HEAVEN’S DOOR AFTER A YEAR
By George
J. Borjas
[Peter
Brimelow writes: George Borjas is the outstanding
immigration economist in the U.S., which has gotten him
into trouble. This is from Afterword to the
just-published paperback version of his latest
book.]
It has been a year since Heaven’s
Door was published. And it has been an
interesting year, both in terms of the reactions to
my book and in terms of how the debate over
immigration policy has evolved.
I was
not surprised that my book generated interest among
participants in the immigration debate and among
political commentators.
After all, the book addresses topics that are highly
contentious and controversial—and these topics
evoke a great deal of emotion among most Americans.
I was surprised,
however, at the nature of the reaction—as
represented by the reviews and comments published in
major newspapers and magazines. To a large extent,
the reviews can be easily allocated to two extreme
camps: the favorable reviewers tended to like the
book a lot, while the unfavorable reviewers disliked
the book intensely. As with immigration itself,
there seemed to be no middle ground, no subtleties
over the type of book that I had written and the
type of policies I had proposed. It was often
difficult to imagine that the reviewers were
referring to the same book. For example, Peter
Skerry, who reviewed the book for the Washington
Post, characterized Heaven’s
Door as a “tour de force in the economics of
immigration,” while Sylvia Nassar, who reviewed it
for the New
York Times, concluded that it was
“impressively researched.”
In contrast, Jagdish Bhagwati, who reviewed it for
the Wall
Street Journal, declared that the
“economics arguments...are critically flawed.”
In retrospect, and given
the fact that the immigrant experience forms an
important part of the American psyche, I should have
expected those extremes. I thought that Heaven’s
Door made a nuanced argument that could not be
easily tagged as fitting into either extreme of the
immigration debate. After all, the book stresses
that there are both
benefits and costs associated with immigration. The
book also argued that if
the United States wished to increase the economic
benefits from immigration, the country should pursue
a different type of immigration policy, a policy
that would favor the entry of skilled immigrants. To
be sure, I left little doubt as to whether I think
the United States should consider economic
considerations in setting immigration policy (it
should!). Nevertheless, the subtleties quickly got
lost in the mythological mist that enshrouds any
discussion of U.S. immigration.
In reflecting over the
reaction to Heaven’s
Door, it is clear (at least to me) that the book
elicited the most negative responses from reviewers
writing for conservative and libertarian
publications, such as the
Wall Street Journal and Reason.
These publications typically support calls for
unrestricted immigration to the United States. The
editorial page of the Wall
Street Journal, for example, is famous (or,
depending on one’s point of view, infamous) for
repeatedly proposing a new constitutional amendment:
“There Shall Be Open Borders.”
From my perspective, the
reaction exhibited by these publications represented
a “circling of the wagons” mentality. Rather
than evaluating the overall merits of the idea that
some restrictions on immigration are probably better
than none, and that it might be worth discussing
which types of restrictions might be most
beneficial, the response was to attack almost every
fact reported in the book, to raise questions about
the credibility of the findings, and to dismiss the
whole enterprise as my misguided attempt to reflect
on immigration policy when I failed to fully
understand the (obvious?) implications of the fact
that the United States is “a nation of
immigrants.”
Surprisingly,
the reviews re-ignited the debate over an empirical
observation that I thought had been settled beyond
dispute. In particular, some reviewers doubted my
claim that there has been a drop in the relative
skills of immigrants who entered the United States
in recent decades. The empirical validity of this
finding, which I first published in the academic
literature in 1985 and which has been re-examined by
many social scientists in the past decade, is well
established. In fact, a panel of scholars assembled
by the National Academy of Sciences in 1997 reviewed
the evidence, conducted additional empirical
research, and concluded that the skills of new waves
of immigrants “have been declining relative to
that of native-born Americans. This decline appears
across a number of measures, including education
levels and wages.”
Some
reviewers claimed that there might not have been a
drop in the relative skills of legal immigrants who entered the country in the past few decades.
They argued that the trends revealed by the Census
data were contaminated because the Census enumerates
both legal and illegal immigrants (as well as such
nonimmigrants as foreign students and business
executives temporarily working in the United
States). If the presence of illegal immigrants in
these data biases the direction of the trends in
immigrant skills, the evidence then provides little
information about what happened to legal immigration
and what should be done about it.
I doubt
that the detractors have a valid point. As I showed
in Heaven’s
Door (see Figure 2-4), the downward trend in the
relative skills of immigrants remains even if one
simply examines the trend among non-Mexican
immigrants, on the presumption that a large fraction
of the illegal immigrants are from Mexico and are
relatively unskilled. Moreover, the panel assembled
by the National Academy of Sciences itself conducted
an empirical analysis that analyzed data collected
by the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS)
and concluded that “the decline in the relative
skills of the foreign-born over the last few decades
is not due exclusively to illegal immigrants or
nonimmigrants. The data suggest that the relative
skills of legal immigrants have also been falling
over the period.”
