Working In These Times
Newsflash: What’s Good for Immigration is Good for America
Workers protest at Woodfin Suites Hotel, in Emeryville, Calif. (Photo by David Bacon)
Across the industrialized world, governments have dreamed up various schemes for reinvigorating deflated economies, from blood-sucking austerity budgets to paying for scrap metal. Nowhere is the desperation more evident than in the rightward shift of immigration policy toward a convulsive xenophobic backlash. Yet the OECD, a think tank that monitors rich industrialized nations says in its annual immigration outlook report that part of the solution to the economic crisis is more, not less, immigration.
Progressive economists agree that immigrants' long-term contributions to economic productivity on balance far outweigh the feared disruptions associated with migration. More importantly, in an interconnected world, the transnational movement of people is simply an inevitability: overall, according to OECD, international immigration has accounted for roughly 40 percent of recent employment growth in OECD countries.
But neither the potential wealth generated by labor migration, nor the fact that we couldn't stop it even if we tried, has deterred xenophobic sentiment in rich countries.
Another study by the Dallas Fed links economic decline to the increasing nastiness of immigration restrictions. As unemployment rose, the U.S. and several European countries toughened their immigration policies under a phalanx of racial anxiety and political desperation. State and federal agencies tightened hiring policies for foreign workers and moved to further criminalize the undocumented; the United Kingdom imposed stricter language tests and higher fines for bosses that hire unauthorized immigrants. Japan offered to buy its no-longer-welcome guestworkers a plane ticket home.
While such policies are an efficient way to split up families and induce misery and unrest, they end up having little bearing on the systemic dynamics of global migration. On that front, it turns out the recession naturally gives people less reason to migrate. The Dallas Fed notes that “rising unemployment rates across many advanced economies have deterred would-be migrants, leading to steep declines in flows along the major global migration corridors.” Immigration flows have slowed considerably in the U.S., and dropped steeply in some European countries.
Restrictionist think-tanks proudly chalk this up to tighter immigration enforcement and harsh crackdowns. Though they still can't explain why about 11 million undocumented immigrants are so reluctant to budge.
Well, we all know it's because they're gleefully stealing American jobs, right? The UFW recently tested that thesis with a clever campaign to recruit "real" Americans to try their hand at backbreaking farm work. So far, not too many takers.
For now, says David Scott Fitzgerald of U.C.-San Diego's Center for Comparative Immigration Studies, we can assume that “unauthorized immigrant labor is generally complementary to native-born labor. Unemployed auto workers in Michigan are not migrating to California to pick fruit.”
Moreover, the Dallas Fed cautions that hardline anti-immigration policies could breed political inertia that ultimately impedes recovery:
In fact, the immigration backlash could have its greatest effect after the recession ends, when a growing demand for labor could run headlong into labor market restrictions that remain in place. These could impede countries’ ability to recruit workers in sectors vital to their recovery and long-run economic growth.
So what if the government treated immigration not as a liability, but a tool in its macroeconomic arsenal?
To Bill Watkins at New Geography, immigration as economic stimulus is a shovel-ready project:
The initial benefits of a new wave of immigration would be seen remarkably quickly. Housing demand would increase, leading to renewed vigor in our real estate markets and the construction industry. Our inner cities would be renewed, as they always have been by immigration waves. New business formations would soar. The tax base would increase, helping to fund debt repayment and baby-boomer retirements.
By contrast, the myopic and politicized immigration barriers promoted by the right may accelerate the downward spiral of exploitation across the entire labor force. Incidentally, that works against the interests of both restrictionists and immigrant rights advocates.
The research of Heidi Shierholz at the Economic Policy Institute confirms that immigration itself is the wrong punching bag for disenchanted native-born workers, pointing out that any negative impacts of unauthorized immigration tend to hit not native-born workers, but rather, other immigrants who came before them.
Americans are right to worry about the declining quality of jobs over the last few decades, but for native workers, immigration has had very little to do with it. Other factors--like declining unionization, the erosion of the real value of the minimum wage, and unbalanced foreign trade--are the real culprits behind broad-based erosion of wages and job quality. Nevertheless, immigration could have a much more beneficial impact on the U.S. economy--and its impact on foreign-born workers already here could be mitigated--with a comprehensive overhaul.
How to make sure immigration fills gaps in the labor market without exacerbating inequality? The OECD recommends full integration of migrants into the workforce, including “lowering barriers – such as limits on dual nationality and extremely restrictive eligibility criteria” and encouraging naturalization. An analysis by UCLA’s Dr. Raúl Hinojosa-Ojeda found that common-sense immigration reform could “raise the floor” for the whole workforce, provided that it is supported with rigorous labor standards and protections for all.
But who has time for common sense when folks are busy blacklisting illegals and locking up hardworking people for not having the right papers? For a nation wracked by chronic unemployment, ignorance, it seems, has become a full-time job.

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Comments
What is taxpayer Americans supposedly to do, feed and house the world? Offer freely HMO, PPO’s health care to every penniless, desperate person, including their children, sisters and brothers, uncles and aunts and anybody else who stays in this nation after their visa has expired or those who have violated our immigration laws. Those stole into America through a still upon border fence. Arizona did the right thing for their legal residence and anybody else should be apprehended and placed into detention until deported. But even that doesn’t matter, because they still reenter illegally.
The—ONLY—true way to stop this massive incursion into a sovereign land by any foreign nationals, is to fully implement under the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act all incorrigible employers who knowingly keep hiring illegal workers, throw them into prison with huge fines and take away all business assets. Making E-Verify a mandated federal law, would over time proof absolutely positive to start non-reversible ATTRITION which is far more affordable, than forced deportation. Anybody who aids and abets illegal immigrants, such as mayors who allow Sanctuary City policies, ( SAN FRANCISCO, LOS ANGELES, DENVER AND MORE) should also be taken to federal court. Even state Governors, weak police chiefs who in anyway catering to illegal immigrants, such as Bill Richardson of New Mexico, or any other elected official should not be exempt from federal penalties.
We have unsympathetic politicians such as Sen. Harry Reid and all his Dem followers who are instigators and are demanding another catastrophic Amnesty must be held accountable. Across our nation we have millions of legal American workers, in painful situations who cannot feed their children. Why are we the bad guys, because we are sick and tired of subsidizing Mexico and most of South America? Why is Arizona being demonized because it must defend its residents against the encroachment of illegal aliens, criminal gangs, drug smugglers and all the ugliness that is spreading across this sovereign land? Fight back America before it’s too late. This nation is 13 trillion dollars in debt, with 9.5 percent of Americans out of work.
It is estimated that at least 8.5 million illegal workers are employed. That the Federation for American Immigration Reform states that annually taxpayers mandatory to pay 113 billion in extra taxes to underwrite welfare programs for illegal aliens and their families. That’s not part of the $60 billion a year that leaves America in workers remittances to other countries. Those who want to keep more money in their pockets better start bombarding your Senator. Incumbent Harry Reid was the Democratic majority leader in the Senate who nearly killed E-Verify, 287 (G) and pushing AMNESTY. Learn the implications of overpopulation, the millions a year legal immigrants, costs and other paramount problems at NumbersUSA. Start imposing your will on all your Washington Senators and House Representatives, including state politicians, who seemed to have forgotten who they work for at 202-224-3121. More details and what you can do for America’s survival at NumbersUSA.