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brooklynite

(94,490 posts)
Thu Sep 5, 2013, 04:36 PM Sep 2013

Census Bureau Reports 21 Percent of Married-Couple Households Have at Least One Foreign-Born Spouse

Source: US Census Bureau

The U.S. Census Bureau reported today that 11.4 million married-couple households, or 21 percent of all married-couple households in America in 2011, had at least one spouse born in another country. About 13 percent (7.3 million) of households had two foreign-born spouses, and 7 percent (4.1 million) had one native-born and one foreign-born spouse.

These statistics come from Married-Couple Households by Nativity Status: 2011, a brief that analyzes data from the Census Bureau's American Community Survey.

"The number of mixed-nativity married-couple households corresponds with the increase in immigration to the United States over the last several decades," said Elizabeth Grieco, chief of the Census Bureau's Foreign-Born Population Branch. "As the immigrant population has grown, so has the chance that a native-born person will meet and marry a foreign-born spouse."

There were approximately 56 million married-couple households in the United States in 2011.

Of the households where husband and wife were both foreign-born residents, about 61 percent included at least one naturalized citizen spouse, including 41 percent where both were naturalized U.S. citizens and 20 percent where only one spouse was naturalized.

Other highlights from the brief:

•Among the mixed-nativity married-couple households — households with one native-born and one foreign-born spouse — the foreign-born spouse was more likely to be the wife (55 percent) than the husband (45 percent).
•Foreign-born spouses in mixed-nativity married-couple households were more likely to be naturalized U.S. citizens (61 percent) than noncitizens (39 percent).
•Foreign-born spouses in mixed-nativity married-couple households were most likely to have been born in Latin America and the Caribbean (40 percent), followed by Europe (26 percent) and Asia (23 percent).
•Foreign-born husbands in mixed-nativity married-couple households were more likely than foreign-born wives to have been born in Latin America and the Caribbean. In contrast, foreign-born wives were more likely than foreign-born husbands to have been born in Asia.
•Among all states, Hawaii (16 percent) had the highest percentage of married-couple households that were of mixed nativity, while Mississippi, South Dakota and West Virginia (2 percent in each state) had the lowest percentages.
This nativity status brief, based on data collected from the American Community Survey, focuses on married-couple households, defined as households including a householder with a spouse present. Households consisting of a married householder with an absent spouse or an unmarried householder with an unmarried partner present were not included in this analysis. In addition, married couples in which neither spouse is a householder were not included.

The American Community Survey is an ongoing statistical survey sent to about 3 million households across the country each year. The survey provides a wide range of important statistics about people and housing for every community across the nation. The results are used by everyone from town and city planners to retailers and homebuilders. The survey is the only source of local statistics for most of the 40 topics it covers, such as education, occupation, language, ancestry and housing costs for even the smallest communities. Ever since Thomas Jefferson directed the first census in 1790, the census has collected detailed characteristics about our nation's people. Questions about jobs and the economy were added 20 years later under James Madison, who said such information would allow Congress to "adapt the public measures to the particular circumstances of the community," and over the decades allow America "an opportunity of marking the progress of the society."



Read more: http://www.census.gov/newsroom/releases/archives/foreignborn_population/cb13-157.html

5 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Census Bureau Reports 21 Percent of Married-Couple Households Have at Least One Foreign-Born Spouse (Original Post) brooklynite Sep 2013 OP
I saw this working in Florida Public Schools HockeyMom Sep 2013 #1
Of that 21%, 13.5 percentage points were BOTH foreign born. happyslug Sep 2013 #2
Cool...but wait, hockey moms even exist in FLORIDA? alp227 Sep 2013 #4
My first marriage was to a Canadian. kentauros Sep 2013 #3
That would be me gopiscrap Sep 2013 #5
 

HockeyMom

(14,337 posts)
1. I saw this working in Florida Public Schools
Thu Sep 5, 2013, 04:43 PM
Sep 2013

One spouse would be American born and have family going back generations in this country. The other spouse, usually the husband, would be an immigrant. In Florida this was usually from Mexico or the Caribbean. Their children were ALL born here in the US. Anchor babies? I think NOT.

 

happyslug

(14,779 posts)
2. Of that 21%, 13.5 percentage points were BOTH foreign born.
Thu Sep 5, 2013, 05:08 PM
Sep 2013

Just 7 percentage points had one US Citizen and one Foreign Born spouse. Sounds more like someone migrants to the US, then brings his or her spouse with him or her.

http://www.census.gov/prod/2013pubs/acsbr11-16.pdf

Married-Couple Households by Nativity Status: 2011
(Numbers in thousands. For information on confidentiality protection, sampling error,nonsampling error, and definitions, see www.census.gov/acs/www/)

Nativity status of the married couple..................Number..............Margin of....Percentage
.......................................................................................................error 1

Total . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .............55,520,000........157..............100
Both native . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44,120.000.........141......... .....79
Mixed nativity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... .4,091.000..........38................. 7.4
Native householder/foreign-born spouse . . . . ...... 2,553.000..........29................ 4.6
Foreign-born householder/native spouse . . . ........1,538.000.......... 20.................2.8
Both foreign born . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...7,309.000...........41...............13.2

alp227

(32,015 posts)
4. Cool...but wait, hockey moms even exist in FLORIDA?
Thu Sep 5, 2013, 07:38 PM
Sep 2013

Oh well. Tampa and Miami do have NHL teams.

And meanwhile in certain other more bigoted forums: "HERP DERP WHITE COUNTRIES ANTI RACIST CODE WORD FOR ANTI WHITE...INTERRACIAL MARRIAGE WHITE GENOCIDE IN AMERICA DERRRRRRRP" (seriously that kind of crap even makes it in the supposedly more sane sites).

gopiscrap

(23,736 posts)
5. That would be me
Thu Sep 5, 2013, 09:29 PM
Sep 2013

I was born in Germany and my wife in Kennewick, Washington. It was an issue when we went to teach in Hong Kong

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