Friday, October 13, 2023

US Census Update: Pakistani-Americans' Average Annual Household Earnings Estimated at $150,000

The average annual household earnings of Pakistani-Americans are $149,178, according to the latest update issued by the United States Census Bureau for 2022. The update estimates the median income of 132,958 Pakistani-American households at $106,281. Average is calculated by adding up all incomes and dividing it by total number of households. Median income level divides the top 50% of families from the bottom 50%.  It shows that Pakistani-American household incomes are roughly at par with the Asian-American households' median of $104,646 and average of $149,363. The highest income ethnic group in the US are Asian Indian households with a median of $152,341 and average of $197,732.  Asians are significantly richer than Whites (mean $78,636, average $112,415) and African Americans (mean $52,238, average $76,888). The word "alone" in the labels in the following table excludes mixed race households. 

South Asian Americans Households. Source: US Census Update 2022



Asian Americans are the best educated racial group in the United States. From 2012 to 2022, the percentage of adults age 25 and older with a bachelor’s degree or more increased from 34.5% to 41.8% for the non-Hispanic White population; from 21.2% to 27.6% for the Black population; from 51% to 59.3% for the Asian population; and from 14.5% to 20.9% for the Hispanic population, according to the US Census

Educational Attainment By Racial Groups (Source: US Census)

Among Asian Americans, the Indians (three quarters) have the highest educational attainment with at least a bachelor's degree, followed by Koreans and Pakistanis (about 60%), followed by the rest.  

Asian American Educational Achievement by Countries of Origin. Source: US Census

Asians, including Chinese/Taiwanese, Indians and Pakistanis, tend to be concentrated in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Technology) fields where incomes are generally much higher than in other occupations. 

As of 2019, there were 35,000 Pakistan-born STEM workers in the United States, according to the American Immigration Council. They included information technologists, software developers, engineers and scientists. These figures do not include medical doctors and healthcare workers. 

Foreign-Born STEM Workers in America. Source: American Immigration Council


Foreign-born workers make up a growing share of America's STEM workforce. As of 2019, foreign-born workers made up almost a quarter of all STEM workers in the country. This is a significant increase from 2000, when just 16.4% of the country’s STEM workforce was foreign-born. Between 2000 and 2019, the overall number of STEM workers in the United States increased by 44.5 percent, from 7.5 million to more than 10.8 million, according to American Immigration Council

India and Pakistan Among Top 10 Countries Receiving US Immigrant Visas. Source: Visual Capitalist


India topped the top 10 list of foreign-born STEM workers with 721,000, followed by China (273,000), Mexico (119,000), Vietnam (100,000), Philippines (87,000), South Korea (64,000), Canada (56,000), Taiwan (53,000), Russia (45,000) and Pakistan (35,000).  Enormous number of Indian STEM workers in the United States can at least partly be attributed to the fact that India's "body shops" have mastered the art of gaming the US temporary work visa system. Last year, Indian nationals sponsored by "body shops" like Cognizant, Infosys and TCS received 166,384 H1B visas for work in the United States. By comparison, only 1,107 Pakistanis were granted H1B visas in Fiscal Year 2022.  In addition to H1B work visas, 9,300 Indian nationals and 7,200 Pakistani nationals received immigrant visas to settle in the United States as permanent residents in 2021. 

Doctor Brain Drain. Source: Statista

In addition to 35,000 Pakistan-born STEM workers, there were 12,454 Pakistan-born and Pakistan-trained medical doctors practicing in the United States, making the South Asian nation the second largest source of medical doctors in America.  Pakistan produced 157,102 STEM graduates last year, putting it among the world's top dozen or so countries. About 43,000 of these graduates are in information technology (IT).

H1B Visas Issued in Pakistan. Source: Visagrader.com



Every year, applicants sponsored by Indian body shops claim the lion's share of H1B visas. In 2022, Indians received 166,384 new H1B visas, accounting for nearly three quarters of all such visas issued by the US government. The figures reported as India IT exports are in fact the wages earned by millions of Indian H1B workers in the United States.  

Many developing countries are experiencing brain drain. But India is losing its best brightest at a much faster rate than others. Some call it "The Great Indian Brain Drain". This is the reason why Indians in the United States are the best educated and the highest earning group.  In a recently published book titled "The Other One Percent", authors Sanjoy Chakravorty, Devesh Kapur and Nirvikar Singh explain this phenomenon. 

