While the overall issue of immigration is highly controversial and emotional, I’ve explained before that everyone should be able to agree that it’s a very good idea to bring in people who can be expected to increase per-capita economic output.
The good news is that we have some policies designed to make this happen, including the H-1B visa for skilled workers and the EB-5 visa for job-creating investors. And if the data on median income for certain immigrant groups is any indication, we’re getting some good results.
Today, motivated in part by the fact that I’ll be participating next month in a conference in London on the topic of “economic citizenship” and therefore having to prepare for that discussion, let’s take a closer look at the EB-5 policy and why it’s a smart approach (by the way, I’m allowed to share a few discounted registrations since I’m a speaker, so contact me if you’re interested in the London event).
To put things in context, we’ll begin by reviewing a four-author study published by the National Bureau of Economic Research that looks at the growing effort by many nations to attract highly productive and capable immigrants.
Highly skilled workers play a central and starring role in today’s knowledge economy. Talented individuals make exceptional direct contributions—including breakthrough innovations and scientific discoveries—and coordinate and guide the actions of many others, propelling the knowledge frontier and spurring economic growth.
In this process, the mobility of skilled workers becomes critical to enhancing productivity. …In the 2013 World Population Policies report, 40 percent of countries reported policies to raise immigration of high-skilled workers, a large increase from 22 percent in 2005. …For recipient countries, high-skilled immigration is often linked to clusters of technology and knowledge production that are certainly important for local economies and are plausibly important at the national level. …When it comes to talented foreigners, a number of countries…implement recruiting programs. …Canada has been very active in targeting skilled migrants who are denied or frustrated by the H-1B visa system in the United States, even taking out ads on billboards in the United States to attract such migrants.
By the way, I can’t resist observing that the authors recognize that highly talented (and therefore highly compensated) people are very important for economic growth. Based on the tax policies they advocate, that’s something politicians such as Hillary Clinton have a hard time understanding. Heck, upper-income taxpayers are the ones who finance the lion’s share of big government, so you’d think leftist politicians would be slapping them on their backs rather than across their faces.
But I digress. Let’s look at what the study says about migration by those most capable of producing growth.
Observed migration flows are the result of a complex tangle of multinational firms and other employers pursuing scarce talent, governments and other gatekeepers trying to manage these flows with policies, and individuals seeking their best options given the constraints imposed upon them. …The number of migrants with a tertiary degree rose nearly 130 percent from 1990 to 2010, while low skilled (primary educated) migrants increased by only 40 percent during that time. A pattern is emerging in which these high-skilled migrants are departing from a broader range of countries and heading to a narrower range of countries—in particular, the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada, and Australia. …More than half of the high-skilled technology workers and entrepreneurs in Silicon Valley are foreign-born. …host countries may end up with high concentrations of high-skilled immigrants in particular occupations. For example, immigrants account for some 57 percent of scientists residing in Switzerland, 45 percent in Australia, and 38 percent in the United States (Franzoni et al. 2012).
In the United States, 27 percent of all physicians and surgeons and over 35 percent of current medical residents were foreign born in 2010. Immigrants also accounted for over 35 percent of recent enrollments in STEM fields, with very high proportions in specific areas like Electrical Engineering (70 percent), Computer Science (63 percent) and Economics (55 percent)… The global migration of inventors and the resulting concentration in a handful of countries have been particularly well documented. …the global migration rate of inventors in 2000 stood at 8.6 percent, at least 50 percent greater in share terms than the average for high-skilled workers as a whole. Figure 4 builds on WIPO global patent filings from 2001-2010. The United States has received an enormous net surplus of inventors from abroad.
The authors then consider the policies that different nations adopt in their search for GDP-enhancing immigrants.
