*The Fiscal Impact of Immigration *
*Heritage's finding that less-educated immigrants**
are a large fiscal drain is
incontrovertible*<http://cis.us4.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=11002b90be7384b380b467605&id=64f8530c4b&e=b42d279877>
 ****

*WASHINGTON, DC (May 14, 2013)* — The Heritage Foundation's recent study
authored by Robert Rector, a leading expert on immigration and welfare,
clarifies the Schumer-Rubio bill's fiscal cost to the American public. The
Center for Immigration Studies' analysis of the study finds that its basic
conclusion that less-educated immigrants are a large fiscal drain is
incontrovertible.

Heritage determined that the current fiscal drain (services used minus
taxes paid) from illegal-immigrant households was $55 billion a year, and
if the immigrants receive permanent legal status it would rise to $106
billion a year. Over the lifetime of illegal immigrants, who are only 34
years old on average, the total price tag would be $6.5 trillion.

This imbalance results not from an unwillingness to work on the part of
illegal immigrants. Rather, it stems from the fact that adult illegal
immigrants only have about 10 years of schooling on average. In the modern
American economy, those with relatively little education (whether immigrant
or native-born) earn modest wages on average and make modest tax
contributions. At the same time, they tend to use a good deal in welfare
and other means-tested programs. As a group, the less-educated use more in
services than they pay in taxes. Anyone who argues otherwise has simply not
looked at the data the government collects on this subject.

"Our analysis of Census Bureau data shows that even less-educated
immigrants who have been in the country for 20 years have high rates of
welfare use and low income tax liability," said Dr. Steven Camarota, the
Center's Director of Research. "If the size and cost of government were cut
in half, then the fiscal outcome might be different. But until that
happens, illegal immigrants as a group will be a significant net fiscal
drain."

For a more detailed analysis
see:http://www.nationalreview.com/node/348192<http://cis.us4.list-manage.com/track/click?u=11002b90be7384b380b467605&id=60563e978a&e=b42d279877>

Proponents of amnesty, led by the Cato Institute, have offered very weak
arguments to attack Heritage. Some argue that Rector's methodology is
non-standard because it looks at taxes paid and services used by households
rather than individuals. In fact, this is the standard way to look at the
issue. Critics also argue U.S.-born children should not be counted. But the
impact must include both the immigrant and the family he brings or
acquires, as the children are here only because their parents have been
allowed into the country. It is worth noting that the National Research
Council (NRC) study in 1997 did a fiscal analysis that excluded U.S.-born
children, and it still found that less educated immigrants were a large
fiscal drain by themselves.

The Schumer-Rubio bill may limit welfare access for the first 10 years
after legalization, but the Heritage study shows that illegal-immigrant
households already receive about $4,500 a year on average from means-tested
programs. The U.S.-born children of illegal immigrants have access to all
programs, the ban does not apply to every program, and the administration
of these programs is far from airtight. Further, when the 10-year window
expires, the costs explode.

Dr. Camarota emphasizes that there is no evidence that the economic
benefits gained from having access to low-skilled immigrant labor offset
the fiscal costs. "The NRC study, which was authored by many of the leading
economists in the field, is the only study of which I am aware that tried
to measure both the economic impact and the fiscal impact of all
immigrants," notes Dr. Camarota. "That study found that the economic gain
to the native-born from all immigrants was smaller than the fiscal drain
created by all immigrant households. And that finding was for all
immigrants, not just illegal immigrants, who are much less educated and
poorer on average than immigrants generally."

The nation's top immigration economist, Harvard's George Borjas, observes,
"Immigration is primarily a redistributive policy." To assume that
immigration creates large gains to natives, one must invent benefits that
are not demonstrated in the academic literature. Immigration makes the
economy larger but, as Borjas' work
<http://cis.us4.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=11002b90be7384b380b467605&id=c9fc434356&e=b42d279877>shows,
of that economic growth, "97.8 percent goes to the immigrants themselves in
the form of wages and benefits."

View the Senate bill, CIS Senate testimony and commentary at:
http://www.nationalreview.com/node/348192<http://cis.us4.list-manage.com/track/click?u=11002b90be7384b380b467605&id=663d200224&e=b42d279877>

****

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