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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Mexican emigration drops sharply

U.S. economy, tighter borders are probable deterrents

A Border Patrol vehicle speeds along the border fence with concertina wire topping at sunset  in San Diego on Monday.  Critics say the prison-style fence is an eyesore. (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
By ALEXANDRA OLSON Associated Press

MEXICO CITY – Mexican emigration has dropped 42 percent over the last two years, a government study released Thursday showed, confirming that America has become less appealing amid an economic downturn and stepped-up raids against illegal migrants.

About eight of every 1,000 Mexicans emigrated between February and May of this year, according to the survey conducted by the National Statistics and Geography Institute. That’s a 42 percent drop from the same period in 2006.

In all of 2007, an estimated 814,000 Mexicans emigrated, compared to 1.2 million in 2006. The figure – which was reached through household surveys – includes all Mexicans who left the country and did not break down legal and illegal migration.

A summary of the investigation did not delve into the reasons for the drop. But experts say America’s economic troubles and tighter border security have deterred many Mexicans from risking the journey to the United States, a trip that often means long desert treks, dodging bandits and bribing corrupt police.

The vast majority of Mexican migrants go to the United States.

The study did not offer statistics past May 2008. But experts expect the trend to continue amid the financial crisis that rattled markets worldwide in September.

“There is no longer an American dream, at least for the moment with the economic situation,” said Victor Clark, the director of the Tijuana-based Binational Center for Human Rights, which works with illegal migrants. “News of mass raids snowball through towns that send a lot of migrants. In small northern towns, the news is that there is no work for Mexicans in the United States.”

There have long been indications that Mexican emigration has been falling dramatically. The U.S. Border Patrol has reported a 39 percent drop since 2005 in the capture of migrants trying to cross the frontier illegally.

And Mexicans are sending less money home, hurting Mexico’s second-largest source of foreign income behind oil exports. Remittances fell 12 percent to $1.9 billion in August, the biggest drop since record-keeping began 12 years ago, according to Mexico’s central bank.

Emigration rates will likely recover with the U.S. economy, said Rodolfo Rubio, an investigator with the School of the Northern Frontier, a Mexican think tank.

“It has its fluctuations,” he said. “When migrants start getting news that it’s possible to find jobs … they will certainly start going again to the United States.”

While the sluggish U.S. economy is the main driving force, raids on companies that employ illegal migrants have also contributed to the emigration drop, Rubio said. His institute has found that more than half of deportees in the border city of Ciudad Juarez were caught in raids.

The government statistics are part of the broader 2006-2008 National Survey of Occupation and Employment, which studied 120,000 households.

The study found no significant change in the number of Mexicans coming home. But the drop in emigration was so large that by the end of 2007, more Mexicans were returning home than leaving the country, the study said.