America's exceptional
status as a "nation of immigrants" is being challenged by
globalization, which is making both migration and terrorism much
easier. The biggest challenge for policymakers is
distinguishing illusory immigration problems from real
problems. One thing is quite clear: The favored approach of
recent years-a policy of benign neglect-is no longer tenable.
Members of both the Senate and the House of Representatives
recognize this and deserve credit for striving to craft a
comprehensive law during this session of Congress.
In 2005, immigration
policy received far more genuine attention on Capitol Hill,
and Members of Congress from both sides of the aisle are now
considering what to do about immigration policy. Their various
efforts have focused on a wide variety of changes in current
policy, including improving border security, strengthening employer
verification of employment, establishing a new temporary guest
worker program, and offering some level of amnesty to illegal
immigrants currently living in the United States. At present,
these proposals are working their way through the legislative
process.
However, to achieve
results, immigration reform must be comprehensive. A lopsided,
ideological approach that focuses exclusively on border security
while ignoring migrant workers (or vice versa) is bound to fail. If
Congress passes another law that glosses over the fundamental
contradictions in the status quo, then the status quo will not
change. Thinking through the incentives is the key to
success.
The Real
Problem
Illegal immigration
into the United States is massive in scale. More than 10
million undocumented aliens currently reside in the U.S., and that
population is growing by 700,000 per year.[1] On one hand, the
presence of so many aliens is a powerful testament to the
attractiveness of America. On the other hand, it is a sign of how
dangerously open our borders are.
Typical illegal aliens
come to America primarily for better jobs and in the process add
value to the U.S. economy. However, they also take away value by
weakening the legal and national security environment. When
three out of every 100 people in America are undocumented (or,
rather, documented with forged and faked papers), there is a
profound security problem. Even though they pose no direct security
threat, the presence of millions of undocumented migrants distorts
the law, distracts resources, and effectively creates a cover for
terrorists and criminals.
In other words, the
real problem presented by illegal immigration is security, not the
supposed threat to the economy. Indeed, efforts to curtail the
economic influx of migrants actually worsen the security dilemma by
driving many migrant workers underground, thereby encouraging the
culture of illegality. A non-citizen guest worker program is an
essential component of securing the border, but only if it is the
right program.
It is important to
craft a guest worker program intelligently. While there are
numerous issues involved in such a program, many of which are
beyond the scope of this paper, the evidence indicates that
worker migration is a net plus economically. With this in
mind, there are 14 principles- with an eye toward the economic
incentives involved-that should be included as part of a guest
worker program.
Immigration Benefits
and Costs
An honest assessment
acknowledges that illegal immigrants bring real benefits to the
supply side of the American economy, which is why the business
community is opposed to a simple crackdown. There are economic
costs as well, given America's generous social insurance
institutions. The cost of securing the border would logically exist
regardless of the number of immigrants.
The argument that
immigrants harm the American economy should be dismissed out
of hand. The population today includes a far higher percentage (12
percent) of foreign-born Americans than in recent decades, yet the
economy is strong, with higher total gross domestic product (GDP),
higher GDP per person, higher productivity per worker, and more
Americans working than ever before. immigration may not have caused
this economic boom, but it is folly to blame immigrants for
hurting the economy at a time when the economy is simply not
hurting. As Stephen Moore pointed out in a recent article in The
Wall Street Journal:
The increase in the
immigration flow has corresponded with steady and substantial
reductions in unemployment from 7.3 percent to 5.1 percent over the
past two decades. And the unemployment rates have fallen by 6
percentage points for blacks and 3.5 percentage points for
Latinos.[2]
Whether low-skilled or
high-skilled, immigrants boost national output, enhance
specialization, and provide a net economic benefit. The 2005
Economic Report of the President (ERP) devotes an entire
chapter to immigration and reports that "A comprehensive
accounting of the benefits and costs of immigration shows the
benefits of immigration exceed the costs."[3] The following are among the
ERP's other related findings:
- Immigrant unemployment
rates are lower than the national average in the U.S.;
- Studies show that a 10
percent share increase of immigrant labor results in roughly a 1
percent reduction in native wages-a very minor effect;
- Most immigrant families
have a positive net fiscal impact on the U.S., adding $88,000
more in tax revenues than they consume in services; and
- Social Security payroll
taxes paid by improperly identified (undocumented) workers have led
to a $463 billion funding surplus.
