by Robert E. Rector
WebMemo #1523
Last week, the White House Council of Economic Advisers issued a report
entitled "Immigration's Economic Impact" which defended the President's
promotion of the Senate's "comprehensive" immigration legislation
(S.1348).[1] On June 25, the White House issued a follow-up editorial
elaborating on the points made in the CEA report.[2] These publications
criticized Heritage Foundation research on the fiscal costs of low
skill immigration and amnesty.
The Heritage research criticized by the White House made the following
basic points about immigration and its costs:
Individuals without a high school degree impose significant net costs
(the extent to which benefits and services received exceed taxes paid)
on taxpayers.
The net fiscal cost of families of immigrants who lack a high school
degree is not markedly different from the net fiscal cost of families
of non-immigrants who lack a high school degree.
Immigrants are disproportionately low skilled; one-third of all
immigrants and 50 to 60 percent of illegal immigrants lack a high
school degree.
Unlike low and moderate skill immigrants, immigrants with a college
education will pay more in taxes than they receive in benefits;
therefore. immigration policy should increase the number of high skill
immigrants entering the country and sharply decrease the number of low
skill, fiscally dependent immigrants.[3]
Heritage research has shown that low skill immigrants (those without a
high school degree) receive, on average, three dollars in government
benefits and services for each dollar of taxes they pay. This imbalance
imposes a net cost of $89 billion per year on U.S. taxpayers. Over a
lifetime, the typical low skill immigrant household will cost taxpayers
$1.2 million.[4]
Future taxpayer costs will be increased by policies which increase (1)
the number of low skill immigrants entering the U.S., (2) the length of
low skill immigrants' stays in the U.S., or (3) low skill immigrants'
access to government benefits and services. Unfortunately, this is
exactly what the Senate immigration bill does:
The bill would triple the flow of low skill chain immigration into the
U.S.
By granting amnesty to at least 12 million illegal immigrants, the bill
would greatly lengthen their stay in the U.S., particularly during
retirement years.
The bill would grant illegal immigrants access to Social Security and
Medicare benefits and, over time, to more than 60 different federal
welfare programs.
Although the bill does not currently permit Z visa holders to bring
spouses and children in from abroad, this would likely be amended at
some future point on humanitarian grounds, resulting in another 5
million predominantly low-skill immigrants entering the country.
Heritage research has concluded that the cost of amnesty alone will be
$2.6 trillion once the amnesty recipients reach retirement age.
In an effort to defend the Senate bill, the White has contested these
conclusions. As described below, many of the assertions made by the
White House are inaccurate or misleading.
The White House claims that, under the Senate immigration bill, amnesty
recipients would receive little or no welfare.
CEA Chairman Edward Lazear charged that the Heritage claims concerning
the cost of the Senate immigration bill were flawed because, under the
bill, amnesty recipients would be barred from receiving "the vast
majority of welfare benefits."[5] Like previous statements by White
House spokesmen,[6] this assertion mischaracterizes the Senate bill and
also shows a lack of understanding of the Heritage estimates of the
bill's costs.
While provisions of the Senate bill would delay illegal immigrants'
access to welfare for several years, over time, nearly all amnesty
recipients would be offered legal permanent residence and access to
more than 60 federal means-tested welfare programs. Specifically, Z
visa holders would immediately be given Social Security numbers and
would begin earning entitlement to Social Security and Medicare (which
are not means-tested welfare programs). Some ten to thirteen years
after enactment, amnesty recipients would begin to gain access to a
wide variety of means-tested welfare programs, such as Temporary
Assistance to Needy Families, public housing, and Food Stamps.[7]
Children born to illegal and legal immigrants in the U.S. have
immediate, lifetime access to all welfare programs.
The initial limitation on the receipt of means-tested welfare will have
only a small effect on governmental costs. Adult welfare comprises only
a small part of the benefits received by immigrant families. Moreover,
the average adult amnesty recipient can be expected to live more than
50 years after receiving his Z visa. While his eligibility for
means-tested welfare would be constrained for the first 10 to 15 years,
each amnesty recipient would be fully eligible for welfare during the
last 30 to 40 years of his life. Use of welfare during these years will
be heavy.
The White House claims that, to the extent that amnesty recipients
receive welfare benefits, they would receive the same low levels of
benefits as other poorly educated immigrants, who (in the White House's
view) receive little welfare.The White House reassures taxpayers that
amnesty recipients and millions of future low skill immigrants will not
generate welfare costs because they must "qualify for…government
[welfare] transfers only the old fashioned way."[8] The implication is
that those who must struggle to earn access to welfare "the old
fashioned way" will, in the end, get very little welfare. Contrary to
this claim, the average low skill immigrant family actually receives
$10,500 per year in means-tested welfare, or about a half million
dollars over the course of a lifetime. Amnesty recipients would indeed
gain access to welfare "the old fashioned way," and the old fashioned
way is extraordinarily expensive.
