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Costs And Contributions The Wave From

Costs And Contributions: The Wave From South Of The Border Essay, Research Paper


Costs and Contributions: The Wave From South of The Border


Every year, hundreds of millions of people enter the US via land ports


of entry, and the INS each year apprehends over 1.3 million aliens at or near


the border. Over 90 percent of those apprehended near the border are Mexicans,


and some who enter the US legally and illegally are carrying drugs into the US.


This influx of illegal immigrants from south of the border has created quite a


stir in many places. Is this good that people are coming to the U.S.? What


will happen if this pattern keeps up? Will they steal our jobs? What effect


will this wave of people have on us? These questions plague many and deserved


to be answered in the following paper on: “Costs and contributions: The Wave


From South of The Border”.


“Dowell Myers (USC) reported on his double cohort method–by age and


year of entry– of analyzing what happened to immigrants arriving in the seven


southern CA counties after 1980. His analysis shows that especially young


immigrants make considerable economic progress after their arrival–as measured


by their total incomes–and that some of their behavior converges rapidly to


that of natives, e.g., they rapidly abandon buses and drive cars to work. In


southern CA, one-third of all bus riders are recent immigrants.


Myers noted that immigration is raising other issues, including


overcrowded housing. The US definition of acceptable housing was two or less


persons per room until 1960, when the definition was change to one or less per


room. However, as immigrants


moved into southern CA, overcrowding jumped, raising questions about how


aggressively cities should enforce housing codes developed during a non-


immigrant era.” Many are haunted by the question: will we be hurt? Over


crowding has had a major impact on families living near the Mexican border


lowering standards of living and living space as well. Also, citizens wonder


about the filthy scum that comes from south of the border-are all illegal


immigrants scum?


George Vernez outlined an ambitious project that is dealing with the


question of whether immigration is a plus or minus for CA by examining the


effects of immigration on internal migration, on wages, and on public finances


since 1960. Those studies showed that immigrants from most countries do catch up


to similar natives in average weekly earnings after 10 to 20 years, but not


immigrants from the major country of origin–Mexico. Furthermore, immigrant


children tend to follow in their parents’ footsteps, meaning that the children


of Asian immigrants tend to do well in school, etc., while the children of


Mexican immigrants do not.


Is this a problem to worry about? I mean, come on, a few illiterate


children doesn’t hurt anything, right? How many immigrants are there again?


While immigration to the US in 1994 was substantial – 800,000 people -


this still falls far short of the peak year of 1907 when 1.3 million people


entered the country; and since, at the beginning of the century, the total US


population was only a

round one-third of what it is today, the impact was much


greater.


Another economic concern is that immigrants will swamp social services


such as education, health and welfare. Immigrants who arrive traumatized in


their new countries are indeed likely to need considerable support. But other


immigrants generally contribute much more in taxes than they take in benefits.


This means that in contrast to popular belief, legal immigrants actually benefit


the U.S. as a whole. On the other hand, illegal immigrants can cause many


economical drains.


The U.S. is a little leery about people migrating to the U.S. for many


reasons.


The chief concern is that poverty will drive people in increasing


numbers from developing to industrialized countries. The United States frets


over its border with Mexico – and the 2.6 million illegal immigrants it already


has.


On the flip side of the coin, if there is a minus, there must be a plus.


Money will need to be spent on the education of immigrant children but adult


immigrants are likely to be young and healthy and few will require welfare or


pensions. In the United States, for example, legal immigrants who arrived in


the 1980s have been found to use welfare at a rate well below that of the


natives. Illegal immigrants, fearing detection, are of course even less likely


to use welfare – even though through sales taxes they make a considerable


contribution to the public coffers.


Others worry about the economic impact – nervous that immigrants are


going to steal their jobs. Such fears may be understandable but are generally


groundless. In reality, immigrants do not substitute local workers but rather


complement them – often doing the “dirty, dangerous, and difficult” jobs that


local people refuse. This was spotlighted in the United States in 1993 when the


presidential nomination for Attorney General was found to have employed an


illegal immigrant. She was not alone: the employment of women in the United


States is critically underpinned by 350,000 illegal immigrants working as


domestic help. Despite the continuing international debate on the impact of


immigration on employment, the argument that workers take jobs from existing


residents has usually been shown to be without grounds for accusation.


Immigration can help rejuvenate the population, though it would have to


take place on a really massive scale to have any impact on the age profile.


Cutting off immigration may satisfy populist political sentiment but it is


doubtful whether it makes much economic sense. Apart from making a useful


contribution to the labor force they can also have a useful demographic


contribution. Many industrial countries are facing steadily aging populations -


and will have fewer active workers to support a growing retired population.


In conclusion, it is this detective’s belief that trying to cut off the


influx of immigrants into the U.S. would be, economically speaking, stupid.


There is substantial evidence piling up by the hour that immigrants help the


economy rather than hinder it. Leave the gates open. These people help us in


the right amounts.

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