Committee of 100 and NORC Release Full Report: State of Chinese Americans National Survey

Committee of 100 and NORC Release Full Report:
State of Chinese Americans National Survey

Joint research by Committee of 100 and NORC shows the U.S. – China relationship, along with political and media rhetoric impacts how Chinese Americans are treated by strangers, acquaintances and coworkers

New York, NY (October 31, 2024) — Committee of 100, a nonprofit membership organization of prominent Chinese Americans, and NORC at the University of Chicago, one of the largest independent social research organizations in the United States, today unveiled the Full Report for its ‘State of Chinese Americans’ study, a survey focused on areas of mental health, political preferences, discrimination, and diversity of the Chinese American population.

The Committee of 100 and NORC study was conducted to help address the insufficient data necessary to inform and address ongoing discrimination, stereotypes, and misperceptions about Chinese Americans, and the many gaps in knowledge that remain about Chinese Americans’ political attitudes and behaviors.

The “2024 State of Chinese Americans” study aimed to document the misperceptions of the Chinese American population as a monolithic political bloc, and provide needed insights about the lived experiences, policy preferences, and political activity of Chinese Americans. Overall conclusions from the survey include Chinese Americans having high levels of concern about U.S. and China relations, particularly as relations affect how Chinese Americans are treated by others; that they are a diverse and excited electorate, yet uncaptured by either major party; they still frequently face discrimination in everyday life, and; are diverse when it comes to nativity and birthplace.

Both the Full Report and Executive Summary are broken-out into these four key areas:

Chinese Americans still frequently face discrimination in everyday life.

  • About two thirds of Chinese Americans (68%) face at least one form of discrimination in an average month, and 85% perceive this discrimination to be because of their race, ethnicity, accent, or name;
  • More than half of Chinese Americans (54%) regularly experience microaggressions, such as people assuming they are not from the U.S., but many also are verbally insulted (27%) or physically threatened or harassed (21%) in an average month;
  • A large proportion of the Chinese American community continue to struggle with mental health; 50% report having felt hopeless in the 30 days before taking the survey, 43% say they felt depressed, and 39% report having felt worthless. This struggle with mental wellness is particularly pronounced among those who are younger, women, and Chinese Americans who regularly experience racial discrimination.
Chinese Americans are a diverse and excited electorate, yet uncaptured by either major party.
  • Three quarters of Chinese American citizens (76%) are certain they’ll turn out to vote in November’s presidential election, including 87% of registered voters that say the same;
  • A little less than half of Chinese Americans (46%) identify as Democrats, 31% identify as Republicans, and 24% identify as independents or don’t lean toward either party;
  • The economy ranks as one of the most important issues to Chinese Americans ahead of the 2024 election, and the plurality (43%) say the economy is getting worse.
Chinese Americans have high levels of concern about U.S. and China relations.
  • 89% describe the current U.S. and China relationship as negative and nearly two thirds (65%) say the current bilateral relations negatively affect how other Americans treat them;
  • Four in five Chinese Americans (81%) are at least a little concerned about the language and rhetoric used by the 2024 presidential candidates when they talk about China and U.S.-China relations;
  • 61% say that the language and rhetoric used by U.S. news media when reporting on China and U.S.-China relations negatively affects how strangers treat them; and about a quarter of respondents says their relationships with acquaintances (26%) and coworkers (25%) have also been negatively impacted by this.
Hacienda Chinese Association Participated in the National Day Parade

Chinese Americans are diverse when it comes to nativity and birthplace.

  • Only a third of Chinese Americans are optimistic that their values and cultures are becoming more widespread and accepted in the United States. The majority either feel that American society has not shifted in either direction when it comes to cultural acceptance (41%) or that acceptance is becoming rarer (18%);
  • Most Chinese Americans feel connected to other people of Chinese descent in the U.S.: 70% state that the well-being of other Chinese Americans affects their individual lives;
  • Roughly three in four Chinese Americans are born outside of the United States.  Although many Chinese Americans are born abroad, the vast majority (83%) are citizens, including 78% of those born outside of the U.S.
Key Recommendations from the Full Report
  • Political candidates and parties need to invest more resources in reaching to and listening to the concerns and needs of Chinese American communities. Chinese Americans are diverse in their policy positions and partisan identities;
  • There needs to be the creation of a pipeline to identify, recruit, and train Chinese American candidates for office, as our findings show support for more descriptive and substantive representation to address anti-Asian hate and other needs of Chinese Americans;
  • Increased representation from the Chinese American community may help fight against discriminatory legislation seeking to prohibit property ownership by Chinese citizens, as well as other insidious forms of encoded racism.
  • Greater policy and enforcement efforts need to be made to reduce discrimination against Chinese Americans and Asian Americans more broadly;
  • Greater legislative and administrative efforts also need to be made to collect discrimination and hate crime incident data, especially in disaggregating across racial and ethnic groups;
  • Policymakers and vested advocacy groups need to be cognizant of, and work to alleviate, the underreporting of acts of hate and discrimination experienced by older and less English-proficient Chinese Americans;
  • There needs to be greater investment into mental health services and disbursement of mental health resources to Chinese American communities. Particular attention should be paid to Chinese who are of limited English proficiency, as research has identified limited English-speaking individuals to be less likely to seek mental health resources and experience greater delays in reaching care;
  • There needs to be increased sensitivity and bias training for politicians, members of the media, and stakeholders, especially when it comes to discussion of Chinese, Chinese Americans, and U.S.-China relations, which could help reduce the discrimination that Chinese and Asian Americans experience at the hands of other Americans;

Survey Methodology  
Committee of 100 partnered with NORC at the University of Chicago to reach a sample of 504 Chinese American adults using NORC’s probability-based Amplify AAPI survey panel.  Participants were asked 49 questions about: cultural identity and acceptance in the U.S., experiences with discrimination, opinions about how violence against Chinese Americans is being addressed, political engagement, views toward presidential candidates, positions on a wide array of pertinent policy issues, and opinions on U.S.-China relations and the downstream effects of the countries’ relations. Participants were given the option to take the survey over the phone in English, Mandarin, or Cantonese, or online in English, simplified Chinese, or traditional Chinese. The data were weighted across age, gender, age-by-gender, census region, education, and nativity, benchmarked by the American Community Survey’s 2022 5-year data.

Acknowledgment
Committee of 100 and NORC at the University of Chicago are thankful for the contributions of Dr. Vivien Leung, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Santa Clara University and Dr. Nathan Kar Ming Chan, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Loyola Marymount University. Both contributed their academic expertise in the questionnaire’s design and collaborated with Committee of 100 in analyzing the data, drafting reports, and presenting findings and recommendations.  Committee of 100 would also like to thank Dr. Sam Collitt, Research and Data Scientist at Committee of 100 for his leadership in the project overall.

Committee of 100 and NORC at the University of Chicago are also grateful for the participation and support of the Advisory Group members on this project, whose knowledge and expertise across the fields of academia and civic engagement served to guide the project’s development and implementation: Gordon H. Chang, Professor, Stanford University; Daphne Kwok, Vice President, Office of Diversity, Equity & Inclusion, Asian American & Pacific Islander Audience Strategy at AARP; and Jeremy Wu, PhD, Founder and Co-Organizer, APA Justice.

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