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New Report Shines Light on the Economics of Illegal Immigration

by Michele Waslin posted on Friday, 4 December 20093 Comments

migrant labor New Report Shines Light on the Economics of Illegal ImmigrationYesterday, the Migration Policy Institute (MPI)t New Report Shines Light on the Economics of Illegal Immigration held an event aimed at dispelling some of the most common myths about illegal immigrants and the U.S. economy and making the case that enforcement-only policies are not cost effective. MPI also released The Economics and Policy of Illegal Immigration in the United Statest New Report Shines Light on the Economics of Illegal Immigration, written by Gordon Hanson, a professor of economics at UC-San Diego.

In his paper and in his remarks, Hansont New Report Shines Light on the Economics of Illegal Immigration found that:

  • Unauthorized immigrants are a large part of the low-skilled U.S. labor force. While the number of U.S. born working-age adults without a high school diploma has dropped dramatically since 1960, there are currently about 8.3 million unauthorized immigrants in the labor force, and about half have less than a high school degree. They account for 20% of working-age adults with less than a high-school degree in the U.S. They have a significant presence is some industries, such as farming, construction, and food preparation. According to Hanson, “An enforcement-only strategy that did not facilitate legal labor inflows but which sought to cut low-skilled immigration drastically would hurt these industries.”
  • Illegal immigration responds to market conditions in ways that legal immigration does not. Unlike the number of green cards and temporary work visas which are set by Congress, the number of unauthorized workers is responsive to the labor market. The best evidence is that the number of undocumented immigrants entering the U.S. has decreased in recent months due to the lack of available jobs.
  • The overall impact of illegal immigration on the U.S. economy is small. According to Hanson, “Illegal immigration produces a tiny net gain to the U.S. economy after subtracting U.S.-born workers’ losses from U.S. employers’ gains. And if we account for the small fiscal burden that unauthorized immigrants impose, the overall economic benefit is close enough to zero to be essentially a wash.”
  • Enforcement against illegal immigration is expensive. The U.S. spends approximately $15 billion annually enforcing immigration laws. A simple cost-benefit analysis indicates that the high level of spending on enforcement is not justified.

In their remarks, MPI policy analyst Marc Rosenblum and Jeanne Butterfield of the National Immigration Forum largely agreed with Hanson, but took the argument a step further, making a strong case for legalization and comprehensive immigration reform. Rosenblumt New Report Shines Light on the Economics of Illegal Immigration pointed out that the net fiscal impact of illegal immigrants improves over time—immigrants are not only workers, but consumers, entrepreneurs, and investors, and their contributions improve over time. Furthermore, the cost of removing illegal workers from the U.S.t New Report Shines Light on the Economics of Illegal Immigration goes beyond the enforcement budget. Other studiest New Report Shines Light on the Economics of Illegal Immigration have pointed out that more enforcement could result in fewer jobs for U.S. citizens and less tax revenues for the government.

Butterfieldt New Report Shines Light on the Economics of Illegal Immigration added that there are additional hidden costs of the status quo—a broken immigration systemt New Report Shines Light on the Economics of Illegal Immigration. Employers pay for complying with harsh enforcement strategies, illegal immigrants endure exploitation because of their lack of legal status, and state and local governments disproportionately bear the burden of any related fiscal costs.

michelle waslin 150x150 New Report Shines Light on the Economics of Illegal Immigration

Today’s report and discussion are examples of the thoughtful, reasonable, analysis and conversation that is so needed in the current climate surrounding the national immigration debate. This complex issue cannot and should not be whittled down to simplistic anti-immigrant versus pro-amnesty labels. We hope that Members of Congress read the reports that are emerging and hold equally thought-provoking conversations.

Michele Waslin

Republished with permission from Immigration Impact.

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3 Comments »

  • Gaga 4 Dada says:

    “Illegal immigration produces a tiny net gain to the U.S. economy after subtracting U.S.-born workers’ losses from U.S. employers’ gains……………………….”

    I have been saying this for years.

    Any Economist w/o an ax to grind has always understood that illegal immigration is not a burden to the economy.

    We need to have some sort of sane policy that allows immigrants to work here legally. We also need a path to legalization to those already here, taking into account that penalties too onerous will only convince those already here not to participate. Whether the forces of reaction like it or not illegal immigrants are staked players in this game any attempt to ignore that for political expediency will only result in a continuation of the current situation.

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  • kris.kringle says:

    Why are the “Costs” always ignored in these articles:
    (1) education of children through High School
    (2) Healthcare, usually through hospitals
    (3) Displacement of U.S. Workers, whom must claim unemployment and/or welfare, which could be in those jobs
    (4) benefits from churches / other organizations

    When you take these into account, Illigal immigration causes a great “Net Negative”, not a net positive.

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