-Caveat Lector-

Contra Costa Times
Published Saturday, December 4, 1999

Immigration policy stupid, evil and hurting Americans
By Peter Brimelow

IN AMERICA, WE have a two-party system," a Republican congressional
staffer is supposed to have told a visiting group of Russian
legislators some years ago.

"There is the stupid party. And there is the evil party. I am proud
to be a member of the stupid party."

He added: "Periodically, the two parties get together and do
something that is both stupid and evil. This is called --
bipartisanship."

Our current mass immigration policy is a classic example of this
fatal Washington bipartisanship. It is a stupid policy because there
is absolutely no reason for it -- in particular, Americans as a whole
are no better off economically because of mass immigration.

It is an evil policy because it second-guesses the American people,
who have shown through smaller families that they want to stabilize
population size.

Unfortunately, our current immigration policy is consuming the
environment with urban sprawl, hurting the poor and minorities with
intensified wage competition, and ultimately threatening the American
nation itself -- what Abraham Lincoln called "the last, best hope of
earth" -- with cultural and linguistic fragmentation.

And, of course, the current mass immigration policy is bipartisan.
Both major party leaderships have tacitly agreed to keep the subject
out of politics. No single figure is more responsible for this than
Sen. Spencer Abraham, R-Mich., chairman of the Senate's Immigration
Subcommittee.

Abraham was a key figure in sabotaging the most recent chance of
reform, the Smith-Simpson immigration bill, in 1996.

Ironically, this was a truly bipartisan measure, proposed by
Republicans but based on the work of the Jordan Commission, headed by
the former black liberal Democratic Congresswoman Barbara Jordan. She
recommended almost halving immigration, in part because of its impact
on the poor.

The economic stupidity of current mass immigration policy is
illustrated by a brilliant new book, "Heaven's Door: Immigration
Policy and the American Economy" (Princeton University Press).

The author, Professor George Borjas of Harvard University's John F.
Kennedy School of Government, is widely regarded as the leading
American immigration economist. And he is an immigrant, arriving here
penniless from Castro's Cuba in 1962, when he was 12 years old.

Borjas has every reason to favor immigration. He writes movingly
about his own early experiences, and compassionately about the
immigrant waves that have followed him.

But, as a scholar, he recognizes what he calls "accumulating
evidence" that immigration has costs as well as benefits. "My
thinking on this issue has changed substantially over the years," he
admits.

Professor Borjas' devastating findings:

The current wave of mass immigration is not benefiting Americans
overall. "All of the available estimates suggest the annual net gain
is astoundingly small," writes Professor Borjas, "... less than 0.1
percent of the Gross Domestic Product." Roughly: less than $10
billion in a $7 trillion economy.

Note carefully what Professor Borjas is saying here. Sure, those
immigrants who work do raise overall GDP. But the bulk of that
increase goes to the immigrants themselves, in the form of wages. The
benefit to native-born Americans, after everything is taken into
account, is infinitesimally small.

Current mass immigration is not benefiting Americans overall -- but
it is transforming their country. For nothing.

Least-skilled Americans are being hurt. Borjas estimates that almost
half of the increased wage gap between high school dropouts and high
school graduates can be attributed to immigration.

Again, note carefully what Professor Borjas is saying. Mass
immigration is not making Americans richer overall. But it is, in
effect, redistributing income between Americans. Specifically,
because immigrants tend to be unskilled, they compete with American
unskilled workers and have forced their wages down.

Of course, profits for employers of unskilled workers have
correspondingly gone up. But the employers' gain, according to
Professor Borjas' calculations, does not cancel out the workers'
loss.

And it's not just unskilled American workers. Any group of workers
could be displaced. It's already happened in the computer software
industry. Employers prefer to import cheap young immigrant
programmers rather than retrain and pay older American programmers.

Current mass immigration is hurting key states badly. Because
immigrants tend to be unskilled, and because we now have a costly
social safety net, immigrants cost taxpayers money in the half-dozen
states where they concentrate.

A lot of money. For example, immigration has raised the taxes of
native households in California by a stunning $1,200 a year. Overall,
this fiscal loss easily cancels out any small benefit immigration
brings to native-born Americans.

Not only are Americans seeing their country transformed, they are
actually paying for the privilege.

Oh, in case you're wondering: The amazing fact is that Borjas' views
are the consensus in his profession -- see the National Research
Council's 1997 report "The New Americans."

Evil? Or stupid? Either way, immigration policy is broke. And it
needs fixing. Now.
http://www.vdare.com/pb/contra_costa_times_article.htm

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