ATLANTA — U.S. Latinos can expect to outlive whites by more than two years and blacks by more than seven, government researchers say in a startling report that is the first to calculate Latino life expectancy in this country.
The report released Wednesday is the strongest evidence yet of what some experts call the “Hispanic paradox” — longevity for a population with a large share of poor, undereducated members. A leading theory is that Latinos who manage to immigrate to the U.S. are among the healthiest from their countries.
A Latino born in 2006 could expect to live about 80 years and seven months, the government estimates. Life expectancy for a white is about 78, and for a black, just shy of 73 years.
Researchers have seen signs of Latino longevity for years. But until recently, the government didn’t calculate life expectancy for Latinos as a separate group; they were included among the black and white populations. The new report projecting future life spans is based on death certificates from 2006.
By breaking out the longer-living Latino, the life expectancies for non-Latino whites and blacks both declined slightly, said the report’s author, Elizabeth Arias of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Latinos are the largest, fastest-growing minority in the United States, accounting for 15 percent of the population. An estimated 40 percent of them are immigrants, who in some cases arrived after arduous journeys to do taxing manual labor. It takes a fit person to accomplish that, suggesting that the United States is gaining some of the healthiest people born in Mexico and other countries, said Dr. Peter Muennig of Columbia University’s school of public health who has studied life expectancy in different countries.
Compared to the estimate for all U.S. Latinos, life expectancy is nearly two years lower in Puerto Rico, more than two years lower in Cuba, and more than four years lower in Mexico, according to World Health Organization figures.
However, experts say that immigrant hardiness diminishes within a couple of generations of living here. Many believe it’s because the children of immigrants take up smoking, fast-food diets and other habits blamed for wrecking the health of other ethnic populations.
“The American lifestyle is very sedentary. That’s not a good thing,” said Jane Delgado, president of the National Alliance for Hispanic Health, which focuses on improving health services for Hispanics.