…we then review the “gatekeepers” for global talent flows. At the government level, we compare the points-based skilled migration regimes as historically implemented by Canada and Australia with the employment-based policies used in the United States through mechanisms like the H-1B visa program. …The exceptional rise in the number of high-skilled migrants to OECD countries is the result of several forces, including increased efforts to attract them by policymakers as they recognize the central role of human capital in economic growth, positive spillovers generated by skill agglomeration, declines in transportation and communication costs, and rising pursuit of foreign education by young people. Among the resulting effects are the doubling of the share of the tertiary-educated in the labor force and fierce competition among countries hoping to attract talent. …One can explain certain aspects of current high-skilled migration patterns using this model. For example, the United States has a very wide earnings distribution and low tax levels and progressivity, especially compared to most source countries, including many high-income European countries. As a result, we can see why the United States would attract more high-skilled migrants…relative to other high-income countries.
By the way, I can’t resist making one minor correction. While we generally have lower taxes than other developed nations, we actually have a very “progressive” tax system. But US-style progressivity is the result of very low taxes on lower- and middle-income workers (no value-added tax, for instance), not unusually steep taxes on higher-income workers.
Returning to our main topic , the authors explain that developed nations either use a points-based system or an employment-based system when seeking to facilitate more high-skilled immigration.
Here’s how the the points-based system works.
Canada and Australia are prominent examples of countries that implement points-based systems for skilled migration. These programs select individuals based upon their observable education, language skills, work experience, and existing employment arrangements. …In the Canadian example, migrants need to collect 67 points across six categories. In terms of education, for example, 15 points are awarded for one-year post-secondary diploma, trade certificate or apprenticeship, compared to 25 for a doctorate degree. With regards work experience, six or more years of applicable experience receive 15 points, compared to 9 points for just one year of experience.
And here’s information on the employment-based approach, with the US being an obvious example.
The United States is the most cited example of a country that uses an employer-driven program for highskilled immigration, with the H-1B and L1 visas as primary categories (Kerr et al. 2015a). The H-1B visa allows US companies to temporarily employ skilled foreigners in “specialty occupations,” defined to be those demanding application of specialized knowledge like engineering or accounting. …Virtually all H-1B holders have a bachelor’s degree or higher and about 70% of the visas in recent years went to STEM-related occupations. India is by far the largest source country, accounting for about two-thirds of H-1B recipients in recent years. …most real-world regimes combine different features of points-based and employment-driven systems.
But the study notes that America also has a special system for bringing in ostensible superstars. Sort of a points system for the super talented.
Superstar talent rarely competes for H-1B visas, for example, but instead gains direct access to the United States through O1 temporary visas for extraordinary ability and direct green card applications of the EB-1 level for those with even more exceptional talent. …In effect, the US operates a points system for individuals with truly exceptional talents such as Nobel Prize winners, superstar athletes and musicians.
Now let’s turn the EB-5 program, which is another way that the United States seeks to attract those capable of making big economic contributions.
In part because the natural inefficiency of government creates opportunities for corruption in implementation, the EB-5 program has become very controversial. Some lawmakers even want the entire program to lapse when its authorization expires in December.
At the risk of understatement, I hope they don’t throw the baby out with the bathwater.
The Brookings Institution notes that Senators Chuck Grassley (R-IA) and Patrick Leahy (D-VT) want to impose stricter rules and micro-manage how the investment occurs.
It also raises the minimum investment amount to $800,000 within a [targeted employment area] and $1.2 million otherwise. Most important for reaching the program’s economic development goals, however, are the bill’s new rules on defining TEAs. …The bill would revise the TEA definition to include rural areas, closed military bases, or single census tracts within metro areas with an unemployment rate at 150 percent of the national average. To further increase the effect of EB-5 financing, at least 50 percent of the job creation would have to be within the metro area, or within the county in which a rural TEA is located.
The business community doesn’t object to some stricter standards, as reported by The Hill, but wants the program to remain and wants it made permanent.
