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Immigrants and Boomers

Forging a New Social Contract for the Future of America
Author
Dowell Myers
Paperback
$27.95
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Publication Date
6 in. × 9 in. 380 pages
ISBN
978-0-87154-624-1
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About This Book

Winner of the 2007 Thomas and Znaniecki Award from the International Migration Section of the American Sociological Association

“This story of hope for both immigrants and native-born Americans is a well-researched, insightful, and illuminating study that provides compelling evidence to support a policy of homegrown human investment as a new priority. A timely, valuable addition to demographic and immigration studies. Highly recommended.”
-Choice 

"Dowell Myers has described a future full of hope-if as a nation we are able to understand the power of immigration, to reach understandings about our mutual societal responsibilities, and to unleash the full capabilities of immigrants who want to contribute to American society. It is an approach that is hopeful but is also entirely possible and indeed may be the only way that our nation can assure that its present prosperity and progress continue into the future."
-HENRY CISNEROS, executive chairman, CityView

"Always an incisive analyst of contemporary immigration, Dowell Myers moves the debate forward in this rigorous volume by highlighting the interconnected fates of the aging baby boomers and upwardly striving immigrants. His clear-eyed reading of the California experience shows how forging a new social contract between these groups can help us move from a politics of conflict over immigration to a politics of mutual advantage."
-JOHN MOLLENKOPF, Distinguished Professor of Political Science and director, Center for Urban Research, City University of New York Graduate Center

"In this immensely readable book, Dowell Myers probes the soft center of American politics and finds the solidity needed to erect a new social contract to bridge the divide between the largely white baby boom generation and the increasingly diverse group of younger Americans. With deft analysis and reasoning, he exposes the short-sightedness of current fears about immigration and the American future. Immigrants and Boomers is a book that will inform citizen and scholar alike about ways to move beyond contemporary impasses."
-RICHARD ALBA, Distinguished Professor, The State University of New York, Albany

"Immigrants and Boomers is a tour de force. Dowell Myers displays creative analytical acumen to delineate the mutual self-interests between aging, mostly white baby boom cohorts and highly diverse 'replacement' cohorts that are currently in school and entering the workforce. Comparing California's demographic and economic narratives since 1970 with those of the United States, Myers convincingly demonstrates how various facets of interdependencies between generations-schooling, work, child, and elderly care-warrant a renewed social contract that will serve the interests of both old and young, now and in the future. This is superb social policy analysis; heeding Dowell's recommendations is in the national interest."
-MARTA TIENDA, Maurice P. During Professor in Demographic Studies and professor of sociology and public affairs, Woodrow Wilson School, Princeton University

Virtually unnoticed in the contentious national debate over immigration is the significant demographic change about to occur as the first wave of the Baby Boom generation retires, slowly draining the workforce and straining the federal budget to the breaking point.  In this forward-looking new book, noted demographer Dowell Myers proposes a new way of thinking about the influx of immigrants and the impending retirement of the Baby Boomers. Myers argues that each of these two powerful demographic shifts may hold the keys to resolving the problems presented by the other.

Immigrants and Boomers looks to California as a bellwether state—where whites are no longer a majority of the population and represent just a third of residents under age twenty—to afford us a glimpse into the future impact of immigration on the rest of the nation. Myers opens with an examination of the roots of voter resistance to providing social services for immigrants. Drawing on detailed census data, Myers demonstrates that long-established immigrants have been far more successful than the public believes. Among the Latinos who make up the bulk of California’s immigrant population, those who have lived in California for over a decade show high levels of social mobility and use of English, and 50 percent of Latino immigrants become homeowners after twenty years. The impressive progress made by immigrant families suggests they have the potential to pick up the slack from aging boomers over the next two decades. The mass retirement of the boomers will leave critical shortages in the educated workforce, while shrinking ranks of middle-class tax payers and driving up entitlement expenditures. In addition, as retirees sell off their housing assets, the prospect of a generational collapse in housing prices looms. Myers suggests that it is in the boomers’ best interest to invest in the education and integration of immigrants and their children today in order to bolster the ranks of workers, taxpayers, and homeowners America they will depend on ten and twenty years from now.

In this compelling, optimistic book, Myers calls for a new social contract between the older and younger generations, based on their mutual interests and the moral responsibility of each generation to provide for children and the elderly. Combining a rich scholarly perspective with keen insight into contemporary political dilemmas, Immigrants and Boomers creates a new framework for understanding the demographic challenges facing America and forging a national consensus to address them.

DOWELL MYERS is professor of urban planning and demography at the University of Southern California.

 

 

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