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Welcome to Call to Decision
Giving
Welfare to Illegals
By Robert Rector
Heritage Foundation | June 20, 2007
In criticizing recent Heritage Foundation research on the
cost of low-skill immigration and amnesty, proponents of the
Senate immigration legislation (S. 1348), including
Administration spokesmen, have falsely claimed that the
proposal would not give illegal immigrants access to the
U.S. Welfare system.[1]
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. The amnesty process under S.1348, and the
different stages of the process at which amnesty recipients
become eligible for different government benefits, are
precisely described in "Amnesty Will Cost U.S.
Taxpayers at Least $2.6 Trillion."[2]
The fact that amnesty recipients will have limited access to
means-tested welfare in the first ten years or so after
enactment will have only a marginal impact on overall costs.
As the Heritage study states:
The initial limitation on receipt of means-tested welfare
will have only a small effect on governmental costs. Welfare
is only 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 will be
constrained for the first 10 to 15 years, each amnesty
recipient will be fully eligible for welfare during the last
30 to 40 years of his life. Use of welfare during these
years is likely to be heavy.[3]
The Heritage analysis of the costs of amnesty was a study of
the fiscal costs (benefits received minus taxes paid) of
amnesty recipients during their retirement years. It
concluded that amnesty recipients would impose a likely net
cost of $2.6 trillion dollars on the taxpayers during that
period and that these costs would mainly occur in two
non-welfare programs (Social Security and Medicare) and in
one means-tested program (Medicaid). The study explicitly
states that these costs will not commence until 25 to 30
years after the bill is enacted.[4] To claim that amnesty
recipients will not have access to the welfare system
evidences an unfamiliarity with the provisions of S. 1348 as
well as the Heritage analysis.
Defending S.1348 on the grounds that amnesty recipients
would not be eligible for welfare also is hypocritical,
because the position of the Administration has been to
reduce the restrictions in current law on immigrants' use of
welfare. For example, the 1996 welfare reform law prohibited
legal permanent residents (green card holders) from
receiving welfare for their first ten years in the country.
In 2002, the Bush administration successfully promoted a
change in the law to allow non-citizen green card holders to
receive Food Stamps after five years in the country.[5]
It is also claimed that a second study by The Heritage
Foundation, "The Fiscal Cost of Low Skill Immigrants to
the U.S. Taxpayer,"is an outlier in the field of
research.[6]
This study examined the net fiscal cost (total government
benefits received minus total taxes paid) of households
headed by immigrants without a high school degree. It found
that these low-skill immigrant households, on average,
receive three dollars in benefits for every one dollar in
taxes paid. Low-skill immigrant households (both legal and
illegal) now comprise five percent of the U.S. Population
and impose a net cost of $89 billion per year on the U.S.
Taxpayer.
There is one previous study of the fiscal impact of
low-skill immigrants: the National Academy of Sciences' 1997
New Americans study.[7] The findings in that study match
those of Heritage research: immigrants without a high school
degree imposed a substantial net cost on the taxpayer, and
the initial fiscal burden was so severe that it was not
erased by the earnings and taxes of subsequent generations.
Even when the net taxes paid by the immigrants' descendents
over the next 300 years (roughly 10 generations) were
estimated, the net present value to the taxpayer of
low-skill immigrants remained slightly negative.[8]
The same National Academy of Sciences study also argued that
low-skill immigration produced an economic gain, mainly by
reducing prices. Most Americans, however, would find the
reason for this gain unsettling: "There is a direct
correspondence between the fact that some domestic workers
suffer wage reductions and the fact that we gain as a
nation" from immigration.
[9]
Low-skill immigration reduces prices of some consumer goods
because it reduces the relative wages of the workers
producing those goods, including the wages of millions of
low-skill non-immigrants who compete with the low-skill
immigrants. As the National Academy of Sciences put it,
"Although wage declines are real losses to the affected
[non-immigrant] workers, they are also the source of a
national ‘gain' from immigration.
"[10] A national policy that reduces consumer prices by
reducing the wages of the least skilled American workers is
hardly a recipe for long-term social and political
stability.
The Heritage studies in question show that while
college-educated immigrants pay more in taxes than they
receive in benefits, low-skill immigrants do not. The best
public policy would encourage the more high-skill and less
low-skill immigration. Unfortunately, S. 1348 moves in the
opposite direction.
Robert Rector is Senior Research Fellow in Domestic Policy
Studies at The Heritage Foundation.
ENDNOTES:
[1] Interview with Tony Snow, CNN, American Morning, 7:51
AM, June 12, 2007. "I understand that it's important to
try to total costs and benefits, but you have to take a look
at the actual bill…. this bill does not guarantee; it says
the people do not have access to the welfare system."
[2] Robert Rector, "Amnesty will Cost the U.S.
Taxpayers at least $2.6 Trillion," Heritage Foundation
WebMemo No. 1490, June 6, 2007, at www.heritage.
org/Research/
Immigration/
wm1490.cfm. Since the publication of this paper, an
amendment introduced by Senator Jeff Sessions and passed by
the Senate has modified the bill to delay a Z visa holder's
access to the Earned Income Tax Credit.
[3] Ibid.
[4] Ibid., p.6.
[5] The White House, Working Toward Independence: The
President's Plan To Strengthen Welfare Reform, February
2002, p.33, at www.whitehouse.
gov/news/
releases/
2002/02/
welfare-reform-
announcement-
book.html.
[6] Robert Rector and Christine Kim, "The Fiscal Cost
of Low-Skill Immigrants to the U.S. Taxpayer," Heritage
Foundation Special Report No.SR-14, May 21, 2007, at
www.heritage.
org/Research/
Immigration/
sr14.cfm.
[7] National Research Council, The New Americans: Economic,
Demographic and Fiscal Effects of Immigration (Washington,
D.C.: National Academy Press, 1997).
[8] Ibid., pp., 334, 342.
[9] Ibid., p. 140.
[10] Ibid., p.141.
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