They write that the vast majority of Indians who migrate to the United States are from privileged backgrounds in terms of caste, class and education. They have gone through “a triple selection” process that gave Indian-Americans a boost over typically poor and uneducated immigrants who come to the United States from other countries. The first two selections took place in India. As explained in the book: “The social system created a small pool of persons to receive higher education, who were urban, educated, and from high/dominant castes.” India’s examination system then selected individuals for specialized training in technical fields that also happened to be in demand in the United States. Kapur estimated that the India-American population is nine times more educated than individuals in the home country. Here's an excerpt of it:

"A major focus of this book is on demonstrating and understanding the multiple selections that shaped the Indian-American population. These selections applied not only to education (that, in terms of attaining college degrees, made the India-born population three times more educated than that in the host country and nine times more educated than the home country’s population) but also to class and caste (favoring, by large margins, the “upper” and dominant classes and castes of India), profession (engineering, IT, and health care), and both the region of origin (Gujarati and Punjabi were overrepresented in the first two phases, and Telugu and Tamil in the third phase) and region of settlement (in specific metropolitan clusters in and around New York City, the San Francisco Bay Area, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and Houston and Dallas). In addition to direct selection is what we call the “selection+” advantage: we suggest that group characteristics or norms, such as the fact that Indians had the highest propensity to live in married-couple households of any major immigrant group, added to the advantages of being an already selected group. We show, in particular, how family norms were useful in keeping the Indian-American poverty level low (under 5 percent) and family income high (the highest in the United States). It is also likely that the selection process enabled, without explicitly intending to, the generation of high levels of social capital (through linguistic/ professional networks such as Gujarati entrepreneurs in the hotel industry, Telugu and Tamil workers in the IT industry, IIT engineers, Malayali nurses, Bengali academics, etc.)"



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15 comments:

Mayraj F. said...

$150,000 is not much for a family depending on where one is.

Riaz Haq said...

Mayraj: "$150,000 is not much for a family depending on where one is"

Asians are significantly richer than Whites (mean $78,636, average $112,415) and African Americans (mean $52,238, average $76,888). The word "alone" in the labels in the following table excludes mixed race households.

I wonder how white and black American families survive because they make a lot less than Pakistani American families.

Ahmed said...

Dear Sir

Thanks for the reply , Sir I think the reason why African and White Americans survive in America is because every individual in their family including their wives and children work . So almost every one is independent in America . Also these Americans don’t have relatives back in their home land where they have to send money as remittance since America is their homeland .

The case for Indians and Pakistanis is I think different as the Pakistanis and Indians living in America have to send money as remittance to their parents and relatives back in Pakistan and India .

Also Sir is it true that foreign immigrants in America who belong to different countries have to pay more taxes to the American government as compared to African and White Americans ? Could this be possibly be the reason why white and African Americans are more happy and they even survive with less earning ?

Also Sir I think white and African Americans have less expenses as compared to Indians and Pakistanis . Am I right ?

Thanks

Krishna said...

Ahmed - no I think you are mistaken in all your assumptions
1) No, not all African/White American families work. Most are single income households, though dual income is increasing.
2) Indians and Pakistanis are actually more educated and earn more. Household wealth is signfiicantly more than white/african households given mentality of saving, inspite of remittances
3) No - everyone is taxed the same
4) No - actually White/African households spend more, because of America's credit card culture and have less than $400 in the bank. Asians as a whole save much , much more and spend less.

White/African households survive with debt and almost no savings. In addition, 150K is a very large sum for a person living in Idaho, but not very much for a person in San francisco. The cost of living changes dramatically with region

Ejaz Butt said...

Why are indian americans 43% richer than pakistani americans ? Why are there 10 times as many indian americans in the US than pakistani americans when there are only about 6 times as many indians (1.4 billion) as there are pakistanis (240 million). Something doesn't add up. Why are indians immigrating to the US at faster rates than pakistanis and why are they richer than us ?

Ahmed said...

Dear Sir Ejaz

You have asked some very good questions , well according to what I know and what I have learned from Sir Riaz is that more Indians apply for immigration of America as compared to Pakistanis and because Indians have much more population than Pakistan ,so statistically speaking their is more probability of Indians getting into America as compared to Pakistanis .

Even I have heard that the immigration process of Indians is tasters as compared to Pakistanis . Sir I think this is because Indians are not associated with terrorism and terrorist groups as according to western countries politics , India is a non- Muslim democratic country which has nothing to do with Islamic millitancy and terrorism . But unfortunately because Pakistan being a Muslim country is associated with terrorism , so this could probably and possibly be the reason why their is double check applied on Pakistanis applicants who apply for American immigration .

