texas' Southern Methodist University. Instead, he built a new life in the U.S. over a decade, becoming a manager at a communications technology company and starting a family in the Dallas suburb of Plano.

"You start growing your roots and eventually end up staying here," the 37-year-old said.

His path is an increasingly common one: Immigrants from China and India, many with student or work visas, have overtaken Mexicans as the largest groups coming into the U.S., according to U.S. Census Bureau research released in May. The shift has been building for more than a decade and experts say it's bringing more highly skilled immigrants here. And some Republican presidential candidates have proposed a heavier focus on employment-based migration, which could accelerate traditionally slow changes to the country's ever-evolving face of immigration.

Mexicans still dominate the overall composition of immigrants in the U.S., accounting for more than a quarter of the foreign-born people. But of the 1.2 million newly arrived immigrants here legally and illegally counted in 2013 numbers, China led with 147,000, followed by India with 129,000 and Mexico with 125,000. It's a sharp contrast to the 2000, when there were 402,000 from Mexico and no more than 84,000 each from India and China. Experts say part of the reason for the decrease in Mexican immigrants is a dramatic plunge in illegal immigration.

http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_IMMIGRATION_SKILLED_WORKERS?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2015-08-29-10-41-43

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