A coalition of business groups is pushing Congress to permanently renew a controversial investor visa program before it expires in September. …In a letter shared with The Hill on Thursday, those groups called on lawmakers to renew the EB-5 investor visa program with bolstered security and anti-fraud checks, adjustments to highly criticized investment incentives and streamlined visa processing. “Congress must not let this important job-creating program lapse, in large measure because of the immediate negative consequences to U.S. businesses and projects counting on EB-5 investment to create jobs for Americans,” wrote the groups to the Senate and House Judiciary committees. …The EB-5 program is responsible for more than $15 billion in investment and 100,000 jobs between 2005 and 2010, the coalition says.
Ike Brannon, writing for the Weekly Standard, worries that politicians will undermine the positive impact of the program with some back-door central planning.
That EB-5 program has succeeded at its intended purpose is not in dispute: A Brookings Institution study estimated that the program has created nearly 100,000 jobs along with over $5 billion of new investment since its inception. The current EB-5 program technically consists of two different pieces: The first is the original EB-5 visa program, which Congress enacted in 1990. Its intent was to help American business compete for foreign investment with countries like Canada and Australia, which had similar investor programs in place. …The overriding intent of the program has always been about job creation, anywhere and everywhere. Senator Paul Simon, a sponsor of the original EB-5 program, took care to emphasize that its purpose was first and foremost to attract entrepreneurs and spur job creation, noting that “neither the Senate nor the House bill established any sort of criteria about the type of business investment…As long as the employment goal is met, it is unnecessary to needlessly regulate the type of business or the character of the investment.”
But politicians love the “needlessly regulate,” so the EB-5 system has lots of red tape and Ike fears it may get even more.
Congress nonetheless attempted to spur some sort of geographic balance-cum-urban development with the creation of Target Employment Areas [TEAs], which consist of areas with high unemployment rates or rural areas outside the boundary of any city or town with a population over 20,000. In a TEA, the necessary investment need only be $500,000, so long as it creates the requisite number of jobs. …The problem with a federal top-down approach of this sort is that such a constraint could limit the efficacy of the program. …imposing a new rule that restricts how states designate Targeted Employment Areas will only make EB-5 more of a political football than it already is. Creating a welter of restrictions about where such investment can and cannot go would likely dampen the economic impact of the program.
A columnist for Forbes explains why the program should continue.
The EB-5 immigration visa may be the best immigration program the U.S. has to offer. Foreign investors…are putting up a minimum of $500,000 to renew and rebuild rundown urban areas and create jobs. It’s a legal way in for the kind of immigrant, a fortunate one, that tends to contribute to the neighborhood by bringing in money and jobs. …“EB-5 has economic benefits that doesn’t stop at the five hundred thousand dollars they need to invest to participate,” says Julian Montero, a partner in the Miami law office of Arnstein & Lehr. “It’s just the beginning of a more significant investment that will be made by these families when the come here. They’re going to private schools. They’re making good income. They’re paying taxes. And most of them start other businesses once here.” …The EB-5 has become a way for developers to attract foreign capital at low, project finance-style structured interest rates because the people giving the money are getting a prize: the right to live, work and study in the United States.
Perhaps most notably, even the International Monetary Fund recognizes the advantages of this type of program.
…economic residency programs were recently launched across a wide range of (generally much larger) European countries, including Bulgaria, France, Hungary, Ireland, the Netherlands, Portugal, and Spain. Almost half of EU member states now have a dedicated immigrant investor route. Also known as golden visa programs, these arrangements give investors residency rights…some advanced economies, such as Canada, the United Kingdom, and the United States, have had immigrant investor programs since the late 1980s or early 1990s, offering a route to citizenship in exchange for specific investment conditions… The inflows of funds to countries from these programs can be substantial, with far-reaching macroeconomic implications for nearly every sector.
The IMF article includes a helpful summary of nations that have programs to attract investors.
The bottom line is that there are many high-income and high-wealth people in the world (including the “super-entrepreneurs“) who would like to move to places that offer more stability, security, and opportunity. This creates a potential win-win situation for both the people migrating and the recipient nations.
