Findings from the National Agricultural Workers Survey (NAWS) 2017-2018: A Demographic and Employment Profile of United States Farmworkers - Research Report No. 14

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Findings from the National Agricultural Workers Survey (NAWS) 2017-2018: A Demographic and Employment Profile of United States Farmworkers - Research Report No. 14

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2021-22

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This report is the fourteenth in a series on hired crop workers' demographic and employment characteristics. Its findings are based on 2,586 interviews that were conducted in fiscal years 2017 and 2018. The report's nine chapters summarize national-level findings on key characteristics, including place of birth and legal status; education and language skills; housing and transportation; job characteristics and employment experience; income and assets; and access to health care.

Most hired crop workers are foreign-born. In 2017-2018, 64 percent of crop workers were born in Mexico, 32 percent in the United States or Puerto Rico, 3 percent in Central America, and 1 percent in other regions. Nearly two thirds of hired crop workers (63%) had authorization to work in the United States, compared to 51 percent in 2015-2016.

The NAWS portrays a crop labor force that is aging and settling in one place with families that include U.S.-born children. In 2017-2018, the average age of crop workers was 41 and 42 percent were 45 or older. Only 13 percent of crop workers had migrated (traveled more than 75 miles between jobs or between their residence and a job) sometime in the year prior to their interview. Among all crop workers, 57 percent were married and 50 percent had children.

Crop workers were employed, on average, 35 weeks in farm jobs in the previous 12 months. They worked an average of 45 hours in the previous week at their current farm job. The majority were paid by the hour at their current farm job (84%) and averaged $12.32 per hour. Mean and median personal incomes the previous year were $20,000 to $24,999, while mean and median total family incomes were $25,000 to $29,999. A fifth of crop workers had below-poverty-level incomes (21%), 56 percent had health insurance, and 71 percent accessed health care in the United States sometime in the last two years.

The NAWS portrays a farm labor market characterized by an experienced labor force that largely intends to continue working in agriculture. In 2017-2018, only 1 percent of crop workers were foreign-born newcomers in their first year of U.S. farm work. Eighty-one percent of crop workers worked for only 1 farm employer in the previous 12 months, 12 percent worked for 2 employers, and 6 percent had 3 or more employers. On average, crop workers had been with their current employer 8 years. The majority of crop workers expected to continue doing farm work for more than 5 years (80%).