As
construction jobs drop off, immigrant workers' families to the south are
feeling the pinch.
|
o |
|
 |
|
RIPPLE EFFECT:
A slowdown in money transfers to Mexico and other Latin
American nations has moved virtually in lock step with
the stumble in U.S. home building. Above, a home under
construction in Sandy Springs, Ga., this month. |
|
 |
|
LOOKING FOR WORK:
Day laborers vie for the attention of a potential
employer at a hiring center in Laguna Beach last summer.
Fallout from the U.S. construction industry, which
employs 1 in 5 Hispanic immigrants, is being felt in
Mexico. |
|
|
 |
|
|
MEXICO CITY (By Marla Dickerson, LATimes) April 26, 2007 When California's
housing market was booming, Lucretia Diaz could feel the good vibrations
2,200 miles away in her rural hamlet in southern Mexico.
Her husband, Carlos Romero, an illegal immigrant living in Los Angeles,
wired her $600 a month from his labors hanging drywall and pounding
shingles. The remittances bought meat for tacos, sneakers for the kids and a
few extras for the family's home in tiny Juquila, Oaxaca.
No more. With U.S. home building in the dumps, Romero is working
sporadically and sending little money. Diaz and her three young boys are
eating rice and beans. She is watching every centavo.
So are economists who track this crucial southward flow of currency. They
are worried by what they see.
Remittances are the financial lifeblood for millions of Mexican families and
a crucial source of foreign exchange for their government. The $23 billion
that maids, cooks, gardeners and others sent home last year almost all
from the U.S. topped the amount that multinationals invested in Mexico.
But fallout from the U.S. construction industry, which employs 1 in 5
Hispanic
immigrants, is now rippling south of the border. Growth in remittances to
Mexico has slowed to a trickle.
After increasing an average of just over 23% a year since 2000, remittances
for the first two months of 2007 were just 5.5% ahead of the same period
last year, according to Mexico's central bank. The figure peaked in May at
$2.3 billion and has drifted downward ever since.
Analysts say tougher border enforcement and workplace crackdowns by U.S.
immigration authorities may be playing a role. Still, the remittance
slowdown has moved virtually in lock step with the stumble in U.S. home
building. Housing starts hit their 2006 peak in May before tumbling 50% by
year-end.
Mexico isn't the only country feeling the effect. Growth in money wired to
Guatemala, El Salvador, the Dominican Republic and other Latin American
nations has followed the housing market slowdown.
Romero, who has been in the U.S. for 10 years, hasn't had steady
construction work in six months, and the jobs he has found pay a lot less
than they used to. A buddy just gave him a tip about a night position at a
Los Angeles restaurant. He isn't thrilled at the prospect of washing dishes
or slinging hash on the graveyard shift. But Romero is running out of
options.
"Even one day without work is bad. I've gone four days without work already
this week," the 38-year-old said anxiously by telephone from Los Angeles
recently. "The situation is very bad for me and my family."
It bodes ill for Mexico as well.
The deceleration in remittances is coming just as Mexico's economy is
weakening, oil revenue is falling and unemployment is on the rise. In the
past, tough times pushed more migrants north and remittances increased,
helping cushion downturns in the Mexican economy, said Gray Newman, chief
Latin America economist for Morgan Stanley.
But with more U.S. agents patrolling the border and fewer construction jobs
waiting on the other side, Newman said, Mexico might be in for a bumpier
landing this time. He is projecting 3.3% economic growth for Mexico this
year, down from 4.8% in 2006.
"In the past this was the one flow that acted as sort of a shock absorber,"
Newman said of remittances. "This could be a double whammy."
Nearly 3 million Hispanics were employed in the U.S. housing industry in 2006,
according to a study by the Washington-based Pew Hispanic Center.
Three-quarters of them were foreign-born. Nearly 30% had been in the United
States six years or fewer.
Within the construction business, lower-skilled immigrants are more
prevalent in the residential sector, which has shed nearly
28,000 jobs since September, a 2.7% decline, according to the U.S. Bureau of
Labor Statistics. Some experts believe that the slide is actually much worse
because the activities of off-the-books day laborers aren't fully reflected
in official statistics.
Construction work typically pays better than farm and service jobs, a little
over $20 an hour on average, according to government data. Many illegal
immigrants toil for less. Still, the industry is considered a big step up
from stoop labor in the fields.
Illinois bricklayer Francisco Godinez, a legal resident who arrived from
Mexico in 1997, considers himself blessed to have a skilled trade. He landed
so much work building subdivisions over the last few years that he wired
nearly $25,000 to his family in Michoacan to build their own dream house
south of the border.
His tools are mostly idle these days. The paint and flooring on the family's
new place will have to wait. Right now his wife and three children in Mexico
need money for food and other essentials.
"I'm hoping to find work and send $200 or $300 in a week or so," said
Godinez, 38. "Things are really slow."
Money-transfer companies are likewise feeling the pinch. Colorado-based
Western Union reported that wire transactions to Mexico increased just 2% in
the first quarter compared with the first three months of 2006.
Minnesota-based MoneyGram doesn't release volume figures. But spokeswoman
Cathy Rebuffoni acknowledged "a slowdown in that market" largely because of
sluggish U.S. construction activity.
Both firms also mentioned heightened tensions over illegal immigration as a
factor cutting into sales. Analyst Gwenn Bezard, who follows the
money-transfer industry, said he believed that tougher border enforcement
was crimping the flow of new arrivals to the United States and that
employment raids and deportations had spooked undocumented workers. He said
some were avoiding places where immigrants congregate, such as major
money-wiring chains.
"A lot of people are just staying home because they are afraid of being
caught," said Bezard, research director at Aite Group, a Boston-based
financial services consulting firm. "The political climate has a lot to do
with it."
But in Los Angeles, Romero said his biggest fear was that his family was
going without. He prays that the housing market will recover.
"I can do anything. Haul construction materials, put up walls," he said. "At
this point, I'll take whatever construction job I can get."