The United States is already a big beneficiary of economic-based migration, but we could reap even greater benefits with a more sensible, streamlined, and expanded EB-5 system.
P.S. Zooming out to the broader issue of immigration and whether people want to come to the United States for the wrong reason, Professor Tyler Cowen of George Mason University has a very intriguing proposal to have open immigration with nations such as Denmark that have bigger welfare states than America.
P.P.S. Today’s column is about economic-based immigration. There’s also the issue of economic-based emigration. Sadly, the United States policy on allowing people to leave is even worse than France’s system.
P.P.P.S. If you want to enjoy some migration-related humor, we have a video about Americans emigrating to Peru and a story about American leftists escaping to Canada.
P.P.P.P.S. Remember to contact me if you’re interested in the London conference.
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] because of their entrepreneurial skills and work ethic, immigrants from many nations wind up earning more than native-born […]
[…] because of their entrepreneurial skills and work ethic, immigrants from many nations wind up earning more than native-born […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] because of their entrepreneurial skills and work ethic, immigrants from many nations wind up earning more than native-born […]
[…] because of their entrepreneurial skills and work ethic, immigrants from many nations wind up earning more than native-born […]
[…] because of their entrepreneurial skills and work ethic, immigrants from many nations wind up earning more than native-born […]
[…] because of their entrepreneurial skills and work ethic, immigrants from many nations wind up earning more than native-born […]
[…] because of their entrepreneurial skills and work ethic, immigrants from many nations wind up earning more than native-born […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] are not included in this chart, but I would be very surprised if they were not among America’s high-earning immigrant […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] because of their entrepreneurial skills and work ethic, immigrants from many nations wind up earning more than native-born […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] because of their entrepreneurial skills and work ethic, immigrants from many nations wind up earning more than native-born […]
[…] because of their entrepreneurial skills and work ethic, immigrants from many nations wind up earning more than native-born […]
[…] think it’s great when immigrants add more dynamism and entrepreneurship to our […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] The good news is that the United States is attracting more millionaires than it’s losing (perhaps because of the EB-5 program). […]
[…] That being said, not all inbound investment is created equal. I’m delighted when foreigners buy stock and bond. I’m very happy when they make direct investments (one of the reasons I like the EB-5 visa program). […]
[…] about the nations that explicitly seek to attract new residents? Especially new residents that can help boost the economy with new jobs and […]
[…] the underlying concept is good. If we want more prosperity, America should join in the competition to attract economically successful […]
[…] to any immigration (even from high-skilled people) means that Japan can’t compensate (as America has to some degree) for low birth rates by expanding its […]
[…] to any immigration (even from high-skilled people) means that Japan can’t compensate (as America has to some degree) for low birth rates by expanding its […]
[…] to any immigration (even from high-skilled people) means that Japan can’t compensate (as America has to some degree) for low birth rates by expanding its […]
[…] to any immigration (even from high-skilled people) means that Japan can’t compensate (as America has to some degree) for low birth rates by expanding its […]
[…] to any immigration (even from high-skilled people) means that Japan can’t compensate (as America has to some degree) for low birth rates by expanding its […]
[…] to any immigration (even from high-skilled people) means that Japan can’t compensate (as America has to some degree) for low birth rates by expanding its […]
[…] Immigration is another difference between Japan and the United States. It is quite difficult for foreigners to live and work in Japan. Our immigration laws are not exemplary, of course, but at least the United States is relatively open to foreigners who want to contribute to our economy. This is good news, both because new blood slows down our demographic decline and because we attract a lot of high-income entrepreneurial talent. […]
“Milton Friedman himself said explicitly that as a libertarian he believed absolutely in the economic benefit of free flows of international human labor, but that THIS PRINCIPLE DOES NOT WORK WHEN ONE HAS A WELFARE STATE.”