Unfortunately this might be happening in western countries specially in America and this happens when Muslims living in America mostly ignore the political system of America and don’t build up their lobbies .
Pakistani community in America is doing exactly this , they most of them only stay within their confined boundaries of cultures , religion and values in America , only interact with people of their community and keep themselves mostly isolated from American people . This lack of interaction of Pakistanis with American people specially with American government Leeds to such level of ignorance on the part of American people and their government .

Thanks

I hope this helps

Riaz Haq said...

Some Americans saw big gains in wealth during the pandemic. Here's why. - CBS News


https://www.cbsnews.com/news/american-income-wealth-surged-pandemic-federal-reserve/

The racial group with the highest median wealth are Asian American households, with about $536,000 in assets. The Fed found that even as wealth inequality declined during the pandemic, income disparities worsened. Median incomes grew 3% compared with the previous survey, which covered 2017 through 2019.

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Many Americans saw major gains in their wealth during the pandemic, boosted by rising home and investment values as well as federal stimulus payments, according to a new report from the Federal Reserve.

The net worth of the median U.S. household — the midpoint between the richest and poorest households — surged 37% to $192,900 between 2019 and 2022, according to the Survey of Consumer Finances, published by the central bank on Wednesday. The survey, issued every three years, provides insights into the financial health of households by examining income, wealth and debt.

Millions of households saw their wealth jump during the pandemic thanks to gains in the value of their homes and investments. Even people who rent their homes, and thus were locked out of the dizzying rise in real estate values since 2019, saw a bump in median wealth.

The pandemic-induced recession, which was short and brutal, cost 20 million jobs, but the rapid recovery, fueled by relief such as stimulus checks and extra unemployment aid, helped bolster many households. Gains were widespread across ages, races and education levels, the Fed said.

"Increases in both median and mean net worth were near universal across different types of families, grouped by either economic or demographic characteristics," the bank said in its analysis of the data.


The boost to many families' wealth helps explain the robustness of the economy this year, despite a flurry of interest rate hikes from the Fed that have made it more expensive to buy everything from homes to cars. Economists had been warning that the rate hikes could push the U.S. into a recession, but so far that hasn't happened.

Riaz Haq said...

Ejaz: "Why are indian americans 43% richer than pakistani americans ? Why are there 10 times as many indian americans in the US than pakistani americans when there are only about 6 times as many indians (1.4 billion) as there are pakistanis (240 million).

If you read my entire post you will get your answers.


Highest income in US are in the STEM fields. Most Indians are on H1B visas and work in the STEM fields, particularly IT (information technology), where pays are significantly higher.

As of 2019, there were 35,000 Pakistanis and 721,000 Indian STEM workers in the United States, according to the American Immigration Council. They included information technologists, software developers, engineers and scientists. These figures do not include medical doctors and healthcare workers.

Riaz Haq said...

US Federal Reserve October 18, 2023

Greater Wealth, Greater Uncertainty: Changes in Racial Inequality in the Survey of Consumer Finances

https://www.federalreserve.gov/econres/notes/feds-notes/greater-wealth-greater-uncertainty-changes-in-racial-inequality-in-the-survey-of-consumer-finances-20231018.html

Wealth by Race in 2022
This note explores patterns in families' wealth, income, and financial well-being across race and ethnicity using new data from the 2022 Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF).2 We first document continued large and persistent differences in wealth across race and ethnicity, with particular attention to how such differences changed between the 2019 and 2022 surveys. We then turn to analyzing other metrics of financial well-being, including income, ability to meet payments on recurring monthly expenses, and families' expectations and attitudes about their financial situations.

Figure 1 shows large disparities in real wealth—the difference between assets and liabilities—across families of different races in 2022.3,4 Median wealth (the amount held by a typical family, shown in the top panel) among White families was $285,000 in 2022. By comparison, the typical Asian family—who we can split out for the first time in 2022 because of an oversample of certain non-White groups—held $536,000, nearly twice that of the typical White family.5 Meanwhile, the wealth of the typical Black family ($44,900) was only about 15 percent of the typical White family. The typical Hispanic family similarly held only about 20 percent of the wealth of the typical White family (about $61,600). The remaining families—a diverse group that includes those identifying as American Indian, Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian, Pacific Islander, other race, and all respondents reporting more than one racial identification—had median wealth similar to the typical Black or Hispanic family, rather than the typical White or Asian family. Notably, mean wealth (the average within each group, shown in the bottom panel; note the different vertical axis scale) was much higher than medians, particularly for White and Asian families. This reflects the fact that mean wealth is influenced significantly by a small number of very rich families, which tend to be comprised disproportionately of White and Asian families.