The macroeconomic
argument in favor of immigration is especially compelling for
highly educated individuals with backgrounds in science,
engineering, and information technology. The increasing worry
about outsourcing jobs to other nations is just one more reason to
attract more jobs to America by insourcing labor. If workers
are allowed to work inside the U.S., they immediately add to the
economy and pay taxes, which does not happen when a job is
outsourced. Therefore, capping the number of H-1B visas limits
America's power as a brain "magnet" attracting highly skilled
workers, thereby weakening U.S. firms' competitiveness.
Congress increased the
number of H-1B visas by 20,000 in November 2004 after the annual
cap was exhausted on the first day of fiscal year (FY) 2005.[4] On
August 12, 2005, the U.S. citizenship and immigration Service
announced that it had already received enough H-1B applications for
FY 2006 (which began October 1, 2005) and would not be accepting
any more applications for the general selection lottery.[5] These
and other numbers show that more workers from abroad, not
fewer, are needed.
Still, critics of this
type of insourcing worry that jobs are being taken away from
native-born Americans in favor of low-wage foreigners. Recent
data suggest that these fears are overblown. While the nation's
unemployment rate generally has remained just above 5 percent over
the past year, unemployment in information technology now stands at
a four-year low of 3.7 percent.[6]
While the presence of
low-skill migrant workers can be construed as a challenge to
low-skill native workers, the economic effects are the same as the
effects of free trade-a net positive and a leading cause of
economic growth. A National Bureau of Economic Research study by
David Card found that "Overall, evidence that immigrants have
harmed the opportunities of less educated natives is scant."[7] The
consensus of the vast majority of economists is that the broad
economic gains from openness to trade and immigration far outweigh
the isolated cases of economic loss. In the long run, as has been
documented in recent years, the gains are even higher.[8]
A simple example is
instructive in terms of both trade and immigration. An imaginary
small town has 10 citizens: some farmers, some ranchers, a
fisherman, a tailor, a barber, a cook, and a merchant. A new
family headed by a young farmer moves to town. His presence is
resented by the other farmers, but he also consumes from the other
business in town-getting haircuts, eating beef and fish, having his
shirts sewn and pressed, and buying supplies at the store, not to
mention paying taxes. He undoubtedly boosts the supply side of the
economy, but he also boosts the demand side. If he were run out of
town for "stealing jobs," his demand for everyone's work would
leave with him.
The real problem with
undocumented immigrant workers is that flouting the law has
become the norm, which makes the job of terrorists and drug
traffickers infinitely easier. The economic costs of terrorism can
be very high and very real, quite apart from the otherwise positive
economic impact of immigration. In order to separate the good from
the bad, there is no substitute for a nationwide system that
identifies all foreign persons present within the U.S. It is
not sufficient to identify visitors upon entry and exit; rather,
all foreign visitors must be quickly documented.
Economic Principles for
an Effective Guest Worker Program
To this end, 14
economic principles should be borne in mind in crafting an
effective guest worker program:
- All guest workers in
the U.S. should be identified biometrically. Technologically, a
nationwide system of biometric identification (fingerprints,
retina scans, etc.) for visitors has already been developed for the
US-VISIT program. A sister "WORKER-VISIT" program is essential
for enforcement efforts and would help American companies to
authenticate guest workers efficiently. There is at present no
effective system of internal enforcement, but the Department
of Homeland Security (DHS) has in place a "basic pilot employment
verification program"[9] that demonstrates the potential
effectiveness of using such technology with guest workers to
discourage undocumented work arrangements. Employers who want to
hire guest workers should be required to verify electronically that
the particular worker has registered with WORKER-VISIT and is
eligible to work in the United States.
