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Walking through New York City, it doesn’t take long before one hears a variety of languages, smells the various spices wafting from the food carts, and sees the diverse faces that make NYC the cultural capital of the world. Since even before the days of Ellis Island, New York has welcomed immigrants from every corner of the world. This website specifically follows the narrative of Ecuadorian immigrants in New York City from the time of their departure to their settlement. Today, about a half million people of Ecuadorian origin live in the United States. Of that number, more than 50% reside within the New York metropolitan area. Through the lenses of history, economics, demographics, gender, means of immigration, and educational attainment, this website aims to showcase how people of Ecuadorian origin fit into the framework of NYC.

Family. Food. Language. Culture.
Get a glimpse into the modern-day Ecuadorian-American experience!

History of Ecuadorian Migration to NYC

Statistical Information

Population

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MHC-Ecuador-Pie-Chart-Pop
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2000 Census-Summary File 3; 2011 American Community Survey-Summary File Population Division-New York City Department of City Planning

Although Ecuador is a small Latin American country consisting of only 15.7 million people as of 2011, it provides one of the largest groups of Latin American immigrants to the United States (Jokisch, 2014). Within New York City itself, Ecuadorians are disproportionately represented in such a high number compared to the rest of the United States. While the general United States, as of 2011, accounted for 435,476 foreign-born Ecuadorians, New York City alone, as of 2011, had 31.6% of them living within it (Lobo & Salvo, 2011: 16-17). This large number of foreign born Ecuadorians that live in New York City amounts to 137,791 individuals (Jokisch, 2014). As of 2011, at 6%, Ecuadorians rank sixth in the size of foreign-born population in New York City (U.S Census Bureau, 2011). Additionally, 58% of U.S.-bound Ecuadorian migrants settle within the New York-New Jersey metropolitan area (Jokisch, 2014).

Means of Entry

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MHC-Ecuador-Means-of-Entry1
Source: CRS analysis of data from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, FY2009 Statistical Yearbook of Immigration Statistics, 2008.

Of the roughly 10,700 Ecuadorians who were granted legal permanent residency annually between the years 2000-2013, 80% were authorized due to the “family sponsored preference” and “immediate relatives of U.S citizens” categories. When it comes to the unauthorized immigrant population size from 2005-2010 within the United States, a derivation, by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), showed that up to 180,000 unauthorized Ecuadorians resided in the United States as of 2010. As a consequence of stricter immigration policies in the United States following the passage of the Illegal Immigration Reform and Immigrant Responsibility Act in 1996 (Migration Policy Institute, 2013: 5-6), the process by which thousands of Ecuadorians have entered the U.S. undocumented became severely costlier in relation to not only money, but also the risk of apprehension or even death (Bertoli, Moraga, & Ortega, 2010: 20).

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MHC-Unauthorized-Immigrant-Pop
* These numbers were calculated using the “residual method” in which the number of legally resident Ecuadorian born population was subtracted from the total Ecuadorian born population in order to estimate the unauthorized Ecuadorian resident population.

Source: U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

Gender Ratios

An analysis of the domestic-born population shows that Ecuadorian men in New York outnumber women, but by not too large of a margin. According to the US Census Bureau, in 2011, the Ecuadorian sex ratio was about 118 men for every 100 women. This contrasts with New York’s overall sex ratio of about 93.76 males per 100 females (Butler, 2014). This is due to the fact that it was typically foreign-born Ecuadorian men moving to New York to establish themselves first, but later on being joined by their spouses and children, which eventually lowers the gap in ratio.

The U.S. had previously gone through a period of time where it was using a quotas system to manage its immigration load. The Act of 1965, however, allowed the immigrants coming in to be chosen based on their familial connections in the U.S. and their occupational skills. This is why females did not find it too difficult to later join their male counterparts in New York, as they were capitalizing on family reunification processes. Overall, when it comes to integration, in the long-term sense, it is better to have a close sex ratio, as that can typically imply a higher presence of family units. Family units then produce multiple generations that slowly have assimilated more, as evidenced through the lens of the life expectancies of language in the United States (Rambaut et. al, 2006).

Poverty

According to a 2011 PewResearch Center analysis, about 18% of Ecuadorians live in poverty. This is more than the rate for the general U.S. population (16%), but less than that for the Hispanic-American population (26%). In New York, more specifically, the percentage of Ecuadorians living in poverty is higher at 20.7%, but it is on par with both the overall native-born poverty rate in New York (21.3%) and the foreign-born one of 19.8% (Lobo & Salvo, 2013: 104). Being located in New York seems to result in a higher than national rate of poverty among other groups as well, which may be due to the high cost of living in New York coupled with the prevalence of low wage work.