Riaz Haq said...

Ejaz Butt: "And if indian americans are richer than pakistani americans because most of them are IT workers, what fields are most pakistani americans employed in that they earn so much less than Indian americans ?"

I know you're only interested in India vs Pakistan debate. But Indians in America are richer than ALL nationalities and races in the United States, including Jews.

Please read: https://www.riazhaq.com/2021/06/top-one-percent-are-hindus-new-jews-in.html

Also read "The Other One Percent" by Chakravorty, Sanjoy; Kapur, Devesh; Singh, Nirvikar.

It explains the vast majority of Indians who migrate to the United States are from privileged backgrounds in terms of caste, class and education.

Here's an excerpt of it:

A major focus of this book is on demonstrating and understanding the multiple selections that shaped the Indian-American population. These selections applied not only to education (that, in terms of attaining college degrees, made the India-born population three times more educated than that in the host country and nine times more educated than the home country’s population) but also to class and caste (favoring, by large margins, the “upper” and dominant classes and castes of India), profession (engineering, IT, and health care), and both the region of origin (Gujarati and Punjabi were overrepresented in the first two phases, and Telugu and Tamil in the third phase) and region of settlement (in specific metropolitan clusters in and around New York City, the San Francisco Bay Area, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and Houston and Dallas). In addition to direct selection is what we call the “selection+” advantage: we suggest that group characteristics or norms, such as the fact that Indians had the highest propensity to live in married-couple households of any major immigrant group, added to the advantages of being an already selected group. We show, in particular, how family norms were useful in keeping the Indian-American poverty level low (under 5 percent) and family income high (the highest in the United States). It is also likely that the selection process enabled, without explicitly intending to, the generation of high levels of social capital (through linguistic/ professional networks such as Gujarati entrepreneurs in the hotel industry, Telugu and Tamil workers in the IT industry, IIT engineers, Malayali nurses, Bengali academics, etc.). Several linguistic subgroups, many with caste or clan affinities, with moderate to high levels of human capital, were also successful in creating “bonding” social networks and capital that enhanced their status.5 Even low-income groups, such as Punjabi
taxi drivers in New York, were able to create some social (bonding) capital. Several professional subgroups without kinship or linguistic affiliation—doctors and engineers, for example—were able to organize and prosper by creating bridging social networks and capital. Selection—broadly understood—is present as a primary or secondary theme in much of this book.

Riaz Haq said...

Ejaz Butt: "In the UK, the MEDIAN household wealth of a british Pakistani is £224,000, whereas that of British Indians is 40% greater, at £313,000 (Exactly the same as White brits)"

The best way to understand it is to look at where the British Pakistanis come from. They are from poor rural backgrounds, not urban middle class.


Majority of Pakistanis in the UK are from Mirpur and its surrounding villages in Azad Kashmir. They or their parents migrated to Britain when they were given compensation by Pakistani government for their land to make way for the building of the massive Mangla Dam after the signing of the Indus Water Treaty between India and Pakistan in 1960. Five of the twelve British Pakistani MPs in the new parliament are from Azad Kashmir.


While the British Pakistanis have made some headway in the public sector in their new home, they continue to face discrimination, particularly in the private sector. A 2016 study by the government’s Social Mobility Commission found that the "children of Bangladeshi and Pakistani origin in Britain have outperformed other ethnic groups to achieve rapid improvements at every level of education, but are significantly less likely to be employed in managerial or professional jobs than their white counterparts".

The study said that the "minority ethnic pupils (including Pakistanis) are outperforming white working class children in English tests throughout school, with white British teenagers coming bottom of the pile in the subject at GCSE level".

Riaz Haq said...

The UK Government data on British household wealth (April 2016 to March 2018) by ethnicity shows that Pakistani household median wealth is £224,500, the second highest after British White and Indian household median wealth of just over £313,000

https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/personalandhouseholdfinances/incomeandwealth/articles/householdwealthbyethnicitygreatbritain/april2016tomarch2018


White households median £313,900 mean £590,400
Indian households median £313,200 mean £493,800
Pakistani households median £224,500 mean £302,100
Chinese households median £77,300 mean £348,400
Bangladeshi households median £65,600 mean £141,100
Other Asian households median £162,100 mean £367,800
Black Caribbean households median £85,900 mean £379,200

Riaz Haq said...

Please read "The Other One Percent" by Chakravorty, Sanjoy; Kapur, Devesh; Singh, Nirvikar.