- Existing migrant
workers should have incentives to register with the guest
worker program. A guest worker program
that is less attractive to migrant workers than the status quo will
fail. Therefore, the new law for guest workers should include
both positive incentives for compliance and negative incentives
(punishments) for non-compliance. For example, a program
that caps the tenure of guest workers at six years can be expected
to experience massive noncompliance at the six-year point because a
hard cap on tenure is essentially an incentive to skirt the law. If
the goal is to limit the number of undocumented foreign
workers, then renewable short-term work permits have a greater
likelihood of success than a single permit with an inflexible
expiration date.
- U.S. companies need
incentives to make the program work. immigration reform will
be successful if-and probably only if-American companies support
its passage and enforcement. A new law must therefore avoid
both onerous red tape (e.g., requiring an exhaustive search of
native workers before a job can be offered to migrants) and any
provision that would make it easier to hire guest workers than it
is to hire natives (e.g., waiving payroll taxes on guest workers
that must be paid on native worker payrolls). Perhaps the most
important incentive is a negative one: The new law should include
funding for a system of internal enforcement to police and
prosecute companies that break the law.
- Guest worker status
should not be a path to citizenship and should not include rights
to U.S. social benefits. If the incentive to
work in the U.S. is artificially enhanced with a promise of
potential citizenship, foreign migrants will be oversupplied.
citizenship carries with it tremendous benefits (e.g., social
spending and entitlement programs) that should be provided
only to American citizens. For example, unemployment insurance
benefits should never go to foreign visitors. Providing benefits
such as unemployment insurance, welfare, Head Start, and other
payments to visiting workers will significantly distort the
incentives to migrate to the U.S. The legal status equivalent of
guest workers is that of tourists-people who reside in America
temporarily and are bound by U.S. law but do not have any
claim on citizenship or its benefits.
- Efficient legal entry
for guest workers is a necessary condition for
compliance. Existing illegal
migrants should be required to leave the U.S. and then allowed a
system of entry through border checkpoints with strict
conditions for identification, documentation, and compliance
with U.S. law. If the guest worker program instead involves
prolonged waits for reentry or a lottery for work visas, existing
migrant workers will have little incentive to comply with the law.
Moreover, such reforms will be perceived as attempts to shrink the
supply of migrant labor and will be resisted. However, a
program of efficient legal entry for migrants who comply
with biometric identification will not deter compliance and
will encourage migrants to utilize the formal channels of
entry rather than jumping the border.
- Efficient legal entry
should be contingent upon a brief waiting period to allow law
enforcement agencies the time needed to screen incoming workers. A
waiting period of at least a few days will give law enforcement
agencies time to screen incoming visitors' biometrics against
criminal and terrorist databases.
- Provisions for
efficient legal entry will not be amnesty, nor will they "open the
floodgates." Such a system will actually encourage many
migrants to exit, knowing that they will be able to return under
reasonable regulations. This is in stark contrast to the status
quo, in which the difficulty and uncertainty of reentering the
U.S. effectively discourage aliens from leaving. Documented migrant
workers would enter a new status: not citizen, not illegal, but
rather temporary workers.
As for opening the
floodgates, the reality is that they are already open. More to the
point, labor markets operate effectively to balance supply and
demand, and those markets are currently in balance. Creating a new
category of legal migrants would not change that equilibrium,
provide unfair benefits to undocumented aliens over others, or be
tied to citizenship, but it would enhance security.
- Government agencies
should not micromanage migrant labor. Any federal attempt to
license migrants by occupation-micromanaging the market for
migrant labor-would be a dangerous precedent and would likely fail.
Socialized planning of any market is inferior to the free market,
and its implementation is dangerous on many levels. First,
allowing government management of the migrant labor market
would be terrible precedent for later intrusion into all U.S. labor
markets. Second, it would be open to abuse, vulnerable to
corruption, and inefficient even if run by angels.
