The Emerging Economic Value of Spanish in the U.S. Symposium: The Economic Power of Hispanics

The Emerging Economic Value of Spanish in the U.S. Symposium: The Economic Power of Hispanics
"The Economic Power of Hispanics" panelists ICC/file
The Emerging Economic Value of Spanish in the U.S. Symposium: The Economic Power of Hispanics
"The Economic Power of Hispanics" panelists ICC/file

The Emerging Economic Value of Spanish in the U.S. Symposium: The Economic Power of Hispanics

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The Emerging Economic Value of Spanish in the U.S. Symposium is a forum on the demographic change that the United States is experiencing due to the unprecedented growth of the Hispanic population. The opportunity for greater cooperation and commerce is driven in part by the dramatic increase in the use of Spanish in the United States to the point where there are now approximately 36 million people in the country who speak it. Spanish is now the second language of international communication. Additionally, one out of six U.S. residents is Hispanic, one out of five public school students is Hispanic, and a quarter of children born in the United States is Hispanic. By 2025, over half of American families will be multicultural. By 2050, the United States will be the largest Spanish speaking country in the world. According to estimates made by the U.S. Census Bureau, 132.8 million inhabitants will be Hispanic by 2050, almost three times the current 46.7 million, which means nearly one in three Americans citizens will be Hispanic.

A new corporate paradigm will have to evolve to address this emerging consumer mosaic and help keep the United States on the crest of this wave of demographic change. The Spanish language will be a natural component of the new framework, and the ability to speak Spanish in addition to English will increase in value in schools, media, scientific research, business, politics, and diplomacy.

But how should the United States capitalize on the rising value of Spanish domestically and internationally? How should the U.S. address Spanish in the school system? How are corporations facing this radical multicultural change in the U.S.? How to best manage the impact and growing influence the U.S. Hispanic population has on society, the economy and politics in the U.S.?

This two-day symposium aims to open a national and international dialogue to generate ideas for leveraging these opportunities. The symposium is conducted in English and Spanish with simultaneous translation.

“The Economic Power of Hispanics” panel objectives are to: Understand the economic impact of the major demographic growth of Hispanics and the nature of this trend within the U.S.; Explore the economic impact of Hispanics within the political and social context of the U.S.; Learn how to capitalize on the pivotal role U.S. Hispanics play in international relations between the U.S. and all the Spanish speaking countries.

Panelists: José María Lassalle, cultural spokesperson for the Grupo Popular (Conservative Party Spain); Daniel P. Erikson, senior advisor for policy in the Bureau of Western Hemisphere Affairs at the U.S. Department of State; Silvia Puente, executive director of the Latino Policy Forum; Kenneth McClintock Hernández, secretary of state, Puerto Rico; Javier Rupérez, former Spanish ambasador to the United States; Julio Ortega, professor of Hispanic studies at Brown University. Moderator: Allert Brown-Gort, associate director, Institute for Latino Studies, Kellogg Institute for International Studies, University of Notre Dame.

Recorded Thursday, December 8, 2011 at the Instituto Cervantes of Chicago.