CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 2013 OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 2013 OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WILL FACTS OR IMMIGRATION MYTHS SHAPE NEW POLICIES?”
Myths will probably not stop
Congress from enacting some major changes in immigration policy this year, but
half a dozen or so common shibboleths may well shape the changes that emerge.
Here are a few: For every immigrant
legalized and able to take a job, one American citizen worker will lose his or
hers. Unauthorized immigrants pay almost no taxes, while costing taxpayers many
billions of dollars. New immigrants are bad for business. Immigrant workers
cause wages to drop, especially unauthorized immigrants. Immigrant workers
cause African-American unemployment to rise.
A host of new academic studies now
shows every one of these widely-believed statements to be false. And there are
reasons why each is untrue.
The most pervasive of these kinds of
anti-immigrant claims – often repeated in Congress and on talk radio – relate
to taxes. Undocumented immigrants pay far less in taxes than they use in
government services, goes the myth, promoted in part by the Washington,
D.C.-based Center for Immigration Studies, which in 2004 claimed immigrant
households cost the federal government $10 billion more than they pay in taxes.
But U.S. Census
figures indicate otherwise. Immigrants in California pay roughly $30 billion a
year in federal taxes, $5.2 billion in state income taxes and $4.6 billion in
sales taxes, while contributing an average of $2,679 to Social Security, about
$540 more than the typical household headed by a U.S.-born citizen (http://www.immigrationpolicy.org/just-facts/new-americans-california). About one-fourth of that tax money
comes from the undocumented. With the national cost of illegal immigration
estimated by anti-illegal immigrant groups at about $30 billion per year, these
figures mean that rather than costing government more than they pay in,
immigrants probably pay more than they use in services.
And that doesn’t include any taxes
paid by businesses owned by U.S. citizens where Latino immigrants of all types
who have arrived since 2000 now spend $310 billion yearly in California alone,
or about $1.6 trillion nationally, according to the Selig Center for Economic
Growth at the University of Georgia.
What about jobs? Rather than costing
Americans work, immigrants actually create more jobs, according to the Immigration
Policy Center, another outfit based in Washington. In California alone, 588,763
Latino immigrant-owned businesses employed more than 458,000 persons of all
ethnicities.
What’s more, immigration – including
unauthorized immigration – tends to drive wages up, not down, according to yet
another study, this one completed in 2007 at UC Davis. “Immigration produced a
4 percent real wage increase (after inflation) for the average native worker,”
said the study, which covered the years 1990-2004.
How can that be? “Immigrant workers
spend their wages in U.S. businesses,” said an Immigration Policy Center
summary. “They buy food, clothes, appliances, cars and much more. Businesses
respond to the presence of these new workers and consumers by investing in new
restaurants, stores and production facilities. Immigrants also are 30 percent
more likely than the native-born to start their own businesses. The end result
is more jobs and more pay for more workers.”
What about immigrants’ effect on
African-Americans? “Cities experiencing the highest rates of immigration tend
to have relatively low or average unemployment rates for African-Americans,”
Saint Louis University economist Jack Strauss concluded in an analysis of
Census findings. “Cities with greater immigration from Latin America experience
lower unemployment rates, poverty rates and higher wages among
African-Americans.”
This may be counter-intuitive, but
it’s probably because Latino newcomers and African-Americans don’t compete for
the same jobs. “Native-born workers take higher-paying jobs that require better
English-language skills,” said the Immigration Policy Center report.
Never mind that all these conclusions
are based either on Census numbers or on peer-reviewed academic research. Facts
will not eliminate immigration shibboleths, because they are based largely on
emotion and fear.
With all this academic and
Census-based information readily available to everyone in Congress, the big
question now is whether it will be myths and misinformation or facts that shape
new immigration policies that just might emerge later this year.
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Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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