U.S. Latinas having fewer babies: sign of assimilation?

You may have heard that the birthrate in the United States is on the decline. It's true. But if you listen to pundits who insist that Latino families, and particularly Mexican immigrants, keep churning out babies, now you can respond with some real statistics: Latinas are having smaller families too.

How the new economy affects young Latinos

Some things have been clear for a while. The Great Recession and its anemic recovery has severly hurt Americans in every corner of the nation, in every community. And, this is the perennial problem: as always, an economic downturn hurts racial and ethnic minorities more.

The New Latino South: Diminished Opportunity, Increasing Bigotry

The 2010 U.S. Census showed a striking demographic shift, one we've reported on this blog. Hispanics immigrants (legal and not), and second and third generation U.S. citizens of Latino heritage, seeking greater opportunity and lower costs of living than bigger cities like Los Angeles, filled small towns in the midwest and south in greater numbers than ever before.

"We've never had so many American-born working in the fields."

There was a time, not too long ago - and many Americans are operating under the impression it's still true - that there was an immigration escalator. That is; if you come to the U.S., work hard, play by the rules, you would find upward mobility, and your children would be better off than you.

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