According to Lobo & Salvo (2013), Ecuadorians had a median household income of $46,126 in 2011, a value lower than the overall median for native-born New Yorkers, but higher than that of foreign-born New Yorkers (p. 104). Poverty can hinder a group’s integration, as it can act as a barrier that prevents the attainment of things such as education, a firmer grasp of the English language, and higher paying jobs. Again, finding stability in the American system can often directly tie to socioeconomic status.

Educational Attainment

About 58.6% of Ecuadorian in New York (25 years and over) were at least high school graduates. In comparison, 86.6% of native-born and 72.2% of foreign-born New Yorkers hold that status. The group’s lower educational attainment percentage may be explained by how the main mindset of leaving Ecuador was to escape economic complications and find better work in the United States, not necessarily to obtain higher education.

A correlation may also be drawn between English proficiency and educational attainment. English-speaking countries bring in people with a lingual advantage, something that is quite beneficial both in the realm of school and work. Migrants from countries with majority Spanish-speakers, then, sometimes come to the United States with more of a disadvantage.

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MHC-Ecuador-Educational-Attainment-English
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2011 American Community Survey-Public Use Microdata Sample & The Newest New Yorkers- 2013

Educational attainment is also related to the networks Ecuadorians and other communities already have built upon settlement. These established communities, otherwise known as enclaves, can either hinder or uplift different groups of immigrants (Sullivan, 2012). Many Latin American immigrants settle in enclaves that are homogenous in their socioeconomic status and resources (American Psychological Association, 2012: 34). Typically, socioeconomic diversity in a community is advantageous. For instance, parents with lower levels of education would have access to resources and people that can help navigate their children through the educational system. Having a high educational attainment is clearly becoming more and more integral to opening doors for higher-paying jobs and allowing a group to climb up the socioeconomic ladder.

Ecuadorians in NYC Today

More than half of the 600,000 Ecuadorians recorded in the U.S. 2000 census reside in the New York City metropolitan area. About one-third of Ecuadorians living in metropolitan New York reside in Queens, particularly in the neighborhoods of Corona and Jackson Heights (All Peoples Initiative, 2009). By 2010, according to Statista, the largest Ecuadorian-American population group in the U.S. resided in Queens County, with 98,512 people of Ecuadorian origin. As mentioned, the established trade networks such as those of the Panama hat industry and the banana industry that eventually were converted into migration networks by pioneer migrants from Azuay and Cañar are responsible for the highly-concentrated populations of Ecuadorians in metropolitan New York, specifically in Corona and Jackson Heights. Essentially, the migration networks allow those in Ecuador and abroad to remain connected. Job opportunities between Ecuador and the U.S. are communicated along with letters and audios that link Ecuadorian villages with those migrant communities in the United States (Jokisch & Pribilsky, 2002: 79). The courier service Delgado Travel, which has several branches in metropolitan New York and even more in south-central Ecuador, allows Ecuadorian immigrants to send remittances back to their families and to stay connected to Ecuador through newspaper and radio.

Today, Ecuadorians account for a considerable number of immigrants in New York City. Primarily driven by poor economic circumstances, Ecuadorian migrants moved to the United States with the hope of bettering their situation. Moreover, had it not been for the trade networks that connected Ecuador to New York (namely, the Panama hat trade and banana trade), Ecuadorians would not have as large a presence in New York as they do today. Once these connections were created, those who became U.S. citizens were able to sponsor immediate relatives as well as establish communities where newer Ecuadorian immigrants would be able to join. While Ecuadorians as a whole are a relatively newer immigrant group in New York City, they are slowly establishing themselves as a group that is here to stay.

References

All Peoples Initiative. (2009, Oct). Ecuadorians in the New York metro area. Retrieved from http://unreachednewyork.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/11/Ecuadorian-Profile-Final.pdf

American Psychological Association, Presidential Task Force on Educational Disparities. (2012, Aug). Ethnic and racial disparities in education: Psychology’s contributions to understanding and reducing disparities. Retrieved from https://www.apa.org/ed/resources/racial-disparities.pdf

Bergad, L. (2011, Nov). The Latino population of New York City, 1990 – 2010. Retrieved from http://clacls.gc.cuny.edu/files/2013/10/The-Latino-Population-of-New-York-City-1990-2 010.pdf

Bergad, L. & Klein, H. (2010). Hispanics in the United States: A demographic, social, and economic history, 1980-2005. New York, NY: Cambridge University Press.