A
recent study conducted by Guillermina Jasso, Mark
Rosenzweig, and James Smith (and published in a volume
that I edited for the National Bureau of Economic
Research) reexamined the INS data and seems to
suggest that the absolute skill level of legal
immigrants exceeded that of natives for much of the
1972-95 period.
It is worth pointing out, however, that the INS data
are particularly ill-suited for documenting trends
in immigrant skills. After all, the data do not
report the immigrant’s actual earnings or
educational attainment; instead, one makes a guess
about the person’s economic potential by using
information on the type of job the immigrant held
before moving to the United States.
For instance, if the immigrant was a medical doctor
prior to migrating, one assumes that the immigrant
will earn the average salary of doctors in the
United States. Needless to say, there is a great
deal of measurement error in this measure of the
immigrant’s potential skills. After all, the
immigrant’s pre-migration job may have little to
do with what that person ends up doing in the United
States—particularly if the occupation requires
re-licensing (as in the case of medical doctors).
Moreover, the Jasso-Rosenzweig-Smith study is itself
inconclusive. The relative economic status of the
immigrant population depends on the type of
statistical fine-tuning that is made to adjust the
data for the fact that the Census Bureau changed the
way it coded occupations between 1970 and 1980.
Some reviewers also claimed that it was
“absurd” to conclude, as I do, that the net
economic benefits from immigration are small,
probably less than $10 billion a year. This estimate
comes from a simple application of the widely used
textbook model of a competitive labor market. This
is the same model that is typically used to analyze
the economic consequences of such government
policies as minimum wages and payroll taxes. The
market for ideas provides what is perhaps the most
convincing argument in favor of my estimate. The
immigration area, after all, is highly contentious.
If it were that simple to show that the gains from
immigration are huge, there is an audience ready and
willing to buy such numbers. My estimates are so
“absurd” that not a single academic study has
concluded that they are higher—and some studies
have concluded that they are lower.
The
mischaracterization of the evidence was perhaps most
apparent when it came to the issue of whether
immigrants had a negative effect on the wages of
workers already in the United States. The Wall
Street Journal review, written by Jagdish
Bhagwati, an economic theorist specializing in
international trade issues, shows this tendency in a
very striking way. Mr. Bhagwati dismissed my
evidence (“Mr. Borjas's larger economic claim,
that immigration drives down wages, does not survive
scrutiny”) by claiming that economists Gordon
Hanson and Matthew Slaughter showed that U.S. wages
are not driven down by immigration. The
Hanson-Slaughter work actually demonstrates that
immigration does not seem to create wage
differentials between states that receive many
immigrants and states that do not, a point addressed
at length in Heaven’s
Door (see pages 73-78). The concluding paragraph
of the Hanson-Slaughter study explicitly describes
how their work relates to the question at hand:
“The evidence that state-specific endowments
shocks do not trigger state-specific wage responses
does not
imply that the United States overall had no wage
response to increased immigration” (the emphasis
is theirs).
The
arguments that Mr. Bhagwati and other reviewers used
to quickly dismiss the evidence on the adverse labor
market impacts of immigration were further
undermined by the unexpected entry into this debate
of the
authority on U.S. economic policy. In February 2000,
Alan Greenspan, the chairman of the Federal Reserve,
made some remarks
linking immigration and inflation that are destined
to change the nature of this debate. In Mr.
Greenspan’s words:
Imbalances in the
labor market perhaps may have even more serious
implications for potential inflation pressures.
While the pool of officially unemployed and those
otherwise willing to work may continue to shrink, as
it has persistently over the past seven years, there
is an effective limit to new hiring, unless
immigration is uncapped. At some point in the
continuous reduction in the number of available
workers willing to take jobs, short of the repeal of
the law of supply and demand, wage increases must
rise above even impressive gains in
productivity…In short, unless we are able to
indefinitely increase the rate of capital flows into
the United States to finance rising net imports or
continuously augment immigration quotas, overall
demand for goods and services cannot chronically
exceed the underlying growth rate of supply.
Mr. Greenspan’s
pronouncement restates the obvious: the laws of
supply and demand inevitably imply that a large
increase in the supply of workers lowers wages and
reduces inflationary pressures. Mr. Greenspan, in
effect, partly credits the large immigration flows
of the 1990s’s for the U.S. economy’s low
inflation rate. Under Mr. Greenspan’s astute
interpretation, the fact that immigrants lowered
wages need not be seen as an adverse impact of
immigration; instead, it is a favorable consequence
for it holds inflation in check. Many of those who,
in the pre-Greenspan days, had argued strenuously
that immigration had little impact on the economic
opportunities of native workers now began to argue
just as strenuously that immigration fueled economic
growth by keeping wages and prices down.
Many of
the unfavorable reviewers were so busy questioning
the credibility of the facts reported in Heaven’s
Door that they seemed to miss the whole point of
the book. The United States will inevitably attract
many more immigrants than the country is willing to
admit. As a result, choices have to be made. Current
immigration policy benefits some Americans (the
newly arrived immigrants as well as those who employ
and use the services the immigrants provide) at the
expense of others (those Americans who happen to
have skills that compete directly with those of
immigrants). Before deciding how many and which
immigrants to admit, the country must determine
which groups should be the winners and which should
be the losers. Few of the detractors were willing to
take on this question.