_______________________________________________________________
“Germany: Muslim migrant with four wives and 23 children claims $389,000 a year in benefits”
BY CHRISTINE WILLIAMS
https://www.jihadwatch.org/2016/10/germany-muslim-migrant-with-four-wives-and-23-children-claims-389000-a-year-in-benefits
we must solve our own problems… and not look to the rest of the world to help us with them… if american companies don’t have the workers they need to compete in the world marketplace… they should become engaged in the educational system… we have plenty of young people willing to do whatever is necessary to acquire marketable skills… but our incompetent and foolish political class wants to use our educational system as a tool of indoctrination… rather than as a means of providing our young people with the capacity to make a living… I refuse to believe that a a child born in Mumbai or Hong Kong is smarter… more talented… or more capable than a child born on the south side of Chicago… cultural diversity has always been a hallmark of American society… as has innovation and the capacity to contribute to the welfare of humanity… our problem in recent times has been systemic flaws which have allowed the erosion of our human capital… and minimized our competitive vigor… it is unlikely that we’ll import a foreign national that will revolutionize a segment of our business community… or make us more competitive in the international marketplace… we have a strategic thinking problem and a crisis of leadership… not a staffing problem…
10 million euros to get into France!
Usually I love your posts, but I think you are dead wrong on this one. I think you are inverting cause and effect here. I have two Stanford degrees and grew up in Cupertino, CA about a mile from Apple Computer HQ. My hometown is literally unrecognizeable. There has been a wholesale population replacement. In the uber-pricey regions of Woodside, Portola Valley, Atherton, Palo Alto one still sees the old-line population. But Cupertino, Sunnyvale, San Jose (where decent housing costs “merely” $1 or 2 million) have entire regions where multi-generational families arrived in the last couple of decades at most have entirely replaced the earlier populations.
Silicon Valley is the exciting epicenter of engineering/tech and Americans would EASILY re-locate there from all across the country for high-paying, meaningful jobs in the exciting tech sector, whether hardware, software, social media or business. You cannot convince me that Americans around the country are incapable and uninterested in these jobs. They have been and continue to be pushed out of the running (or, in some cases, the jobs themselves) in favor of cheaper imported H1B labor.
Look at the countries listed above “White Americans” for average HH income. It reads like the Third World dream of Ted Kennedy and the 1960’s Democrats who destroyed and reengineered our immigration policy. That is the result of Social Engineering & explicit political agendas — not some natural hierarchy of intellectual superiority of the Guayanese, Nigerian and Palestinian populations.
Are we to believe that in addition to ostensible American incompetence and refusal to work in the highly-paid STEM sector, that similarly Russians, Norwegians, Germans, Brits, Dutch, etc. etc. have no interest in living in fabulous California with a high-paying job, great weather, and beautiful natural resources? Or that these highly developed countries have no skilled talent to offer?
These are ridiculous arguments we’ve heard for years from self-interested players to provide cover for their intentionally obscured financial and/or political objectives. They provide a rationale, but they are not persuasive arguments. The vast majority of those high-wage earners from the developing world are NOT net-GDP producers for the U.S. once they are evaluated in the specific context of our immigration policies of the last 50 years. Because the 1960s decimation of our immigration policies also created the insane endless daisy chain of mandatory prioritization of “family reunification” — virtually everyone of these multi-generational families become a never-ending daisy chain that imports huge consumers of US-taxpayer-funded welfare & entitlement programs. The SF Bay Area is filled with non-English-speaking taxpayer-funded senior adult daycare programs, community centers, etc. with taxpayer-funded transportation to and from taxpayer-subsidized housing where the extended family enjoys taxpayer-funded food stamps. Nieces and nephews of that highly-paid imported engineer fill the taxpayer-funded public school & eventually attend the taxpayer-funded community colleges, University of California, Cal-State University, etc. systems while benefitting from the scholarships, grants and admissions preferences afforded those who tick the “diversity” boxes.
