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By
Migration Information Source
- June 1, 2006
Population
About 11.8 million people live in the US-Mexico border area.
Approximately one-quarter of the population in the US counties bordering
Mexico live at or below the poverty line. This is over double the rate
of the national average (12 percent) of the US population living in
poverty. Furthermore, the unemployment rate in US counties on the
southern border is 5.6 percent compared to 4.7 percent in the rest of
the country. Mexican border states have an average poverty rate of 28
percent, significantly below the Mexican national average of 37 percent.
(Sources: Environmental Protection Agency; Pan-American Health
Organization/World Health Organization; Inter-American Development Bank;
CIA World Factbook)
The border area in the United States consists of 48 counties in four
states. Approximately 300,000 people live in 1,300 colonias
in Texas and New Mexico. Colonias are unincorporated, semirural
communities characterized by substandard housing and unsafe public
drinking water or wastewater systems. Communities on the Mexican side of
the border generally have less access to basic water and sanitation
services than border communities in the United States. (Sources:
Environmental Protection Agency; Pan-American Health Organization/World
Health Organization)
Two of the 10 fastest-growing metropolitan areas in the United
States, Laredo and McAllen, are located on the Texas-Mexico border.
Estimates indicate the population of many border cities will double in
30 years. The population along the Texas border region is increasing at
twice the rate of Texas as a whole. (Source: US Census Bureau)
Mexicans constitute 29.5 percent of all foreign born in the United
States, by far the largest group. The Philippines and India follow
with about four percent each. (Source: March 2005 Supplement, CPS)
The United States issued 906,622 nonimmigrant visas for Mexicans in
fiscal year (FY) 2005. In addition, 732,566 laser visas (which
replaced the old border crossing cards for those who live on the Mexican
side of the border but work in the United States) were issued in FY
2005, down from 1,990,402 in FY 2001. Note: The US government's fiscal
year runs from October 1 to September 30. (Source: US Department of
State Visa Statistics)
As of March 2006, the estimated unauthorized population in the United
States was 11.5 to 12 million, of which 4.5 to 6 million entered legally
with inspection and 6 to 7 million entered illegally without inspection.
Those who entered legally with inspection include nonimmigrant visa
overstayers (4 to 5.5 million) and border crossing card violators
(250,000 to 500,000), while those who entered illegally without
inspection evaded immigration inspectors and the Border Patrol. On
average, there are 700,000 to 850,000 new unauthorized migrants arriving
annually by all modes of entry. An estimated 6.2 million (or 56 percent)
of all unauthorized migrants are from Mexico. (Sources: Pew Hispanic
Center Estimates based on March 2005 Current Population Survey; DHS
reports)
Crossings
In FY 2004, 12,338 trucks crossed the border daily, up 63 percent
from FY 1994, the year the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
was enacted. Cross-border land trade with Mexico totaled just under
$225 billion in 2004, nearly double the $115 billion in cross-border
trade in 1998. (Sources: US Department of Transportation; the
Washington Post)
The volume of land inspections at the southern border decreased 21
percent between FY 2000 and FY 2004. Land inspections at the
southern border decreased from 324 million in FY 2000 to 255 million in
FY 2004. Land inspections made up 78 percent of all inspections (429
million) in FY 2004, and 76 percent of the 333 million total land
inspections were conducted at the southern border. These inspection
figures include individuals who make multiple entries, such as visitors
with nonimmigrant visas or border crossing cards. (Source: PAS G-22.1
Inspections, Office of Immigration Statistics, DHS)
In 2004, there was an average of 660,000 passenger crossings per day
across 35 points of entry (POEs) on the 1,952-mile border between the
United States and Mexico. Crossings by personal vehicles rose 43
percent between 1995 and 1999 and then fell 21 percent (to 191 million)
by 2004. Almost 20 percent of passenger crossings into the United States
from Mexico in 2004 were made on foot, while bus crossings only
constituted 1.4 percent (3.4 million) of crossings from Mexico. In 2004
there were over 20 million pedestrian crossings in Texas alone. (Source:
US Bureau of Transportation Statistics)
Border Enforcement
Of the approximately 11,000 Border Patrol agents, 89 percent work
along the US-Mexico border. In contrast, there are approximately 980
agents currently working along the 4,000-mile US-Canada border. In a
recent speech on immigration reform, President Bush pledged to add 6,000
more Border Patrol agents by the end of 2008. In the interim, 6,000
National Guard troops will be sent to the southern border to provide
support services to the Border Patrol, such as construction and
surveillance. (Source: Customs and Border Protection)
In FY 2004, there were 1,139,282 apprehensions of immigrants on the
southern border. Apprehensions reflect the number of arrests, not
individuals, as many migrants are caught several times. The level of
apprehensions has fallen from a high of 1,643,679 in FY 2000 but is
still greater than the 905,065 apprehensions in FY 2003. While
historically most apprehensions have taken place in California and
Texas, in FY 2004 the Tucson, Arizona, Border Patrol sector was
responsible for 43 percent (491,771) of apprehensions, while only 12
percent (138,608) took place in the San Diego sector and nine percent
(104,399) in the El Paso sector. As border enforcement has been
strengthened in urban areas along the border, unauthorized immigrants
have increasingly attempted to cross over the more remote and dangerous
desert areas along the Arizona border. (Source: USCIS Office of
Immigration Statistics)
For a map of Border Patrol sectors, see the
Spotlight on US Immigration Enforcement.
