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THE IMMIGRATION PROBLEM
and sewing-machine manufacturing, are of foreign
birth.
Length of Residence of Immigrant Employees
Of the employees in twenty of the most important
industries enumerated above, information concerning
length of residence in the United States was secured
for 290,923 foreign-born persons. Of that number,
116,466, or 40 per cent., had been in the United States
less than five years. Of the total number belonging to
races coming from northern and western Europe and
Canada, less than one-fifth had been in the United
States less than five years, while of the employees of
other races—almost entirely from southern and east
ern Europe—slightly more than one-half had been in
this country less than five years. About one-third of
the foreign-born employees were of races from north
ern and western Europe and Canada, but of the immi
grant employees who had been in the United States
less than five years, only 14.3 per cent, were of these
geographical areas.
Reason for the Employment of Southern and Eastern
Europeans
The employment of recent immigrant wage-earners
in the United States was originally due to the inabil
ity of the manufacturers and mine operators to se
cure other labor at the same wages in the face of the
growing labor needs of the country. How far there
was afterward a reversal of cause and effect, and to
what extent the expansion of industry was stimulated
by the availability of the recent immigrant labor sup