For example, in the
case of a worker certified as an avocado picker who has carpentry
skills that his employer would like to utilize and promote, why
should the worker and his employer have to petition a labor
Department bureaucrat just to revise the worker's skill
certification? Equally implausible is a program that requires
migrants and businesses to know one another prior to entry and file
the relevant paperwork. labor markets do not work this way. Such
schemes would quickly prove ineffective and lead right back the
status quo. Real labor markets work informally, and the power of
the market should be utilized to make the guest worker program
function efficiently.
- The guest worker
program should not be used as an excuse to create another large
federal bureaucracy. The inherent risk of
authorizing a new guest worker program is that it will
establish a new, unwieldy federal bureaucracy that outgrows its
budget and mandate. Critics contend that the federal government is
ill-equipped to handle the substantial influx of people who
would enter the U.S. through a guest worker program. They further
cite the long backlogs that plague other immigration programs,
most notably the green card program.
One way to alleviate
this problem is to involve the private sector in the guest worker
visa process, much as gun retailers are integrated into the
criminal background checks of gun buyers. Many parts of the guest
worker visa process could be facilitated by contracting out certain
parts of the process, including paperwork processing,
interviewing of visa candidates (if necessary), coordinating
with the DHS and federal law enforcement agencies on background
checks, facilitating placement with prospective employers, and
facilitating the exit upon expiration of the visa. As long as
the private contractor has no conflict of interest in the visa
selection or placement process, such a system should be better
than another federal bureaucracy.
- Bonds should be used to
promote compliance after entry. There are many smart
ways that bonds could be used to manage the immigrant pool. In
one system, guest workers would pay upon entry for a bond that is
redeemable upon exit. An individual who wanted to recoup the money
would comply with the overall guest worker system and other U.S.
laws, effectively acting as part of a self-enforcing network that
discourages non-bonded, undocumented migrants. An alternative
arrangement would have U.S. companies paying for the bonds as a
right to hire some number of workers. If Congress felt compelled to
cap the number of guest workers, the bonds could be treated like
property rights and bid on to establish the market value of a guest
worker. In both cases, the dollar value of the bond would be repaid
after the migrant exited the U.S. but would be forfeit if the
migrant went into the black market economy.
- Guest workers should be
required to find a sponsoring employer within one month (or
some other reasonable period of time). The employer would verify
via WORKER-VISIT that the particular worker is eligible to be
employed in the United States. If the migrant cannot locate an
employer within the time frame, the law should require that he or
she leave the country. A sponsorship system is an efficient
alternative to government management of the supply of and demand
for migrant labor. It would be self-checking because employers
could be required to submit payroll records regularly for
automated review, which would identify the guest workers at
each location. If employment with a sponsor ended, the worker would
be allowed a similar reasonable period of time to find a new
employer. Existing undocumented workers should find it
relatively easy to get sponsorship with current employers, so the
act of leaving the country and reentering would neither discourage
their compliance nor come at the expense of legal
migrants.
- Day laborers should be
required to find long-term sponsoring employers. The presence of
tens of thousands of day laborers in the U.S.[10] may seem to pose
a challenge to immigration reform, but the day labor market
should not be given an exemption. A functioning WORKER-VISIT
program would likely motivate the creation of intermediary
firms that employ day laborers and connect them with customers in a
more formal market that develops along the lines of
subcontracting firms that are already active in gardening,
house-cleaning, janitorial services, accounting, and night
security. Intermediary firms could offer day laborers in teams
of variable sizes, allowing the hiring firms to avoid the hassles
of sponsoring and documentation paperwork. Skeptics might
protest that most subcontracted jobs are routine (even
regularly scheduled), whereas day labor is by nature last-minute
and unpredictable. However, that is not really true in the
aggregate, especially when compared with other last-minute
industries like plumbing/flood control or emergency towing.
Competitive firms can meet demand with very little slack as long as
free-market incentives are in place.
