top of page
Search
snitzoid

Why Asian Immigrants Come to the U.S. and How They View Life Here

Right now, 14.4% of Harvard students are Asian. After the recent fall of affirmative action, the class of 2028 is now 37% Asian.


On the other hand, 50% of the people writing this story identify as Asian. And I identify as Asian.


Therefore by 2050, everybody will be Asian except for a few African Americans who will identify as Oprah.



Why Asian Immigrants Come to the U.S. and How They View Life Here

74% say they’d move to the U.S. again if they could, but a majority says the nation’s immigration system needs significant changes

By Ziyao Tian, Carolyne Im, Sahana Mukherjee and Abby Budiman, Pew Research




Asian Americans are the only major racial or ethnic group in the United States that is majority immigrant. Some 54% of the 24 million Asian Americans living in the U.S. are immigrants; among Asian adults, that share rises to 67%.1


Asian immigrants trace their origins from all parts of Asia and make up a significant portion of the overall U.S. immigrant population: Three of the four largest U.S. immigrant populations are from India (2.8 million), China (2.5 million), and the Philippines (2 million).


The diverse origins and varied experiences of international migration and engagement with the U.S. immigration system make up a key part of many Asian Americans’ lives. Moreover, Asian immigrants’ experiences with immigration are linked to their views on what the federal government’s priorities should be for U.S. immigration policy.


A new analysis of Pew Research Center’s 2022-23 survey of Asian American adults finds that Asian immigrants overall give positive assessments of their lives in America compared with their origin country. A large majority (77%) say their standard of living is better than that of their parents in their home countries. At the same time, Asian immigrants are less optimistic about their children’s standard of living being better than their own, and more than half say the country is generally headed in the wrong direction. Still, most (74%) say they would migrate to the U.S. again if given the choice today.


More than half of Asian immigrants say the nation’s immigration system needs large changes (59%). And when asked about U.S. immigration policy goals, attracting highly skilled immigrants to the U.S. is one of the top priorities (86%).


These findings come from Pew Research Center’s multilingual, nationally representative survey of 7,006 Asian American adults, including 5,036 Asian immigrants, conducted from July 5, 2022, to Jan. 27, 2023.


This report explores the following topics:


Asian American immigrants’ experiences adjusting to life in the U.S. (Chapter 1)

Asian American immigrants’ views of quality of life in the U.S. (Chapter 2)

How Asian Americans see the U.S. immigration system (Chapter 3)

A brief history of Asian immigration to the U.S.


Why Asian immigrants come to the U.S.

A pie chart showing that About half of Asian immigrants came to the U.S. for economic or educational opportunities

Asian immigrants have followed many pathways in coming to the United States. About a quarter each say they came to the U.S. to be with family (28%) or to seek economic (27%) or educational (26%) opportunities. A smaller share (7%) say they came to escape from conflict or persecution in their origin country.



Reasons for immigrating vary across Asian ethnic groups, reflecting the diverse histories of their origin countries.


  • About 40% each of Filipino and Indian immigrants came to the U.S. for economic opportunities – a higher share compared with Korean (26%), Chinese (16%) and Vietnamese (9%) immigrants.


  • 32% of Vietnamese immigrants say they came to the U.S. to escape conflict or persecution; by comparison, fewer than 5% of Chinese, Indian, Filipino and Korean immigrants say the same.

Jump to read more about why Asians immigrate to the U.S.


Asian immigrants adjusting to life in the U.S.

Asian immigrants faced many adjustments navigating their new lives in the U.S. Among them are:


Learning to speak English


Nearly all Asian immigrants (91%) say speaking English is important to succeed in the U.S., and roughly two-thirds (64%) say they had learned English before immigrating. Asian immigrants who arrived in the last decade are more likely to say they learned to speak English before arriving than those who came to the U.S. more than 20 years ago (89% vs. 57%).


Receiving financial help


About six-in-ten Asian immigrants (58%) say they received financial assistance in some way after they arrived in the U.S. But whether they received help – and from what sources – varies by their motivation for immigrating:


  • 64% of those who immigrated to escape conflict report receiving government financial assistance in their first six months in the country.

  • About 10% of Asians who came for other reasons, such as educational, economic or family motives, say the same.

Jump to more details about Asian Americans’ immigration experiences.


Views of the U.S. compared with origin countries

A bar chart showing that Asian immigrants say the U.S. has better opportunities, more free speech and is a better place to raise children



Overall, majorities of Asian immigrants see the U.S. as better than their origin country on nearly all measures asked about in the survey. Some of the qualities seen most positively about the U.S. include:


77% see the U.S. as better than their origin country for the opportunity to get ahead.

67% say the U.S. is better when it comes to freedom of speech.

66% say it is better for raising children.

But the U.S. is not universally seen as better: On the strength of family ties, only 15% of Asian immigrants say the U.S. is better than their origin countries. Instead, 60% say their origin country is better on this measure.


Jump to read more about how Asian immigrants compare the U.S. with their origin countries.


Asian immigrants’ priorities for U.S. immigration policy



The survey – conducted from July 2022 to January 2023 – asked Asian Americans about their views on U.S. immigration policy goals.


Among Asian immigrants:


86% say attracting highly skilled immigrants to the U.S. should be an important goal for immigration policy.

82% say it is an important goal to make it easier for U.S. citizens or legal residents to sponsor a family member to immigrate to the U.S.

76% say establishing stricter policies to prevent people from overstaying their visas should be an important goal for U.S. policy.



12 views0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

Comments


Post: Blog2_Post
bottom of page