Opinion

[Print]  [Email]        

An immigrant stimulus?

By: Michael Barone
Senior Political Analyst
04/27/09 2:46 PM EDT

In today’s Wall Street Journal, Gordon Crovitz calls for an immigrant stimulus. He wants to see a comprehensive immigration bill, with legalization and guest worker as well as enforcement provisions. This is in line with the Journal’s longstanding position and with Barack Obama’s call on Congress to pass such an immigration bill.

Crovitz makes strong arguments for increasing the number of skilled immigrants. Currently thousands of high-skill would-be immigrants are prevented from coming to the United States by our immigration laws. In contrast, Canada and Australia have immigration laws that give a preferred place to high-skill immigrants; our laws, since the 1965 act sponsored by Edward Kennedy, let in many more people through their extended-family-reunification provisions.
   
But Crovitz makes no real argument for legalizing unskilled immigrants or maintaining the flow of unskilled immigrants. On the contrary, he concedes that in a recession the economic incentives for low-skill immigrants are reduced and if, as generally conceded, the presence of large numbers of low-skill immigrants marginally reduces the wages of low-skill Americans, the argument for maintaining low-skill immigration is at its weakest at this point in the business cycle.

All of which suggests to me a compromise, which will displease many lobbying forces on both sides of the issue. The compromise is to move our system toward the Canadian and Australian models, with more places for high-skill immigrants and less for those benefiting from extended-family-reunification provisions. This would displease the Latino groups and groups representing employers of low-skill labor (though a separate provision for guest workers, especially, in agriculture, might assuage some of the latter). And any legalization provisions would continue to anger those who regard them  as “amnesty” and those who want to see fewer immigrants in the country.
  
The devil is in the details, and in figuring out the possible consequences of the details. The 1965 act actually imposed lower quotas on Latin American immigrants (who before 1965 faced little in the way of limits on immigration). But its family-reunification provisions were taken advantage of by millions of Latinos, about half of them  from Mexico, as they developed chain migration of relatives and giving birth to “anchor babies” in the United States who were then, under prevailing interpretations of the Fourteenth Amendment, American citizens. If there is any propitious time to cut back on low-skill immigration it is now when the U.S. unemployment rate and our need for low-skill workers is relatively low. But I suspect that this is not the approach the Obama administration and congressional Democrats will take. 
 




beltway confidential

Call it what you like -- it deserves a complete investigation. (afp) Any reporter worth their salt knows that when government decides to investigate itself, exonerations tend...

So let me get this straight, the government created the housing market crash by insuring a lot of really expensive, little-to-no money down mortgages for people that couldn't...

Although the Department of Justice is not yet investigating the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN), its Inspector General has looked into whether...

Clearly it's just a joke, but a bad joke. Washington Post writer Monica Hesse writes of the irresistible nature of the Twilight book series about vampires written primarily for...


To view this site, you need to have Flash Player 8.0 or later installed. Click here to get the latest Flash player.


Most Popular Headlines





 


 



 

Reader Comments

All comments on this page are subject to our Terms of Use and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Examiner or its staff. Comment box is limited to 250 words.

Post a comment


Email:
(This will not be displayed or shared. Privacy Policy)

Display Name:

Comment:




Sports

Houston Rockets coach Rick Adelman, center, reacts with his staff Jack Sikma, left, and Elston Turner, right, to a called foul against his team as they play the Atlanta Hawks during the third quarter ...

Tracy McGrady says he's ready to play, Rockets believe it's still too soon after knee surgery

Tracy McGrady is eager to play. The Houston Rockets say he'll have to wait. Full story

Economy

NC state treasurer issues gift ban for employees, limits on soliciting for charity

State Treasurer Janet Cowell unveiled new rules Friday banning employees from taking gifts from companies that do substantial business with the agency and setting a limit on charitable solicitations. Full story

Entertainment

Pedro Almodovar discusses his childhood, his influences and what he won't put on film

Sex. Drugs. Prostitution. Pedophilia. Rape. Pedro Almodovar has been able to translate some of the most delicate subjects to the big screen with grace and humor. Full story