The Trump Administration
has made real progress on
raising the pace of economic growth with its tax and regulatory agenda. It has
also undercut those
benefits with its misguided tariff
strategy. The upshot is that it still makes sense to focus policy efforts on
the long-run growth rate of the standard of living in the United States. The
traditional tools of public spending, taxation, labor, regulation, education,
innovation, and natural-resources policies should all be focused on a
disciplined effort to raise the rate of productivity and economic growth.
It is time to add immigration to the list of
policies promoting economic growth, and Jacqueline Varas and I
propose exactly how to do it in our new paper.
There is lots of evidence pointing to the contribution
immigrants make to economic growth. Foreign-born workers have higher
labor-market participation rates, are disproportionally more likely to start
their own businesses, and have founded over 40 percent of Fortune 500 companies
and over 50 percent of Fortune 500 technology companies. There is also evidence
that immigrant workers spur productivity gains in the economy. To close the
circle, more rapid overall population growth would generate more rapid GDP
growth, which would in turn raise productivity growth. The latter raises GDP
per capita, or the standard of living.
Unfortunately, at present these impacts are more by accident than by design;
under 5 percent of permanent visas are awarded to new entrants for
economic purposes. Our proposal is to flip the emphasis and place
economic merit at the core of the permanent (legal) visa granting system. We do
this by focusing the visa-granting system on skills demonstrated in
two distinct ways: education (e.g., college or post-graduate degrees) and
experience or sustained labor-market accomplishment. Specifically, we use a
point system to rank candidates for visas; those accumulating enough points
merit a visa.
The first approach is like reading a resume. We award points for English
proficiency, education (e.g., 15 point for a bachelors; an additional 15
points awarded to individuals with degrees from U.S. institutions), age,
employment experience, entrepreneurship potential, being in a high-demand
occupation, and optional local economic preferences. Those with sufficient
points (see the paper for
details) are admitted. But not everyone looks great on paper. To accommodate
the latter, we would create a three-year temporary visa that would
accommodate both seasonal work and temporary employment in the United States.
After completing the temporary visa and one renewal (a total of six years),
workers could apply for permanent status and receive additional points toward
their application. If you have proven you can work successfully in the United
States, we should recognize that skill.
Getting the details right (e.g., the number of points for each degree and so
forth) will be in the eye of the beholder. But the paper is premised on the
notions that the current immigration system is broken beyond repair
and that placing economics at the center of the reform effort is the right
point of emphasis. To be sure, economics would not be the only
element. We fully expect that the United States would continue to have
components dedicated to humanitarian purposes and family unification. And we
are cognizant that any legislation would also need
to reflect a strategy for border security, employer verification,
accommodating the Dreamers, and a proactive policy toward those here
illegally. Those areas are necessarily beyond the scope of our paper.
It is well past time that the economic needs of the nation be the core
consideration for the design of immigration policy. Our hope is to use
this proposal to put it front and center for the first major reform
of immigration law since 1965.
No comments:
Post a Comment