It explains that the vast majority of Indians who migrate to the United States are from privileged backgrounds in terms of caste, class and education. They have gone through “a triple selection” process that gave Indian-Americans a boost over typically poor and uneducated immigrants who come to the United States from other countries. The first two selections took place in India. As explained in the book: “The social system created a small pool of persons to receive higher education, who were urban, educated, and from high/dominant castes.” India’s examination system then selected individuals for specialized training in technical fields that also happened to be in demand in the United States. Kapur estimated that the India-American population is nine times more educated than individuals in the home country.

Here's an excerpt of it:

A major focus of this book is on demonstrating and understanding the multiple selections that shaped the Indian-American population. These selections applied not only to education (that, in terms of attaining college degrees, made the India-born population three times more educated than that in the host country and nine times more educated than the home country’s population) but also to class and caste (favoring, by large margins, the “upper” and dominant classes and castes of India), profession (engineering, IT, and health care), and both the region of origin (Gujarati and Punjabi were overrepresented in the first two phases, and Telugu and Tamil in the third phase) and region of settlement (in specific metropolitan clusters in and around New York City, the San Francisco Bay Area, Chicago, Washington, D.C., and Houston and Dallas). In addition to direct selection is what we call the “selection+” advantage: we suggest that group characteristics or norms, such as the fact that Indians had the highest propensity to live in married-couple households of any major immigrant group, added to the advantages of being an already selected group. We show, in particular, how family norms were useful in keeping the Indian-American poverty level low (under 5 percent) and family income high (the highest in the United States). It is also likely that the selection process enabled, without explicitly intending to, the generation of high levels of social capital (through linguistic/ professional networks such as Gujarati entrepreneurs in the hotel industry, Telugu and Tamil workers in the IT industry, IIT engineers, Malayali nurses, Bengali academics, etc.). Several linguistic subgroups, many with caste or clan affinities, with moderate to high levels of human capital, were also successful in creating “bonding” social networks and capital that enhanced their status.5 Even low-income groups, such as Punjabi
taxi drivers in New York, were able to create some social (bonding) capital. Several professional subgroups without kinship or linguistic affiliation—doctors and engineers, for example—were able to organize and prosper by creating bridging social networks and capital. Selection—broadly understood—is present as a primary or secondary theme in much of this book.

Riaz Haq said...

From 2012 to 2022, the percentage of adults age 25 and older with a bachelor’s degree or more increased from 34.5% to 41.8% for the non-Hispanic White population; from 21.2% to 27.6% for the Black population; from 51% to 59.3% for the Asian population; and from 14.5% to 20.9% for the Hispanic population.

https://www.census.gov/newsroom/press-releases/2023/educational-attainment-data.html#:~:text=the%20Hispanic%20population.-,From%202012%20to%202022%2C%20the%20percentage%20of%20adults%20age%2025,20.9%25%20for%20the%20Hispanic%20population.


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Over three-quarters of the Asian Indian (76.3%) and over half of the Korean (59.3%), Pakistani (58.2%), Chinese except Taiwanese (56.5%), and Japanese populations *53.5%) had a bachelor’s degree or higher.

The Cambodian (24.2%), Vietnamese (32.1%) and Hmong (23.6%) alone and alone or in any combination populations had the largest shares of high school diploma (or equivalency) attainment only.

https://www.census.gov/library/stories/2023/06/detailed-characteristics-race-ethnic-tribal-groups.html

Riaz Haq said...

Social Realities of Indian Americans: Results From the 2020 Indian American Attitudes Survey - Carnegie Endowment for International Peace

https://carnegieendowment.org/2021/06/09/social-realities-of-indian-americans-results-from-2020-indian-american-attitudes-survey-pub-84667


Thirty percent of non-citizen IAAS respondents possess a green card (or a permanent residency card), which places them on a pathway to gaining U.S. citizenship. Twenty-seven percent are H-1B visa holders, a visa status for high-skilled or specialty workers in the United States that has historically been dominated by the technology sector. On average, an H-1B visa holder reports living in the United States for eight years, although 36 percent of H-1B beneficiaries report spending more than a decade in the country (that is, they arrived before 2010). Eighteen percent of non-citizens reside in the United States on an H-4 visa, a category for immediate family members of H-1B visa holders. Fourteen percent of non-citizens are on F-1, J-1, or M-1 visas—categories of student or scholar visas—while another 5 percent hold an L-1 visa, a designation available to employees of an international company with offices in the United States. A small minority of non-citizen respondents—6 percent—claim some other visa status.

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The overwhelming majority of Hindus with a caste identity—more than eight in ten—self-identify as belonging to the category of General or upper caste.