W and immigration reform-by National Review and NY Post columnist

kosar

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W THE DEFEATIST

SURRENDER AT THE BORDER

By RICH LOWRY


April 11, 2007

NOT all incremental progress is equal in the eyes of President Bush. When it occurs in Iraq, it is a sign that we need to forge ahead despite all difficulties. When it occurs on our Southern border, it is deemed insufficient and a sign that - to use a favorite GOP phrase - we need to settle on a "surrender date" on immigration enforcement.

That date would be whenever Bush's latest "comprehensive" reform proposal kicked in. He wants to legalize illegal immigrants already here and invite in "temporary" guest workers. When Congress finishes with it, this probably will be another proposal to solve the illegal-immigrant problem by making all immigrants, past and future, legal.

This is the immigration-enforcement version of "declare victory and go home."

And Bush wants to do it just as increased enforcement is - like "the surge" in Baghdad - showing tentative signs of progress. Apprehensions of illegals are down across the border, an indication that fewer of them are coming. Steven Camarota of the Center for Immigration Studies notes that the foreign-born population grew by only 500,000 last year, significantly off the annual pace of growth since 2000.

The administration contradicts itself on enforcement. On the one hand, it touts the success of increased border patrols and occasional workplace raids, because it realizes, politically, that it has to be seen as trying to enforce the laws. On the other hand, it argues that enforcement can't possibly work, so we have to adopt an amnesty and guest-worker program.

The rational response to the promising signs from enforcement would be to do more of it, and to avoid undercutting its early success. But on immigration, the Bushies are - again, to use a term from the Iraq debate - defeatists.

The cost of this defeatism is borne disproportionately by low-skilled, native-born workers and the taxpayers. Flooding the job market with poorly educated immigrants does no favors for low-skilled native workers. It can only serve to depress their wages in what is already a difficult economic environment for them. (Camarota believes a recent uptick in low-skill wages could be related to the slowdown in the flow of foreign workers.)

The burden on taxpayers, meanwhile, is a function of the nature of government benefits. Robert Rector of The Heritage Foundation calculates that low-skill households receive $32,138 in direct government benefits and services, $10,000 more than the average household. These low-skill households pay less than $10,000 a year in taxes, meaning they get three dollars from the government for every dollar paid. Because almost all immigrants from Mexico are low-skilled, they can only add to this fiscal drain.

At least Bush wants to attempt to depress the wages of higher-skilled workers, too: He is proposing to expand the number of H-1B work visas for higher-skilled foreign workers, who tend to get paid less than their native- born counterparts.

Alan Greenspan recently conducted a thought experiment. "Our skilled wages," he said, "are higher than anywhere in the world. If we open a significant window for [foreign] skilled workers, that would suppress the skilled-wage level and end the concentration of income."

Indeed, it would. It also would cause a political revolt. Such a revolt doesn't occur at the lower end of the income scale, because the natural representative of the interests of native low-skilled workers - the Democratic Party - has bought into high levels of immigration in the hopes of getting new voters.

Bush's failings at the border mirror his failings in Iraq. In both places, he underestimated the need for security and order and has undertaken a push for them only belatedly. In both places, he was motivated by a good-hearted belief in the essential "fungibility" of people: He thought that Iraqis naturally would have the same desires as Westerners; and, on the border, he assumes that Mexicans are seamlessly interchangeable with Americans, since they seek employment here.

In Iraq, he has tried to compensate for his mistakes. On the border, he seems hopeless.

comments.lowry@nationalreview.com
 

AR182

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Bush's failings at the border mirror his failings in Iraq. In both places, he underestimated the need for security and order and has undertaken a push for them only belatedly. In both places, he was motivated by a good-hearted belief in the essential "fungibility" of people: He thought that Iraqis naturally would have the same desires as Westerners; and, on the border, he assumes that Mexicans are seamlessly interchangeable with Americans, since they seek employment here.

In Iraq, he has tried to compensate for his mistakes. On the border, he seems hopeless.


i agree 100 % with the above paragraph.....

my main gripe with bush in iraq was not enough troops from the very beginning...& the iraqi borders should have been sealed off from the very beginning...

my gripe with bush is that he is pandering to the corporations who hire these illegals at lower wages than the american worker.....besides putting a wall at the border the gov't should continue raiding companies that hire these illegals....
 