The brief delay in adult access to welfare under S. 1348 and current
law would have only a tiny effect on the long-term welfare costs of low
skill immigrants. Further, the White House's touting the delays on
immigrants receiving welfare under existing law is hypocritical: The
actual policy pursued by the White House up to this time has been to
dismantle the barriers in current law and increase immigrant families'
access to welfare.
The White House strongly suggests that, under the Senate immigration
bill, amnesty recipients would be net tax contributors.
Some 50 to 60 percent of illegal immigrants who would receive amnesty
under S. 1348 lack a high school degree. Another 25 percent have only a
high school degree. Based on the example of current immigrants with
similar levels of education, these individuals would be a net burden on
the taxpayer over the entire course of their lives.
The White House claims that amnesty recipients would increase the net
government revenue available to support Americans in retirement.
The White House trumpets that "immigrants improve the solvency of our
retirement system."[9] One must assume that they believe that the same
will be true of amnesty recipients, because otherwise the assertion
would be irrelevant in the current debate. The White House does
correctly point out that amnesty recipients would pay Social Security
taxes during their working years. Amnesty recipients' low skill levels,
however, mean that the Social Security tax payments they make would, on
average, be quite modest.
More important is the fact that, in future years, Social Security
benefits will be funded by both Social Security taxes and general
revenue. What matters is not the small amount of Social Security taxes
that would be paid by amnesty recipients but their overall fiscal
balance—that is, the total federal state and local benefits received,
minus all taxes paid. Because the total benefits taken by amnesty
recipients and their families would exceed the Social Security and
other taxes that they would pay, amnesty recipients would undermine,
rather than strengthen, financial support for U.S. retirees, even
before the amnesty recipients reach retirement age themselves.
The White House suggests that the retirement costs of amnesty
recipients would not impose a significant tax burden on U.S. taxpayers.
The Senate bill would give amnesty recipients access not only to
means-tested welfare, but also to government retirement benefits. The
Heritage Foundation has estimated that the net fiscal costs of amnesty
recipients during retirement would be $2.6 trillion. These particular
costs would begin to impact the taxpayer about 30 years after enactment
of the Senate legislation. The White House has made no specific
refutation of this estimate.
The bulk of the net expenditure would be in the Social Security and
Medicare programs; substantial costs would also occur in the
means-tested Medicaid program (amnesty recipients would be fully
eligible for Medicaid benefits long before they reach retirement).
Contrary to any suggestions made by the White House, temporary
restrictions on access to means-tested welfare by amnesty recipients is
irrelevant to the estimated $2.6 trillion cost of amnesty.
The White House does point out that amnesty recipients will have paid
Social Security taxes prior to retirement and thereby might be seen as
having "earned" all the government benefits they would receive.[10]
But, as noted above, the Social Security taxes paid by amnesty
recipients would be modest. Even during working years, most amnesty
recipients would be a drain on the taxpayer, and during retirement
their fiscal cost would be dramatic.
The White House claims that the Senate immigration bill would benefit
U.S. taxpayers by increasing the future flow of high skill immigrants
(who would be strong net tax contributors) and decreasing the flow of
low skill immigrants who are more likely to be a fiscal burden.
The White House claims that the Senate immigration bill would "sharply
improve" the fiscal contributions of immigrants by increasing the share
of future immigrants who are high skilled.[11] It asserts, "[T]he bill
will end chain migration which allows legal immigrants to bring
extended family members to the U.S" and replace it with a "new
merit-based system to select future immigrants based on [their]…skills
and attributes."[12]
In reality, the bill would triple the annual rate of family chain
migration, raising the annual allotment for these immigrants from the
current level of 147,000 to 440,000 and bringing up to 5.9 million such
immigrants into the U.S. over the next decade. Family chain immigrants
are predominately low skilled: 60 percent have only a high school
degree or less and 38 percent lack a high school degree.[13]
What about the new merit-based system, ostensibly intended to bring in
highly educated high tech workers? The core of this proposal is a point
system to select future green card holders, but this point system is
far from merit-based. For example, green card applicants would receive
a high number of points if they are currently employed in "high demand"
occupations, which include janitor, waitress, sales clerk, fast food
worker, freight handler, laborer, grounds keeping worker, food
preparation worker, maid, and house cleaner. Under the proposed point
system, a high school dropout working in a fast food restaurant who has
the recommendation of her employer would outscore an applicant with a
Ph.D. trying to enter the country from abroad. The merit system is
actually designed to confer citizenship on low skill "temporary guest
workers" rather than bring in professionals from abroad.[14]
The bill would eliminate the current green card allocation for workers
of "exceptional ability" but allocate 90,000 green cards per year for
the next eight years to reduce the existing employment visa backlog of
primarily low skill workers. Contrary to White House claims, it seems
unlikely that S. 1348 would increase the number of green cards for
high-skill workers, at least through the first eight years of operation.