None of this even factors in the opportunity cost of jobs, incomes & career paths lost to Americans born and raised here who are not considered for or are pushed out of jobs in favor of less expensive and typically more pliable imported workers.
Milton Friedman himself said explicitly that as a libertarian he believed absolutely in the economic benefit of free flows of international human labor, but that THIS PRINCIPLE DOES NOT WORK WHEN ONE HAS A WELFARE STATE. That is one major reason why contemporary immigration is no longer the net benefit and great social builder that it once was for this nation back when people moved here and made their own way, sponsored by family or friends, or they returned to their country of origin.
Milton Friedman and I disagree with the WSJ, Rupert Murdoch, the US Chamber of Commerce and you on this effusive & willfully blind celebration of context-free immigration without reference to the full economic/social/political history, evidence, impacts, and contemporary distortions.
Let the name-calling commence. . . .
[…] Dan Mitchell on attracting high quality, job-creating immigrants. […]
Graphs and texts are superimposed, making it difficult to read.
RH
On Sun, Oct 23, 2016 at 8:15 AM, International Liberty wrote:
> Dan Mitchell posted: “While the overall issue of immigration is highly > controversial and emotional, I’ve explained before that everyone should be > able to agree that it’s a very good idea to bring in people who can be > expected to increase per-capita economic output. The good” >
I admit that I skimmed over your article, so you may have addresses this point.
You talk about attracting “high-skilled job-creating immigrants,” but what about the people who are already here? White Americans are at the bottom of your first chart — what will be done to help them move upwards and become successful? Or, is it your contention that existing American citizens just need drugs and welfare for their worthless lives?
I believe that charity begins at home, and I’m more concered about improving the lives of people who were born here instead of people from the other side of the world. Get out of your ivory tower and look at the people here
Rethinking Immigration
The present immigration issue is as big an issue as was the decision to invade Iraq. It divides rather than unites the country. Rather than continue fueling it with the heated rhetoric of politics and the impending elections, we need a breather. Step back and let “our better angels” work on a solution. The problem needs to be parsed into separate actionable pieces and analyzed.
Begin with the economic. The demand for labor here in the U.S., and the price industries are willing to pay for it, defies the control systems presently installed. The magnet of economic opportunity here is just too strong to hold back the foreign workforce yearning for opportunity. U.S. industries want what these foreign workers offer – labor at prices that allow them to profit, compete economically, survive, and grow. The present trade in illegal drugs mirrors the immigrant industry. Many want it, and get it, despite massive expenditures by government to save U.S. consumers from following their “evil angels.”
A few facts. To cross the border, traffickers in illegal workers, “coyotes” to the cognoscenti, are charging $7,500 to $10,000 per passage. For that, an “illegal” needs to travel perhaps a month to the border, cross rivers in rafts when most do not know how to swim, suffer trailer rides of packed humanity for days without food or facilities, walk across deserts, and risk their entire enterprise only to be frustrated by a diligent border patrol. That kind of a motivated worker is to die for.
On the other hand, U.S. industries present a demand for workers not readily available in sufficient numbers at the wages they are offering to U.S. citizens. An unemployed American is not prepared to give up his leisure, poor and substandard as the “safety net” assures, for the pay illegals are accepting. It isn’t much, but $10 to $15 an hour is a lot better than the $3 to $5 a day back home. Recognize also that, in addition, the 4 to 8 percent of the U.S. workforce defined as unemployed just don’t have the motivation to do the hard work that immigrants are willing to accept at the risk of losing their lives and meager fortune. Put another way, if you build a barrier, the “illegals” and an enterprising American industry will beat it.
What to do. First, re-frame the question. How do we meet the demand for labor here without increasing unemployment or a reduction in wages? A simple answer is to limit supply (immigrants) as unemployment increases, say, above 6 percent. There are multiple markets with different demands and wage rates for workers with skills. The system for authorizing the number of immigrant visas can respond by authorizing visas by skill and wage rate.
