Most minorities don't reap benefits of California's strong labor market, according to UCSF researche

By Maureen McInaney

While California’s labor market continues to be strong, Latinos and African
Americans - who together make up 31 percent of California’s working
population - are being left behind by the state’s technology-driven economic
boom, according to the results of the third California Work and Health Survey
(CWHS), led by UCSF researchers.

“California’s rising tide is not lifting all boats,” said Irene Yen, PhD, an
epidemiologist at the UCSF Institute for Health and Aging and co-investigator
on the CWHS.  “When compared with the state’s white working population, working
Latinos and African Americans are still playing catch up.”

Latinos are much less likely than whites to benefit from the growth in jobs in
the high technology sector because they are less likely than whites to have
completed high school or college and much less likely than whites to report
using a computer in their work places, she said.

Among employed Californians, Latinos are 11 times more likely than whites to
live in poverty. They are also more likely than whites to lack pension plans
and health insurance coverage and to report poor perceived health status, she
added.

Only 25 percent of Latinos have traditional jobs, as compared to 36 percent of
whites and 38 percent of Asian Americans, Yen said. She explained that
traditional job workers were defined in the 1999 CWHS as those who hold a
full-time job year-round, work a day shift as a permanent employee, are paid by
the firm for which the work is done, and do not work from home or as
independent contractors.
“Though the California job market is changing and increasing numbers of
Californians are working in non-traditional jobs, traditional jobs are still
associated with more stable incomes and availability of pension and health care
plans,” she explained.

As with Latinos, only one quarter of African Americans report having a
traditional job. Similarly, African Americans in the labor force are more
likely than whites to have lower incomes and temporary jobs and to report
poorer health status. They are two-thirds more likely than whites to report
high blood pressure.

These results show a striking contrast in health experiences for different
racial, ethnic groups in California, said Yen, who added that these results of
poorer employment and health status persist even after taking into account age,
sex and educational level.

Asian Americans showed mixed employment and health results, she said. Over 50
percent reported at least a college degree, compared to 40 percent of whites.
Asian Americans are just as likely as whites to have a traditional job, a
pension plan and health insurance coverage, she said. However, Asian Americans
are still over twice as likely as whites to have poverty household incomes. The
2000 California Work and Health Survey included only English-speaking Asian
Americans.

##Additional findings for employed minorities:

* Among people who work full-time (35 or more hours a week), Latinos work on
average
two fewer weeks each year than whites. Among people who work part-time, Latinos
work on average five fewer weeks each year than whites.
* Latinos are much less likely to work at large firms (1,000 or more employees)
than all other ethnic groups.
* African Americans are about 80 percent more likely than whites to have been
laid off
during the previous year.
* African Americans are more than twice as likely as whites to report having an
experience of employment discrimination. Employment discrimination refers to
having been fired, not been hired, or not been promoted on the basis of age,
sex, skin color or race, ethnic background, handicap, or sexual orientation.
To complete the California Work and Health Survey, researchers interviewed
2,168 California adults (1,265 of whom were part of the 1999 CWHS). The 2000
California Work and Health Survey is the third year of a longitudinal study of
the California adult population.  Researchers at UCSF are funded by a grant
from The California Wellness Foundation. The survey was administered by the
Field Institute, a nonprofit public policy organization in San Francisco.

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