Terryray

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oh brother!

oh brother!

that Lowry piece is filled with so many economic misunderstandings, false assumptions, "calculations" from heavily biased conservative shill organizations---it's hard to know where to begin!


Well, for starters, if you think flooding the market with low-skilled labor leads to wage deflation, then I suppose you think American standards of living peaked with the Jamestown settlement.



"It can only serve to depress their wages" he writes, exposing his comprehensive misunderstanding of the most basic economic tenets. Anyone who makes a fatuous statement like this should no longer be listened to on any economic subject, he obviously not only knows nothing of the subject, but worse---knows the wrong things about it.




funny thing is---it was a darling of conservatives, the economist Julian Simon, who wrote a famous book ("The Ultimate Resource") attempting to educate people on this subject.



What has happened since Jamestown, and is happening now, is that the immigrants help grow the pie so big as to raise thiers and others wages--help create enough wealth that it swamps their negative effect on wages and individual welfare costs. Here's a study done on this in North Carolina.


Here's the Congressional Budget Office's analysis (net costs of legalization close to zero, not $30 billion), and this piece also mentions the ridiculous data assumptions that the Heritage report must make to cook up thier numbers.


Here's a good study on contributions of skilled labor to US economy and competitiveness. (warning, pdf file).


A lot of the high-tech companies and jobs is heavily supported by H1-B folks---just look around the lunchroom at Google. A huge and important growing sector of the economy, of which we should be justly proud the US is a leader in many ways, and creating much wealth and for the nation---but Lowry just speaks of them "depressing wages" here. That's so unfathomably ridiculous, I can barely laugh!


There are numerous studies, in peer-review journals, not shill organizations, on the wages rising among low-skilled workers in many sectors "flooded" with them---but I don't wanna waste more of my time looking up empirical studies that just back up theory and history of the last 200 years of this country. Search yourself.



There are many arguments to be made for stopping the immigrants. Lord knows, all my years in Texas gave me quite an education on it, but most of Lowry's arguments don't cut it.
 

gardenweasel

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i hope you aren`t saying that 12 million illegal immigrants are more of a boon to our economy than a drain,terry.....

because that`s insane...

i might be able to find the study that indicates every low skilled laborer(and that`s all we`re getting across the mexican border),on average costs this country roughly a net of $2700 a year....that`s after taxation...

and i`ve seen them quoted much highrer than that...

we`re importing mexico`s uneducated underclass...their relatives...diseases....drugs......and they`re sending our dollars back home....

i hope you aren`t making the argument that this country is better off with an open border policy....

are those studies considering education,healthcare,welfare,incarceration and american resources(money) being sent south of the border?..

and you can consider the cost in resources and humanity of not shutting down,or at least minimizing the drug traffic that crosses the border... i.d. theft.....

and nobody considers that we are enabling a resource rich country.....enabling the greed and corruption that undermines the mexican economy....

no jobs?...no probs.....just let our underclass lay siege to america...and they can send american wealth southward...

and this is just off the top of my head....
 
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smurphy

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I'm with Terry on this. It's pretty obvious what Bush is doing. He doesn't really want to succeed on the border issues. Politically, he must make it look like he tries, but in reality he does not want to control the border.

That labor is such an integral part of our economy, there is NO national level politician that will actually do anything to control the flow. As long as we grow, it will continue to be that way. Unemployment is as low as it can be even after the swarms take several million jobs.

I'm sure there is a cost that the middle class as always covers, but the overall economy does not boom without all this labor. For better or worse, that's just the reality.
 

gardenweasel

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I'm with Terry on this. It's pretty obvious what Bush is doing. He doesn't really want to succeed on the border issues. Politically, he must make it look like he tries, but in reality he does not want to control the border.

That labor is such an integral part of our economy, there is NO national level politician that will actually do anything to control the flow. As long as we grow, it will continue to be that way. Unemployment is as low as it can be even after the swarms take several million jobs.

I'm sure there is a cost that the middle class as always covers, but the overall economy does not boom without all this labor. For better or worse, that's just the reality.

we agree that bush is an asshole on the subject...but,"the labor is such an integral part of our society"?....

that`s laughable...we`re taking in the unskilled..uneducated...by the millions....and that`s a recipe for disaster.....half of them don`t even want to assimilate...

we should be controlling immigration...allowing only those that can be productive immediately....

who cares if lettuce cost an extra 30 cents...

do you have any idea how much money in in the social security suspense file right now because that don`t know who the hell to credit the earnings to?...it went from like 18.5 billion in the decade of the 90`s to 56 billion for 2000 to 2004!....


they`re going to amend the social security act...."mismatched earnings reports remain in the suspense until ssa obtains evidence to link the unidentified earnings to a valid ssn — a process termed "earnings reinstatement." When SSA encounters reports that don't match its records, SSA goes through an involved, and time-consuming attempt to make a match. Reinstatements can occur any time, even years later.

