Posted to findingDulcinea by Shannon Firth
A recent survey by marketing research firm Gaither International reports that one in four Puerto Ricans are considering leaving their homeland. A stream of mainly middle-class professionals have already migrated to Florida to escape Puerto Rico’s rising inflation, crime, a shrinking manufacturing sector and a 12 percent unemployment rate. “Floricans” is the new term used to identify the Puerto Ricans now living in Florida. The Miami Herald, citing U.S. Census data, reports that 200,000 Puerto Ricans moved to Florida between 2000 and 2006, roughly 5 percent of its population of 4 million. This wave of migration continued after the government’s partial shutdown in May 2006, which was triggered by a budget crisis that left almost 100,000 government workers temporarily unemployed.
The same economic downturn hitting the U.S. now is one that Puerto Ricans have been grappling with for two or three years. Frances Robles of the Miami Herald told NPR, “If we think that in the U.S. we’re facing problems with our gas and our electric then they should go to Puerto Rico. … Can you imagine spending a third of your pay on keeping the lights on?”
Most jobseekers from Puerto Rico speak English and have college, and often graduate, degrees. The Miami Herald, citing The Puerto Rican Surgeons Association, said 800 doctors have left in the last three years.
Xavier Vilaro, a sales, marketing and business development VP, told the Herald, “The [job] offers have been good, some have not been what I have been expecting, but it’s been fairly better than back home.”
Frank Oquendo, a recent immigrant who worked as a salesman for a fitness center in Puerto Rico until being forced to take a 25 percent pay cut, confessed reservations about leaving: “Sometimes you feel like a traitor when people ask, ‘Why don’t you stay here and work for your country?’ … I want to help push Puerto Rico forward, but what about my kids?”
Some Puerto Ricans, like Elías Gutiérrez, head of the graduate school at the University of Puerto Rico, are angry about the continuing exodus, telling The Miami Herald: “We are committing collective suicide. This is going to become a country of elderly and poor people.”
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