Immigrants as Economic Drivers in Story and Boone Counties
Date: November 17, 2017
Immigrants living in Iowa’s Story and Boone counties are preserving American jobs and paying millions in state and local taxes. Though making up just 6.6 percent of the population, they contributed $390 million to GDP in 2015 and paid $17.3 million in state and local taxes. Furthermore, nearly 97 percent of the immigrant population is employed.
The brief, Immigrants as Economic Drivers in Story and Boone Counties, finds:
- 96.8 percent of the foreign-born population in Story and Boone Counties are employed. Immigrants are also more likely to be of working age (between 16 and 64 years old) than their U.S.-born neighbors. Nearly 60 percent of foreign-born residents are of working age, compared to 43.6 percent of U.S. born residents.
- Immigrants living in Story and Boone Counties in 2015 helped create or preserve 378 local manufacturing jobs that would have otherwise vanished or moved elsewhere. This is due to the role immigrants play in the workforce helping keep jobs on U.S. soil.
- More than 12 percent of population growth in Story and Boone Counties between 2010 and 2015 is attributable to immigrants.Foreign-born residents make up just 6.6 percent of the counties’ populations.
- Foreign-born residents were much more likely to have an advanced degree than U.S.- born residents in Story and Boone Counties. Half of immigrant residents (50.1 percent) held an advanced degree in 2015, compared to only 13.4 percent of U.S.-born residents.
- Immigrants contributed $390 million to GDP in 2015. The foreign-born population held $145.5 million in spending power, and paid $17.3 million to state and local taxes.
Read the full research brief here.