The mass resignations recently in the U.S., especially of college-educated workers, are speeding up a tendency, predicted decades ago, that is the result of an aging U.S. population.
Cooperation on U.S. and Mexican immigration and education policies represents an opportunity to promote the economic growth and development of human capital that both countries need.
The mass resignations recently in the U.S., especially of college-educated workers, are speeding up a tendency, predicted decades ago, that is the result of an aging U.S. population.
Before the COVID-19 pandemic, it was already predicted that in California alone, there would be a shortage of 1 million university graduates by 2030, because only 40% of jobs will require a university degree by then. Latinos now make up 38% of California’s population, but according to national data, Latino students have less favorable educational outcomes than average; this limits their access to a university education.
Making full use of this human capital requires changes to the educational system, but also to immigration policy.
According to the Urban Institute, approximately 6 million students are minors and have at least one Mexican parent. Many of these students or a member of their family, are facing irregular immigration status and the persistent risk of being forced to return to their country. Their immigration status also limits access to a series of services and programs that would let them better plan their educational and professional future.
Integrating these students into the educational system in the U.S. still comes with many challenges. But Mexico has much to learn from its neighbor to the north, since the number of students who have returned to Mexico, although they are the children of Mexican immigrants and were born or grew up in the U.S., has increased, reaching around 600,000 students.
As they do on the U.S. side of the border, these young people face language, cultural and administrative barriers to integrating into the Mexican educational system. There are also those students who have a foot in both camps, since they have spent time in the schools of both countries.
The students the U.S. and Mexico share could be the core of an important bilateral initiative that, by aligning the immigration and education policies of the two countries, might be able to breach the skills gap that is so prominent in the post-COVID world.
The Migration and Education Forum, backed by Alianza MX, will bring together academic experts from the two countries under the leadership of the University of California, the College of Mexico, the Autonomous University of Nuevo León, and government, business and civil society representatives. Working together, they will articulate public policies aimed at developing a competitive, transnational and sustainable workforce in Mexico and the U.S.
Isabel Studer is the Director of the Alianza UCMX (University of California-Mexico).
The Beijing summit did not produce a major agreement between the great powers on the region, but it firmly established that Middle Eastern crises are now deeply tied to the great-power dialogue.
During the Cold War, the United States occupied the apex of this triangular dynamic, pitting China and the USSR against each other. Today, it is Beijing that occupies that apex.
A summit that would normally send a reassuring message ... faces total uncertainty thanks to the weakness of the United States. The only person to blame for this is Trump.
[T]his wretched president has trampled on, chewed up and spat out pieces of sovereignty, not only of Mexico, but also of our sister countries in Latin America.