The journey from there to here
Published on August 24, 2004 By Gideon MacLeish In Politics
This is article 9 on the Libertarian Party platform. Articles 1-8 can be found in my archives under the "politics" section. If you want more information on the Libertarian Party, please go to: www.lp.com or contact me at: miner432004@yahoo.com:

The benefits of open immigration
BY MICHAEL TANNER
America has always been a nation of immigrants. Thomas Jefferson emphasized this basic part of the American heritage, taking note of "the natural right which all men have of relinquishing the country in which birth or other accident may have thrown them, and seeking subsistence and happiness wheresoever they may be able, and hope to find them."

The Libertarian Party has long recognized the importance of allowing free and open immigration, understanding that this leads to a growing and more prosperous America. We condemn the xenophobic immigrant bashing that would build a wall around the United States. At the same time, we recognize that the right to enter the United States does not include the right to economic entitlements such as welfare. The freedom to immigrate is a freedom of opportunity, not a guarantee of a handout.

A policy of open immigration will advance the economic well-being of all Americans. All major recent studies of immigrants indicate that they have a high labor force participation, are entrepreneurial, and tend to have specialized skills that allow them to enter under-served markets. Although it is a common misconception that immigrants "take jobs away from native-born Americans," this does not appear to be true. In 1989, the U.S. Department of Labor reviewed nearly 100 studies on the relationship between immigration and unemployment and concluded that "neither U.S. workers nor most minority workers appear adversely affected by immigration."

Indeed, most studies show that immigrants actually lead to an increase in the number of jobs available. Immigrants produce jobs in several ways: 1) They expand the demand for goods and services through their own consumption; 2) They bring savings with them that contribute to overall investment and productivity; 3) They are more highly entrepreneurial than native-born Americans and create jobs through the businesses they start; 4) They fill gaps in the low and high ends of the labor markets, producing subsidiary jobs for American workers; 5) Low-wage immigrants may enable threatened American businesses to survive competition from low-wage businesses abroad; and 6) They contribute to increased economic efficiencies through economies of scale.

Confirmation can be seen in a study by economists Richard Vedder and Lowell Galloway of Ohio University and Stephen Moore of the Cato Institute. They found that states with the highest rates of immigration during the 1980s also had the highest rates of economic growth and lowest rates of unemployment.

Studies also show that not only do immigrants not take jobs away from American workers, they also do not drive down wages. Numerous studies have demonstrated that increased immigration has little or no effect on the wages of most American workers, and may even increase wages at upper income levels.

Contrary to stereotypes, there is no evidence that immigrants come to this country to receive welfare. Indeed, most studies show that immigrants actually use welfare at lower rates than do native-born Americans. For example, a study of welfare recipients in New York City found that only 7.7% of immigrants were receiving welfare compared to 13.3% for the population as a whole. Likewise, a nationwide study by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics found that 12.8% of immigrants were receiving welfare benefits, compared to 13.9% of the general population. Some recent studies indicate that the rate of welfare usage may now be equalizing between immigrants and native-born Americans, but, clearly, most immigrants are not on welfare.

The impact of immigrants on taxes is more equivocal. Most immigrants pay more in taxes than they receive in government benefits. However, the majority of immigrant taxes are paid to the federal government, while immigrants tend to use mostly state and local services. This can place a burden on states and localities in high immigration areas.

However, the answer to this problem lies not in cutting off immigration, but in cutting the services that immigrants consume. The right to immigrate does not imply a right to welfare -- or any other government service. Moreover, this is not simply a matter of saving tax money. The Libertarian Party believes that most government welfare programs are destructive to the recipients themselves. Thus, immigrants would actually be better off without access to these programs. As Edward Crane, President of the Cato Institute, has put it:

"Suppose we increased the level of immigration, but the rule would be that immigrants and their descendants would have no access to government social services, including welfare, Social Security, health care, business subsidies, and the public schools. I would argue, first, that there would be no lack of takers for that proposition. Second, within a generation, we would see those immigrants' children going to better and cheaper schools than the average citizen; there would be less poverty, a better work ethic, and proportionately more entrepreneurs than in the rest of U.S. society; and virtually everyone in that group would have inexpensive high-deductible catastrophic health insurance, while the 'truly needy' would be cared for by an immigrant culture that gave proportionately more to charity."

Finally, any discussion of immigration must include a warning about the threat to civil liberties posed by many of the proposals to limit immigration. Recent legislation to restrict immigration has included calls for a national identity card for all Americans. Senator Diane Feinstein (CA-D) has suggested that such an ID card should contain an individual's photograph, fingerprints, and even retina scans. Representative Lamar Smith (R-TX) has proposed legislation that would require employers to consult a national registry of workers before hiring anyone, effectively giving the U.S. government control over every hiring decision by every business in America.

Other legislation has contained provisions penalizing people who fail to "inform" on people they "suspect" might be illegal immigrants. Such Orwellian nightmares have no place in a free society, but are the natural outgrowth of an obsession with restricting immigration.

signing off,

Gideon MacLeish

Comments
on Aug 24, 2004
I am surprised to see that the libertarian party is using Tanner's argument for their position. It seems to have a crucial weakness. All of the statistics that are cited do not distinguish between legal and illegal immigrants. I did a debate on this subject a long time ago in college and I am pretty sure that those statistics are about legal immigrants so they don't support an argument for an open border policy.
on Aug 25, 2004
Can't argue with that, Gideon. The LP has it quite right here!
on Aug 25, 2004
The problem with "illegal" immigration is that the media does not engage in discussions on how to prevent it, besides by militarizing the border. Most undocumented people do not want to leave their homes, but only do so for money. The consequences of corporate giants like Wal-Mart drive down wages in Mexico and kill Mexican based stores. Factories that are put into Mexico pay horrible wages, many less than a dollar an hour. Every night on O'Reilly or Scarborough, there is some story about how undocumented people are crossing over, but they never go into why and who is really causing the problems.
on Aug 25, 2004
I did a debate on this subject a long time ago in college and I am pretty sure that those statistics are about legal immigrants so they don't support an argument for an open border policy.


Abe,

I'm not sure about this, but would be interested in links to the issue.

At any rate, these posts are my posts of the LP platform, not always entirely my personal views. Like a representative of any party, there are areas where I question or disgree with certain positions, but I won't engage in debate on the issue when I am representing the party (a separate thread is another story).

I thank you, though, for your input, and would welcome any further information you can provide.
on Aug 25, 2004
I just saw a bit on CNN today about illegal immigrants. It said that 3/4 of them are unskilled and use more in government services than they pay in taxes, to the tune of 10 billion a year and that is federal only.

Sorry I don't have any links for you. I haven't read up on this subject since school and the WWW only had about 10,000 page back then.