Say that there is a market value for permission to immigrate to the U.S. (There is, witness what illegals are willing to pay already.) Say further that a market for buying and selling visas to the U.S. is legally recognized and monitored.. A potential immigrant or employer could bid for a worker visa(s). The supply of visas would be based on the demand by skill for workers manifested by U.S. industries without triggering wage reductions or increased unemployment. This needs elaboration, but you get the idea.
Interestingly, were a market for visas to exist, those already in line for visas could be compensated by giving them a priority claim for a visa under the market system. They could have the option of selling their position in line to late arrivals. Those presently illegal in the U.S.could bid for a visa to become legal entries from those in the front of the line.
Let’s take on the security issue. Of all the misdirected issues and proposed legislation, this one takes the cake. Here we have the government defending the ramparts of the border(s) while any terrorist with an I.Q. of 50 can circumvent it. Come as a tourist. Come as a student. Those types of visas can be had. Remember that all of the terrorist that acted out their fervor on both World Trade Center attacks got into the country legally.
And what about all those terrorist already in the country, many of them home grown? There are those like the domestic Kansas City terrorists, the environmental terrorist of today, the anarchy terrorist of the 60’s, even criminal “terrorist” working the streets selling killer drugs, and violent sex. Our response to these types of terrorist groups is to look away and wait for them to act before we harness our domestic protective services to seek them out.
More to the point, we actually seek to disarm our security systems in key ways by making it difficult or impossible for them to seek out such cells using profiling systems that work on existing data mining technology to scan for groups or individuals that have behavior patterns of criminal terrorists. Our paranoia over the protection of privacy is such that we will not let government do what private industry already does on their own with impunity.
Think of it. We distrust our government which we own and can mandate, but give a free hand to all other organizations. You think this isn’t’ true? Well check out the information that marketing organizations have on your consumer behavior. Check out the financial records credit organizations and your bank have on your economic value. Check out what political operatives have on your voting behavior, registration, and past record of contributions. Hell, go to the internet and google your name. You’d be “surprised” how public your life is. But allow government to pursue terrorist using these existing data bases, and you, the media, and politicians go bonkers. Our paranoia over privacy is not only illusory, it is crippling our efforts to protect us from terrorist and the common criminal.
For a moment, think of the information the government holds and retains in its files on you as an individual. It has your income and tax statements from the time you began working. It knows where you worked and where you lived. It has your criminal record if you have one. Under Medicaid and Medicare, it knows who your doctor is, what treatments you’ve received, and the medicines you take. But this data cannot be accessed legally for purposes other than for the service it was set up to serve. Actually, there are specific exceptions authorized by law. Tracking on fathers defaulting on child support is one of them. There should be more.
Why we won’t use these data for identifying and tracking criminals and terrorists is a monument to our exaggerated paranoia. I mean, come on! Those charged with keeping publicly maintained files have a remarkable record of successfully limiting their access. They have developed systems for identifying when they are accessed illegally and by whom. And the law allows the government to come down hard on violators with jail sentences and fines. So effective have been such safeguards that the private sector has had to develop entire systems that duplicate that which public systems had already. Your credit report is an example, .
What we need is to “get over it.” Information on Individuals isn’t and never was private. What we need to do is to authorize government to access and expand their use of existing machine readable data for the purpose of searching out terrorist and criminal elements, among other uses. We need to go further. To facilitate these authorized uses, it is critical that a national identification system be established.
The need for a national identification system is needed not just for purposes of security. Other uses become possible and could be authorized. Obviously the system could allow for the registration of permanent or temporary immigrants, and could provide the system for employers to validate the identification of individuals eligible for employment. In addition, the system could be an accurate system for maintaining eligible voter registers. It could be the basis for an efficient drivers license system for the states. It could be the locus for individual medical records with an ability to cut costs for administration and medical care resulting from unnecessary repetitive services, over medication, and errors in diagnosis.. Should individuals wish to limit access to their records, access could be restricted subject to the approval by individuals or the courts. Violations could be subjected to heavy fines and jail sentences. Such safeguards already exist and are being used to protect your data stored, for example, by the Social Security Administration. I know, having help manage the system. And think of the budgetary savings through the elimination of duplicate data bases, systems, and bureaucracies. That, like the stars, are “billions and billions.”