Immigration reform that provides work authorization, and a pending Social Security Totalization Agreement with Mexico, could mean that a very substantial amount of earnings in the ESF file would be reinstated in the future. Because earnings are used to determine both the number of quarters of coverage worked for insured status, and is used to calculate the initial benefit, this poses a substantial liability to the Social Security Trust Fund worsening its solvency.

Once non-citizen workers obtain a valid SSN, they can provide SSA with evidence of earnings reports from unauthorized employment prior to receiving their SSN. Their earnings will be reinstated under their valid SSN. In addition when a person files for benefits, a SSA employee reviews the earnings record with the worker and assists to establish any earnings that are not shown or are not correctly posted.......



The entire process is done at the taxpayer's expense. Non-citizens who worked under fraudulent or invalid Social Security numbers, are not penalized. This occurs even though the use of a non-valid fraudulent SSN is in violation of 1988 identity theft laws. The 1988 law made it a federal crime when a person "knowingly transfers or uses, without lawful authority, a means of identification of another person with the intent to commit, or to aid or abet, any unlawful activity that constitutes a violation of Federal law, or that constitutes a felony under any applicable State or local law." (15)

Minimal Workplace Enforcement—A Contributing Factor

In 2005 the Government Accountability Office (GAO) released a report documenting the growth of the ESF saying a number of factors contribute to the earnings reports, particularly minimal work site immigration enforcement(16) efforts. The GAO also reported that the percentage of foreign-born persons receiving reinstatements has grown dramatically over time from about 8% in 1986 to nearly 21% in 2003. The country of birth of foreign-born receiving the greatest number reinstatements is Mexico.

The extent of probable illegal work related to such reinstatements has also been growing. "With more recent work years and earnings, the percentage of reinstatements to foreign-born persons with work activity prior to SSN issuance is significantly higher—an average of about 32% of such reinstatement occurring between 1986-2003. Further, in some years, these reinstatements for potentially unauthorized work have been in excess of 50% of all reinstatements to foreign-born recipients," the GAO said.(17)

These trends are likely to continue a rapid climb in years to come. The first jump in the ESF coincided with the big increase in illegal immigration of 1970's. When Congress overhauled immigration laws in 1986, amnesty was offered to immigrants who could prove they were longtime, law-abiding residents. About 3.1 million were legalized, twice as many as the government expected. Because the law had no provisions for any new workers to enter, illegal immigration continued.(8)

High Cost of Illegal Work for Social Security Trust Fund

By 2012, in just five years, the first wave of those former illegal immigrants who came to the U.S. in the 1970's at age 20, and became legal permanent residents in 1986, will turn 62 and old enough to file claims for Social Security. As immigrants draw close to retirement age they are more likely to check their Social Security records and request reinstatement of any unauthorized earnings for which they have evidence. This comes during the same period that Baby Boomers start retiring, and assets of the Social Security Trust Fund begin to decline.

The potential cost in benefits based on illegal work is substantial. Failure to address this inconsistency of law could result in newly legalized immigrants receiving benefits for earnings received while breaking U.S. laws, at the same time U.S. workers and senior citizens who paid into the system legally over their entire careers receive benefit cuts and higher taxes."""

this is just one issue....95 % of mice support putting a bell around the cat`s neck.....well,it`s there...it`s ashamed agendas get in the way of common sense...eh, smurph?


the ramifuications are unreal....we don`t even know.....in real time...the ramifications of this unchecked flood of unskilled illegals....

terry...you`re a smart fella...i enjoy discussing issues with you.....

smurph?....who is this nasty little creep?...never heard of him.
 

smurphy

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you guys are not realistic, just look at our history.

americans are not filling these jobs. americans are not procreating enough to grow the population the way we are addicted/accustomed for 250 years. this is no different than any other wave of immigration. you just have to see the big picture. all these jobs bust be taken by somebody, right?

dtb always raves about the vast economic growth we've had the last generation. ...well, who has taken the lowest level jobs in that time?
 
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