Bertoli, S. (2010). Networks, sorting, and self-selection of Ecuadorian migrants. Annals of Economics and Statistics, (97/98), 261-288. doi:10.2307/41219118

Bertoli, S., Moraga, J., & Ortega, F. (2010, Feb). Immigration policies and the Ecuadorian exodus. IZA DP No. 4737, 2-29.

Brown, A., & Patten, E. (2013, June). Hispanics of Ecuadorian origin in the United States, 2011. Retrieved from http://www.pewhispanic.org/2013/06/19/hispanics-of-ecuadorian- origin-in-the-united-states-2011/

Buffington, S. (n.d.). Dominican Americans. Retrieved from http://www.everyculture.com/multi/Bu-Dr/Dominican-Americans.html#Comments_5

Butler, R. (2014, Jan). Male to female sex ratio, ranked by state. Retrieved from http://names.mongabay.com/data/2010-male-to-female-sex-ratio-state.html

Calcagno, J. (2013, November). Trends in poverty rates among Latinos in New York City and the United States, 1990 – 2011. Retrieved from https://www.gc.cuny.edu/CUNY_GC/media/CUNY-Graduate-Center/PDF/Centers/CLA CLS/Trends-in-Poverty-among-Latinos-in-New-York-City-and-the-United-States,-1990- 2011.pdf

Caro-Lopez, H. (2011, April). Ecuadorians in New York City 1990—2008. Retrieved from
http://clacls.gc.cuny.edu/files/2013/10/Ecuadorians-in-New-York-1990-2008.pdf

Delgado Travel. (n.d.). New York. Retrieved from http://delgadotravelusa.com/new-york/

DeSipio, L., & de la Garza, R. (2015, Feb 17) U.S. immigration in the twenty-first century: Making Americans, remaking America. Boulder, CO: Westview Press. Foner, N. (1998). Benefits and burdens: immigrant women and work in New York City. Gender Issues, 16: 5-24. doi:10.1007/s12147-998-0008-y

Hoefer, M., Rytina, N., & Baker, B. (2010, Jan). Estimates of the unauthorized immigrant population residing in the United States: January 2010, 4. Retrieved from https://www.dhs.gov/xlibrary/assets/statistics/publications/ois_ill_pe_2010.pdf

Immigration to the United States. (n.d.). Ecuadorian immigrants. Retrieved from http://immigrationtounitedstates.org/471-ecuadorian-immigrants.html

Jokisch, B. (2014, Nov 24). Ecuador: From mass emigration to return migration? Retrieved from http://www.migrationpolicy.org/article/ecuador-mass-emigration-return-migration

Jokisch, B., & Pribilsky, J. (2002). The panic to leave: Economic crisis and the “new emigration” from Ecuador. International Migration Journal, 40 (4), 76-101. Lobo, A., & Salvo, J. (2013). The newest New Yorkers: Characteristics of the city’s foreign-born population.  Retrieved from https://www1.nyc.gov/assets/planning/download/pdf/data-maps/nyc-population/nny2013/ nny_2013.pdf

Migration Policy Institute. (2013, Mar). Major U.S. immigration laws, 1790 – present. Retrieved from http://www.migrationpolicy.org/research/timeline-1790

Motel, S. & Patten, E. (2012, June). The 10 largest Hispanic origin groups: Characteristics, rankings, top counties. Retrieved from http://www.pewhispanic.org/2012/06/27/the-10-largest-hispanic-origin-groups-characteristics-rankings-top-counties/

Rumbaut, R. G., Massey, D. S., & Bean, F. D. (2006). Linguistic life expectancies: Immigrant language retention in Southern California. Population & Development Review, 32(3), 447-460.

Statista. (n.d.). Largest Ecuadorian-American population groups in the United States, by county. Retrieved from https://www.statista.com/statistics/234962/us-ecuadorian-population-by-county/

Sullivan, M. (2012). Ethnic enclaves: Sanctuary or impediment? Retrieved from https://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/newton17/files/2015/01/Sullivan-Ethnic-Enclaves-Sanctuary-or-Impediment.pdf

Treschan, L. & Mehrotra A. (2013, Mar). Young Mexican-Americans in New York City: Working more, learning and earning less. Retrieved from https://www.db.com/usa/docs/CSS_Report_Young_Mexican_Americans.pdf

Wasem, R. E. (2010, Dec 10). U.S. Immigration policy on permanent admissions, 21. Retrieved from http://trac.syr.edu/immigration/library/P5204.pdf

Header Photo: Pinterest
Background Music: “Zapateado Ecuatoriano” | Composed by Maestro Carlos Bonilla Chávez | Interpreted by Fabián Carrera
Welcome!’ Photo: PinMart
‘Ecuadorian Americans Documentary’ Video: Ebru TV

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