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A New Order: Imagining Life Without Illegal Immigrants

 

January 11, 2004
  By DEAN E. MURPHY
SAN FRANCISCO - Imagine America without illegal immigrants,
the people who flip the burgers, clean the toilets, watch
the kids and send their children to public schools.
Would the grass be greener?
The question got an answer of
sorts last month in California, where about a third of the
country's estimated 8 million to 10 million illegal
immigrants live. Thousands of Latinos stayed home from
school and work one Friday, protesting the repeal of a
contentious new law that would have allowed illegal
immigrants to obtain driver's licenses.
The boycott was not nearly the success its organizers had
hoped for. Nonetheless, there were reports of fast-food
counters closing and lawns going uncut. A few shops in
cities with big immigrant populations, like Fresno, did not
bother opening, and in Los Angeles, the second-largest
school district in the country, the absentee rate nearly
tripled from the Friday before.
President Bush reopened the national debate about
immigration last week with his proposal to grant temporary
visas to undocumented workers. As with those who supported
the repeal of the driver's license law in California, the
Bush initiative left many Americans wondering why elected
officials would change the rules for people who live in
this country only by breaking them.
"I think it is hard to imagine a worse immigration reform
proposal right now," said George J. Borjas, a professor of
economics and social policy at Harvard who has written
extensively about the drawbacks of illegal immigration.
"The one good thing you could say about it is, it takes
seriously the fact that the United States is not going to
deport 10 million people. We have to do something about
these people."
Most everyone would agree that mass deportation is
unlikely. But imagining such a chain of events is one way
of understanding the economic backdrop to Mr. Bush's
initiative.
The Pew Hispanic Center estimated in 2001 that the
unauthorized labor force in the United States totaled 5.3
million workers, including 700,000 restaurant workers,
250,000 household employees and 620,000 construction
workers. In addition, about 1.2 million of the 2.5 million
wage-earning farm workers live here illegally, according to
a study by Philip L. Martin, a professor at the University
of California at Davis who studies immigration and farm
labor.
That is a whole lot of cheap labor.
Without it, fruit and vegetables would rot in fields.
Toddlers in Manhattan would be without nannies. Towels at
hotels in states like Florida, Texas and California would
go unlaundered. Commuters at airports from Miami to Newark
would be stranded as taxi cabs sat driverless. Home
improvement projects across the Sun Belt would grind to a
halt. And bedpans and lunch trays at nursing homes in
Chicago, New York, Houston and Los Angeles would go
uncollected.
"There would be a ripple effect across the economy," said
Harry P. Pachon, president of the Tom�s Rivera Policy
Institute at the University of Southern California, a
Latino research group.
But while the disruption would be real, Professor Borjas
argues, it would not be long lasting. As proof, he says,
look no further than places like Iowa, where foreign-born
residents are relatively rare, but there are people working
in hotels, fast-food restaurants and all the rest.
Most illegal immigrants, in fact, are concentrated in a
handful of states - California, Texas, New York, Illinois
and Florida - leaving many parts of the United States
relatively untouched by the influx.
Estimates by the Immigration and Naturalization Service
based on the 2000 census show that 15 states accounted for
all but 13 percent of illegal immigrants.
If there were no undocumented workers to tend to the
gardening, Californians who wanted a nice lawn would pay
more for it, eventually drawing low-skilled workers from
other parts of the country, Professor Borjas said, adding
that American workers would be the better for it.
"The workers would be slightly wealthier and the employers
would be slightly poorer, but everything would get done,"
said Professor Borjas, who used to live in California. "I
moved to Boston and the lawn is still green."
Laura Hill, a research fellow at the nonpartisan Public
Policy Institute of California, said there would be a spike
in prices for lettuce, spinach and strawberries, which are
typically picked by undocumented workers. But farmers and
agricultural companies would eventually find cheaper ways
to harvest the crops. "Who knows, but maybe it would turn
into new technology being developed," Ms. Hill said.
If not, Americans would look elsewhere, including other
countries, for cheaper substitutes.
"The nice thing about importing a good is that once you
don't like it, you can dispose of it," Professor Borjas
said. "Immigration isn't like that."
Some immigration experts also suggest that American
taxpayers would be better off financially if the country's
unauthorized residents returned home.
Mark Krikorian, executive director of the Center for
Immigration Studies, a Washington group that favors greater
restrictions on immigration, argues that if Americans
"eased our addiction to this illegal labor," there would be
less stress on the country's social welfare system, ranging
from fewer children in crowded urban schools to fewer
welfare checks for the American-born families of illegal
immigrants.
"Immigrants over all use at least one major welfare program
at a rate 50 percent higher than natives," Mr. Krikorian
said, referring to an analysis of 2001 data by his center
that found Medicaid use particularly high among immigrants.
"That is not because they are morally defective. It is
because they are poor and don't have any education and they
end up inevitably stumbling and having needs for the
system."
But immigrant advocacy groups dispute the notion that
illegal immigration is a drag on America. Raul Yzaguirre,
president of the National Council of La Raza, a Latino
civil rights organization, said the economic impact of
immigration plays out differently at the local and national
levels.
While hospitals and clinics in Los Angeles County, for
example, bear huge health care costs associated with
uninsured illegal immigrants - one study put the total at
$340 million in 2002 - the federal government enjoys a
"bonanza" from many of the same immigrants who pay federal
taxes but receive no benefits in return, Mr. Yzaguirre
said.
Mr. Yzaguirre suggested that Social Security would go broke
without the payments of undocumented workers, many of whom,
contrary to popular perception, do have regular payroll
taxes deducted from their paychecks by employers. (In some
instances, undocumented workers use false Social Security
numbers, while others have valid numbers from when they had
worked legally.)
Mr. Yzaguirre also rejected suggestions that Americans
would maintain their standard of living without the
low-wage contributions of those workers. He agreed with
Professor Borjas that some Americans would enjoy fatter
paychecks, but he said all Americans would be punished by
having to pay more for everything from a McDonald's
hamburger to a new house.
In a 2002 study conducted with the cooperation of immigrant
rights organizations, researchers at the Center for Urban
Economic Development at the University of Illinois at
Chicago concluded that the 300,000 or so illegal immigrants
in Chicago did not use government benefits at a substantial
rate. The study also estimated that 70 percent of the
undocumented workers paid payroll taxes, like Social
Security and unemployment insurance. The researchers
calculated other economic benefits, finding that consumer
spending by illegal migrants generated more than 31,000
jobs and contributed $5.34 billion annually to the gross
regional product in Chicago.
Which side to believe? The problem with gathering data
about illegal immigrants, and the idea of an America
without them, is that they tend to blend into the vast
tapestry of legal immigrants.
Someone living and working in the United States with a
valid visa one year can become illegal the next by
overstaying the visa. A single household can have legal and
illegal residents, sometimes brothers and sisters. In that
sense, the Bush proposal to blur the distinction further
between illegal and legal workers includes "some degree of
honesty," said Patricia Nelson Limerick, chairwoman of the
Center of the American West at the University of Colorado.
"The hope is that it would lead to some recognition that
you don't solve problems of illegal immigration by shutting
down the border," she said, "but reckoning with the
problems in the home country."
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/01/11/weekinreview/11murp.html?ex=1074935669&ei=1&en=3e0a83de755cbfaf
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