The White House claims high school dropouts are a "very small part" of
the immigrant population.
The Chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers dismissed
Heritage research on the negative fiscal impact of poorly educated
immigrants as "relevant only to a very small part of the population"
and therefore of little importance in assessing the Senate immigration
bill.[15] In reality, a large and disproportionate share of current
immigrants in the U.S. is poorly educated. One-third of all current
immigrants lack a high school degree, compared to nine percent of
native-born Americans. The families of immigrants without a high school
degree now comprise 5 percent of the U.S. population. As noted, among
the ten million adult illegal immigrants who would receive amnesty and
citizenship under the Senate's immigration bill, some 50 to 60 percent
lack a high school degree and many have only a high school degree.
The White House asserts that low skill immigrant families impose a
substantially lesser burden on taxpayers than do low skill
non-immigrant families.
The White House asserts, "[L]ow-skill immigrants are actually
comparatively self-sufficient compared to low skill native
households."[16] This assertion is false. Low skill immigrants and
non-immigrants impose similar burdens on the taxpayer. Wages, tax
payments, and receipt of welfare are quite similar for the two groups.
Low skill non-immigrants differ from immigrants primarily because they
are more likely to be elderly and therefore less likely to be employed.
The White House asserts that the children of low skill immigrants
quickly become fiscal contributors (taxes paid exceed benefits and
services received) and thereby compensate taxpayers for nearly all the
fiscal losses generated by their parents.
The White House has suggested that while low skill immigrants may
impose some initial taxpayer costs, these costs are "recovered quickly"
by the net taxes paid by the immigrants' children.[17] This is not
true. Low skill immigrants impose very heavy costs on U.S. taxpayers.
As noted, on average, each low skill immigrant household receives three
dollars in benefits for each one dollar of taxes paid; over a lifetime,
each household costs the taxpayer more than $1 million.
The children of low skill immigrants do better than their parents. With
higher levels of education, they will receive fewer welfare benefits
and pay more taxes. Nonetheless, despite this upward progress, the
children of immigrant dropouts are likely to remain a net drain on the
taxpayers. [18]
The White House asserts that the "children of immigrant parents are 12
percent more likely to obtain a college degree than other natives."[19]
It neglects to note that the relevant group, the children of low skill
immigrant parents, have below-average educational attainment. For
example, the children of Hispanic dropout parents are three times more
likely to drop out of high school and 75 percent less likely to have a
college degree than the general population.
With prevailing trends in upward mobility, the descendents of immigrant
dropouts will not become net tax contributors until the third
generation. This means that the net fiscal impact of low skill
immigrants will remains negative for 50 to 60 years after the
immigrants' arrival in the U.S.
The White House obscures the cost of low skill immigrants.
The White House report asserted that Heritage Foundation research on
low skill immigrants is flawed because it lacks a "forward looking
projection."[20] The Council of Economic Advisers stated that, from the
'long-run point of view," low skill immigrants are remarkably
inexpensive: Each immigrant without a high school degree costs the
taxpayer a mere $13,000 overall.[21] The CEA failed to note that its
"long-run point of view" includes the estimated taxes paid by the low
skill immigrants' descendents for the next 300 years.[22] In other
words, the White House is asserting that taxpayers should not be
concerned about the $89 billion annual cost generated by low skill
immigrants because that cost would be largely offset by the taxes paid
by the immigrants' descendents in the year 2407. In addition, the
300-year estimate cited by White House assumes very large tax increases
and benefits reductions in the near future.
In its defense of the Senate immigration bill, the White House employs
statistics about the fiscal contributions of college-educated
immigrants, but the taxes paid by college-educated immigrants are
almost completely irrelevant to a fiscal analysis of S. 1348. The main
fiscal impact of S. 1348 will occur through two mechanisms: (1) the
grant of amnesty, with accompanying access to Social Security, Medicare
and welfare benefits, to 12 million illegal immigrants who are
overwhelmingly low skilled; and (2) a dramatic increase in chain
immigration, which will also be predominantly low skilled.
In this context, talking about the taxes paid by college-educated
immigrants is a red herring and merely serves to obscure the obvious
fiscal consequences of the legislation.
The bottom line is that high school dropouts are extremely expensive to
U.S. taxpayers. It does not matter whether the dropout comes from Ohio,
Tennessee, or Mexico. It does matter that the Senate immigration bill
would increase the future flow of poorly educated immigrants into the
U.S. and grant amnesty and access to government benefits to millions of
poorly educated illegal aliens already here. Such legislation would
inevitably impose huge costs on U.S. taxpayers.
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White House Report Hides the Real Costs of Amnesty and Low Skill Immigration
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