Let’s now focus on the politics of immigration. What is at play is the additional cost that immigrants allegedly represent to our expenditures for public education, health, and other safety net services,. What is also at play is the country’s ability to absorb and indoctrinate newly arriving immigrants to American values and systems. What is at play is the right to vote.
Let’s take on the additional budgetary expenditures. Recent articles have claimed that immigrant worker represents an annual cost to the government of about $20,000. Let’s accept that estimate. At the same time let’s also recognize that these workers probably earn about $20,000 to $30,000 annually. If they are on a payroll, they would be paying federal and state taxes, and may even be paying contributions to the Social Security system. If they don’t file an annual income tax report, they get no refund. If they are using a false Social Security number, they are contributing to a benefit system they may never receive. That contribution alone could amount to about 15 percent of their wages, split between them and their employer. They are paying sales taxes imposed by the states. They are paying the gasoline tax should they be running a car. All this suggests that they are not having a totally free ride on the economy.
We also might recognize that an able bodied worker isn’t costless. Growing up for 18 years costs. We pay at least $10,000 annually per individual from public and private sources for each of our 18 year olds. More likely it is double that. That means that $180,000 to $360,000 has been invested per able bodied American. We pay nothing for the immigrant. At least ten years would have to pass before the “capital” costs for a migrant would be “re-paid.”
Now, if a worker is educated, say, with a BA, that probably represents an additional expenditure minimally of roughly $20,000 a year for four years, e.g., $80,000 more per U.S. BA. The immigrant with a BA is free. Take it a step further. A physician requires four to eight years of additional training that probably costs more than $40,000 a year. Add $160,000 to $320,000. And then there are all those biochemist, computer scientist, nurses, engineers…… Suffice to say, immigrants at these levels of training are a steal.
But can we risk the mutation of our culture by letting all these non-Americans to enter the country? Well, let’s think about it. Is the absorption of 12 million “illegals” too big a bite to take in one fell swoop? First off, recognize that we already had that meal and seem not to be suffering from indigestion. These “illegals”are 1 out of 25 people in the country, and many of them do not stay. Looking back three generations, most of what we now call Americans came from similar immigrant roots. The country’s ability to shape past immigrants and their children into citizens is the American phenomena. Those “illegals” who will decide to stay have already put a lot of their working lives into getting along in this country. Many have learned to speak English. Some have raised families, and have paid taxes for years. In a generation or two, their children won’t speak their native language, and probably won’t want to. They would resemble bedrock of Americans going to work, going to Church, buying houses, eating, sleeping and having kids. You won’t be able to tell the difference between them and your neighbor. They already are.
What “illegals” – and we – need is a way to mend a mistake they – and we – made years ago. They will have to pay a price to become “legal.” We, on the other hand, have to recognize that we turned a blind eye to their existence and let them in to serve us. Both of us need to make amends by defining an acceptable the path to “legality.” The overwhelming majority of “illegals” will likely salute and take it.
Finally, there is the matter of citizenship and the right to vote. This privileges for a time may play a part of the price of atonement for illegal entry into the country. But, once the debt has been paid for illegal entry, a workable procedure can be fashioned for them to earn legal immigrant status, Citizenship for these working residents in time, and under the right conditions, may ultimately be justified. As willing workers, they are the “salt of earth.”. Many already are “Americans.” They ought to have the opportunity to earn the right to be citizens.
Jaime L. Manzano
Federal Senior Executive and Foreign Service Officer (Retired)
Bethesda, MD
301 365 4781
Noticeably missing on both charts is Mexico, and Central & South American countries, wondering why??