- Migrants and employers
who do not comply with the new law should be punished.
Migrants who
decline to register and are subsequently apprehended inside
the U.S. should be punished with more than deportation.
Deportation is not a disincentive. The Cornyn-Kyl bill (S.
1438) contains a good proposal along these lines: a 10-year ban on
guest worker participation for migrants who do not comply with the
new program.[11] Congress should also consider a lifetime
prohibition on violators' applying for and receiving U.S.
citizenship. The law should introduce steep penalties as well,
including prison time and seizure of assets of undocumented workers
and their employers. There is no justification for working outside
the system, especially a system that allows free entry. The law
would establish a date certain after which all migrants in the U.S.
must be registered or face these penalties. The lifetime ban on the
opportunity to acquire U.S. citizenship would be a strong incentive
for undocumented immigrants to enter the process of documentation.
Likewise, firm, consistent, enforced penalties against
employers would create the proper incentives for
compliance.
- All migrants should
respect American law and traditions. The requirement to obey
all laws is not optional for new citizens and should not be
optional for visitors. While we encourage and insist on the primacy
of American values for those who join our workforce, we should also
remember the full spectrum of values ourselves. The Statue of
Liberty reminds us that we are all equal, regardless of ethnicity,
origin, or even state of wretchedness, and that America will
continue to be a land of opportunity.
Conclusion
The century of globalization will see
America either descend into timid isolation or affirm its openness.
Throughout history, great nations have declined because they built
up walls of insularity, but America has been the exception for over
a century. It would be a tragedy if America were to turn
toward a false sense of security just when China is ascending with
openness, Western Europe is declining into isolation, and the real
solution is so obvious from our own American heritage.
Tim Kane,
Ph.D., is Bradley Fellow in Labor Policy and Kirk A. Johnson, Ph.D., is
a Senior Policy Analyst in the Center for Data Analysis at The
Heritage Foundation.
[1]Congressional Budget
Office, "The Role of Immigrants in the U.S. Labor Market" November
2005, at
and Jeffrey S. Passel, "Unauthorized Migrants: Numbers and
Characteristics" Task Force on Immigration and America's Future,
Pew Hispanic Center, June 14, 2005 at
pewhispanic.org/files/reports/ 46.pdf.
[2]Stephen Moore, "More
Immigrants, More Jobs," The Wall Street Journal, July 13,
2005, p. A13.
[3]Council of Economic
Advisers, Economic Report of the President (Washington,
D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 2005), pp.
93-116.
[4]These additional visas
are available only to individuals who have master's degrees or
higher from a U.S. university.
[5]Press release, "USCIS
Reaches H-1B Visa Cap," U.S. Department of Homeland Security, U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Service, August 12, 2005, at
(December 27, 2005).
[7]David Card, "Is the New
Immigration Really So Bad?" National Bureau of Economic Research
Working Paper No. 11547, August 2005.
[8]See IDG News Service,
"Study: Offshore Outsourcing Helps U.S. Economy," March 30, 2004,
at
(December 27, 2005).
[9]Associated Press, "Firms
Test Web Immigration Check," September 5, 2005, at
(November 3, 2005). See also U.S. Department of Homeland Security,
U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service, "SAVE Program:
Employment Verification Pilot Programs," at
(December 27, 2005).
[10]Abel Valenzuela, Jr.,
"Working on the Margins: Immigrant Day Labor Characteristics and
Prospects for Employment," University of California at San
Diego, Center for Comparative Immigration Studies Working
Paper No. 22, May 2000.
[11]The Cornyn-Kyl bill is a
good start, but it also has a number of flaws that could be
fixed. See James Jay Carafano, Ph.D., Janice L. Kephart,
and Alane Kochems, "The Cornyn-Kyl Immigration Reform Act: Flawed
But Fixable," Heritage Foundation Executive Memorandum No.
982, September 23, 2005, at http://www.heritage.org/Research/HomelandDefense/em982.cfm.