Immigration is a thorny issue but one that Arnoldo Mata, head of research at the Hispanic Institute in Washington, D.C., says is an integral part of the dialog when it comes to understanding the Hispanic community's financial needs.
It is not enough, Mata says, to assume that all Hispanics have the same immigration history and status. Different Hispanic groups have arrived and continue to arrive in the U.S. under different circumstances, and these immigration patterns determine economics, Mata says. If financial advisors and financial firms are to get to the heart of the vast and heterogeneous Hispanic community, then they have to understand this.
"When people ask me about the Hispanic community, I say think of it in terms of baseball," Mata says. "Just like the Yankees are the richest baseball team, the Cubans are the richest Hispanics, and that's to do with their immigration history, the fact that the upper class Cubans were the first to come into the U.S."
These people were followed by the intellectuals and then the working classes, Mata says, but the Cuban story is very different from, for example, the Mexican story, where workers with very little education where the first to come to this country.