Eakinomics: One
Thumbs-Up for Immigration Reform
The Biden Administration’s stealth immigration reform has now
been unveiled, and it is exactly as advertised (see the short review by Whitney Appel and me).
The U.S. Citizenship Act (USCA) of 2021, introduced in the House by Rep.
Sanchez and in the Senate by Sen. Menendez, most notably includes an
ambitious legalization of the roughly 11 million illegal immigrants present
in the United States. Recipients of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals
(DACA), those with Temporary Protected Status, and agriculture workers would
have the ability to immediately apply for a green card and become citizens
after 3 years. The remainder of the illegal immigrant population would have
an 8-year path to citizenship. In addition to legalization, the bill would
revamp the strategy at the southern border and provide assistance to Central
American countries in an attempt to forestall illegal immigration
at the source.
That’s the good news. It is also the bad news.
That’s because the presence of a large illegal population is not the only
immigration policy problem facing the United States. There is also an
economic-growth imperative for reform of the core visa system for legal
immigration. The growth rate of gross domestic product consists of two
important pieces: (1) the growth rate of the labor force, and (2) the growth
rate of output per worker, or productivity. Immigration can have powerful
impacts on both. Obviously, immigration can raise the overall pace
of population growth. At present, in the absence of immigration, the current
low birth rates mean that the U.S. population will shrink. And because
foreign-born individuals tend to have higher rates of labor-force
participation, immigration translates into an even more rapid pace of growth
in the labor force than simple demographics would suggest.
Immigration can also affect productivity and the standard of living.
Immigrants have traditionally displayed an entrepreneurial bent, with rates
of small business ownership above that of the native-born population. New
entrepreneurial vigor offers the potential for productivity-enhancing
innovations. In addition, to the extent that new innovation is “embodied” in
new capital and consumer goods, more rapid economic growth per se means that
more output will have these advances embedded within, and productivity per
worker will rise.
The USCA is as timid on the economic front as it is ambitious on
legalization. A more ambitious reform would be similar to the American Action
Forum proposal to move the core visa granting
system to a skills-based framework instead of re-affirming the current focus
on family unification.
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