The US Census Bureau is adding refugees to its immigrant count
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[December 17, 2024]
By MIKE SCHNEIDER
The U.S. Census Bureau is changing how it counts immigrants in annual
estimates by including more people who were admitted for humanitarian,
and often temporary, reasons.
The change is being made in an effort to better reflect population
shifts this decade, officials said Monday. Population estimates,
including immigration, are due to be released Thursday showing how the
populations of the United States and the 50 states changed this year.
However, the new approach to counting immigrants will only be reflected
nationally.
The percentage of U.S. residents who were foreign born rose to its
highest level in more than a century in 2023. It could be even higher
under the new methodology. Census Bureau officials wouldn't say Monday
how much larger they expected the immigration figures to be in
Thursday's release because of the change.
Capturing the number of new immigrants is the most difficult part of the
annual U.S. population estimates. Although the newly announced change in
methodology is unrelated, the timing comes a month before a return to
the White House of President-elect Donald Trump, who has promised mass
deportations of people in the United States illegally.
“We feel confident that this was a good approach in order to make our
estimates more current and reflect recent trends that we’ve seen,” said
Eric Jensen, a senior research scientist at the Census Bureau.
The bureau's annual calculation of how many migrants entered the United
States in the 2020s has been much lower than the numbers cited by other
federal agencies, such as the Congressional Budget Office. The Census
Bureau estimated 1.1 million immigrants entered the United States in
2023, while the Congressional Budget Office's estimate was 3.3 million
people.
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A pair of migrant families from Brazil pass through a gap in the
border wall to reach the United States after crossing from Mexico in
Yuma, Ariz., June 10, 2021, to seek asylum. (AP Photo/Eugene Garcia,
File)
The group of people being included in the international migration
estimates are those who enter the country through humanitarian
parole, which has been granted for seven decades by Republican and
Democratic presidential administrations to people unable to use
standard immigration routes because of time pressure or their
government’s poor relations with the U.S. The Migration Policy
Institute, a Washington-based research organization, said last week
that more than 5.8 million people were admitted under various
humanitarian policies from 2021 to 2024.
Trump appears certain to dismantle humanitarian parole, saying
during his campaign that he would end the “outrageous abuse of
parole.” The annual population estimates released by the Census
Bureau each year are calculated from births, deaths, migration to
the United States and migration between states. The population
estimates provide the official population counts each year between
the once-a-decade census for the United States, the 50 states,
counties and metro areas. The figures are used for distributing
trillions of dollars in federal funding.
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Elliot Spagat in San Diego contributed to this report.
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