Finally,
there is an amusing, if unintended, irony in some of
the most extreme reviews—particularly those
written from a libertarian perspective. Stuart
Anderson wrote a review
for Reason
magazine that is worth singling out.
Mr. Anderson dismissed my proposal for a
skills-based point system by repeating my book’s
warning that the system would be difficult for
bureaucrats to administer, and then added
sarcastically: “As if bureaucrats are well suited
to handle any
labor market decisions” (his emphasis). I wonder
if Mr. Anderson saw the incongruity in his
statement. At the time he wrote the review, he was a
high-ranking immigration apparatchik himself—the
“director of immigration policy” for the Senate
Immigration Subcommittee. His boss, Senator
Spencer Abraham, led the charge—presumably
with Mr. Anderson’s advice—to alter the U.S.
labor market for skilled workers by greatly
expanding the number of H1-B visas granted to
temporary high-tech workers. Does Mr. Anderson truly
believe what he writes about bureaucratic
incompetence?
In the year that followed the publication of Heaven’s
Door, the immigration debate was dominated by
three unrelated events. The first was the media
obsession with the saga of Elián
Gonzalez, the six-year-old boy who was rescued
from the Florida seas on Thanksgiving Day in 1999.
His mother died during her attempted escape from
Cuba, and Fidel Castro soon made the return of the
boy a cause célèbre that dominated the airwaves and the front pages of
newspapers for months. Regardless of how one feels
about the merits of the case, the Elián Gonzalez
saga made an important contribution to the future
debate over immigration policy.
It illustrated the awesome and
arbitrary power that the INS has over the lives of
many foreign-born persons residing in the United
States. The INS has a great deal of discretion in
deciding whether particular aliens should be allowed
to remain in the country. And once the agency
chooses to pursue a set of clearly defined goals, it
seems to be able to achieve those goals with
relatively little interference.
There is now, in fact, a
healthy debate over the agency’s competence in
managing U.S. immigration policy. And Congress is
seriously considering proposals that would break up
the INS into two separate agencies. One agency would
be responsible with border protection and
enforcement of immigration regulations, while the
other would provide naturalization services to legal
immigrants already in the United States.
There
is much to be said for the proposition that
administrative incompetence rules at the INS.
Consider, for instance, the agency’s record during
the Clinton years. At the beginning of Doris
Meissner’s tenure as head of the INS in 1993, the
agency reported that there were just over 3 million
illegal aliens residing in the United States. By the
year 2000, there were 6 million. [VDARE note: More recent estimates suggest 12 million. But hey, who’s
counting?]
This huge increase in the illegal alien
population occurred despite much higher expenditures
on border enforcement. The INS budget tripled from
$1.5 billion to $4.8 billion during that time. One
could easily argue that there has been a tremendous
waste of resources at the agency in recent
years—billions of dollars spent on enforcement
with little to show for it.
The
failure of the INS in enforcing existing immigration
laws extends far beyond the agency’s flawed
stewardship of the U.S. borders. The INS has a huge
backlog of persons who are already
living in the United States and who are waiting to
regularize their immigration status and get their
green cards. This backlog increased from an
“equilibrium” of about 121,000 persons in 1994
to over 1 million by 2000. The agency, it seems,
cannot even keep up with the legal immigrant flow.
Finally,
political events in Mexico will inevitably alter the
nature of the dialogue over immigration policy in
the United States.
Over 7 million Mexican immigrants now live in the
United States, and an additional 130,000 Mexican
legal immigrants and 150,000 illegal immigrants
enter the country annually. Soon after his election
on July 2, 2000, President Vincente Fox proposed
that the two countries share an open border within
10 years. There would then be free movement of
people and goods.
The
Mexico-U.S. wage gap is among the largest wage gaps
found between any two contiguous countries in the
world. The World Bank reports that an American
manufacturing worker earns 4 times the salary of a
manufacturing worker in Mexico and 30 times the
salary of an agricultural worker. These income
differences ensure that an open border would
increase the number of Mexicans immigrants.
The new immigrants would probably resemble
the Mexican immigrants already in the United States,
whose poverty rate exceeds 33 percent. Firms that
employ less skilled labor would gain from having
access to an even larger pool of workers. But, as
Mr. Greenspan’s reiteration of the laws of supply
and demand suggests, Mr. Fox’s proposals would
further erode the economic opportunities available
to the most disadvantaged Americans. An open border
between Mexico and the United States would surely
benefit Mexico and Mexican immigrants. But would it
be good for the United States?
In the
end, the answers to many of the concerns that drive
the debate over immigration policy hinge on the
question that I pose at the beginning of Heaven’s Door, a question that has yet to become a central issue
in the modern immigration debate: What do the
American people want immigration to do for the
United States?
June 10,
2001