In FY 2005, there were a record-breaking 473 migrant deaths at the
border; over 260 were on the Arizona border. This number represents
a 43 percent increase over the 330 border deaths in FY 2004. The
previous high in recent years was 383 deaths in FY 2000. Officials
attributed the increased deaths to more than 30 straight days of
100-degree-plus temperatures in parts of Arizona and to better
recordkeeping by the agency, which now checks with coroners' offices to
include bodies located by other agencies. The Border Patrol also rescued
a record 2,570 migrants in FY 2005, nearly twice as many as the 1,347
rescues the previous year. (Source: US Customs and Border Protection
Public Affairs Office)
Currently, there are 74.8 miles of fence along the US-Mexico border,
mostly in California and Texas. A bill passed by the House of
Representatives in December 2005 calls for about 700 miles of new
fencing, while the proposal approved by the Senate in May 2006 calls for
about 370 miles of fencing. (Sources: Border Protection, Antiterrorism,
and Illegal Immigration Control Act of 2005, H.R. 4437, 109th Congress,
2nd session; Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act of 2006, S. 2611,
109th Congress, 2nd session)
The Secure Border Initiative (SBI) is a multiyear plan by the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to secure the nation's borders and
prevent unauthorized migration. SBI aims to increase staffing and
funding for the Border Patrol and Immigration and Customs Enforcement,
which is responsible for immigration enforcement in the country's
interior. The initiative also includes ending a practice called "catch
and release" in which immigrants apprehended for unauthorized migration
are released into the United States pending their immigration hearing;
upgrading border control technology and infrastructure; and
strengthening immigration enforcement at the workplace. (Sources: DHS;
the Washington Post; GovExec.com)
SBI will bring new technology and ideas to Border Patrol operations.
In its border control efforts, SBI employs electronic sensors, night
vision scopes, ground vehicles, aircraft, and unmanned aerial vehicles.
SBI replaces previous border security initiatives, including the
America's Shield Initiative (ASI). DHS is offering a contract, with an
estimated value of $2 billion, to private firms for the initiative's
border security component, called SBInet. SBInet will be an integrated
network of sensors and cameras along both of the nation's borders. The
request for proposals was issued in April 2006, and DHS plans to award a
contact in September. As part of this process, DHS is actively seeking
new ideas from the private sector on how to improve border control
operations. (Sources: DHS; the Washington Post, GovExec.com)
Since 2002, Mexico has launched several major initiatives, both
independently and bilaterally with the United States, to address
cross-border issues such as security, organized crime, drug trafficking,
and human smuggling. Mexico and the United States signed the 2002
US-Mexico Border Partnership and Action Plan (known as the Smart Border
Agreement), which harmonizes point-of-entry operations, combats alien
smuggling, and improves screening of third-country nationals. Mexico
independently launched Operation Centinela in 2003 to strengthen
detention operations of certain unauthorized immigrants and to improve
measures to target organized crime and human trafficking.
The United States and Mexico signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU)
in 2004 to assist both governments in managing migratory flows and
protecting the human rights of immigrants. In 2005, the two countries
launched Operation Against Smugglers (and Traffickers) Initiative on
Safety and Security (OASSIS), which expanded existing efforts against
violent human traffickers. The United States and Mexico also formalized
the Permanent Program against Human Smuggling aimed at prevention,
victim’s assistance, and information exchange. (Sources: Migration
Policy Institute; DHS; MIPT Terrorism Knowledge Base)
Economy
The United States is Mexico's largest trading partner, and Mexico is
the United States' second-largest trading partner. Trade between the
two countries reached $290 billion in 2005, averaging about $795 million
a day. US exports to Mexico in 2005 were $120 billion, and US imports
from Mexico were over $170 billion. Exports to Mexico have more than
doubled since the passage of NAFTA in 1994, when US exports to Mexico
were over $50 billion. (Source: US Census Bureau, "Foreign Trade
Statistics")
For more on US-Mexico trade and migration, see
MPI Fact Sheet #11
In 2005, Mexico imported more than US$101 billion in merchandise from
just 17 US states. Texas was the top state exporter to Mexico, with
export earnings of US$50 billion, followed by California, with exports
earnings of US$17 billion. (Source: US International Trade
Administration)
There are more than 2,700 maquiladoras in Mexican border
states. Maquiladoras (export-oriented factories) on the
border account for about 71 percent of all such factories in Mexico. The
maquiladora industry is a major source of Mexico's export
earnings. (Source: Environmental Protection Agency)
As part of the trilateral Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP),
launched in 2005, the United States, Mexico, and Canada are working to
enhance security while facilitating cross-border movement, trade, and
economic cooperation. The three countries plan to speed
border-crossing times for people and commerce by expanding the trusted
traveler and trusted trader programs and improving infrastructure at
ports of entry. They aim to implement a single, integrated trusted
traveler program by 2008. The members are working to develop common
regulations and standards on food safety and other products to
facilitate trade and eliminate duplicative testing and certification
processes.
The three participating countries have also formed a North American
Competitiveness Council (NACC) to provide recommendations on developing
competitive industries in the region. Their goal is to cooperate on
clean-energy technologies, energy conservation, and market facilitation
to build greater energy security and sustainable development in the
region. (Sources: Department of Homeland Security; the White House,
"Security and Prosperity Partnership of North America Prosperity
Agenda")
- ____________________________________________________
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