Tuesday, November 18, 2014

HISPANIC COMMUNITY CHANGES

Dominicans surpass Puerto Ricans as

city’s largest Latino group

About 747,473 Dominicans lived in the five boroughs in 2013, compared with 719,444 Puerto Ricans, according to Census data.

BY

Thursday, November 13, 2014,                          

                      The Dominican Day Parade is just getting bigger, according to Census data.Craig Ruttle/APThe Dominican Day Parade is just getting bigger, according to Census data.

 
Dominicans have shot past Puerto Ricans as the largest Latino group in the city, a new study found.
 
There were about 747,473 Dominicans in the five boroughs in 2013, compared with 719,444 Puerto Ricans, according to a Census data analysis by CUNY’s Center for Latin American, Caribbean & Latino Studies.

There has been a surge in immigration to New York from the Dominican Republic — with 55,436 immigrants between 2010 and 2013 — and Dominican women living here have high birthrates.

Meanwhile, the Puerto Rican population, historically the city’s largest Latino group, has been falling since the 1990s.
 

Mexicans To Be Majority of Latino New Yorkers By 2024, Study Predicts

By Diego Graglia, FI2W web editor

A taco truck in East Harlem, a traditionally Puerto Rican section which has become more Mexican in recent decades. (Photo: D. Graglia)
Despite the U.S. Latino population’s diversity and widespread presence, certain Hispanic groups have traditionally been associated with specific U.S cities – Mexicans in L.A. and Chicago, Cubans in Miami, Puerto Ricans in New York.
But New York’s Hispanic face is rapidly changing. By 2024, a new study says, New York’s largest Hispanic group will be Mexicans, with Dominicans in second place. The predicted shift is due to both the migration of Puerto Ricans to other states and other parts of the metro area, and the ongoing influx of people from other parts of Latin America and the Caribbean.
Based on data from the U.S. Census Bureau, “The Latino Population of New York City, 2007″ was authored by Laura Limonic, research associate at the Center for Latin American, Caribbean and Latino Studies at the City University of New York’s Graduate Center. [You can download it in pdf by clicking here.]
The city’s Latino population increased by 2.5 percent between 2006 and 2007, to over 2,337,000, the report said.
While several groups have become larger, the rates of growth for Mexicans and Ecuadorians are particularly striking: since 2000, the number of Mexicans increased by 57.7 percent — to over 289,000 — and Ecuadorians, by 38 percent, to over 201,000.
“At this pace and according to projections, in 2025 Mexicans will be the biggest Hispanic group in the city,” said the Center’s directorLaird Bergad in presenting the study, according to Hoy newspaper.
“Although the data cannot be exact,” Bergad added, “they do represent the trends felt day to day on the city’s streets.”
The study showed two interesting bits of information: for the first year since the 1980s the city’s Puerto Rican population in 2007 grew instead of declining, and also for the first year in over two decades, the number of Dominicans decreased.
Puerto Ricans, who are account for one of every three Latinos in the city, increased by 0.9 percent between 2006 and 2007. But the overall trend is downwards: since 2000 the city’s Puerto Rican population had dropped by 2.6 percent.
Dominicans, who have been arriving in strong numbers since the mid-’60s, went down by 1.3 percent between 2006 and 2007, but they showed an increase of 13 percent since 2000.
The report said “the sharp rise” in the Mexican-origin population between 2006 and 2007 (9.8 percent) was due to “continued migration to New York City.” Some 26,000 people were added to the local Mexican population and 44 percent of them were foreign-born.
 
 
Limonic explained the future evolution of the city’s Latino population this way,
If population growth continues at the yearly rates found between 2000 and 2007 Dominicans will surpass Puerto Ricans and become the largest sector of the City’s Latino population in 2020.
Mexicans will surpass Puerto Ricans to become the second largest Latino national group behind Dominicans in 2022, two years later; and in only another 2 years, by 2024, Mexicans will surpass Dominicans to become New York City’s most numerous Latino nationality, in less than two decades.
While census figures are the most reliable population count available, Latino community advocates usually point out that they are not always accurate when accounting for Latino immigrants because of the presence of undocumented newcomers among them.

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