Republished by VDARE.com on August 29, 2003
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National Review, Dec 11,
1995 v47 n23 p20(2)
THE billowing dust of congressional battle joined now
obscures the progress of immigration-reform legislation.
The House bill introduced by Lamar Smith (R., Tex.),
having survived a misguided attempt to split off its
illegal-immigration provisions (NR, Nov. 27), awaits a
Gingrich/Armey decision to bring it to the floor.
Betting: maybe after Christmas. The Senate bill
introduced by Alan Simpson (R., Wyo.) is still
struggling through mark-up—and it's ominously weak
already.
NR believes that next year this dust will be abruptly
dispelled by a rude electoral wind. Immigration will be
an issue in the presidential race, not least because of
the likely presence on the Florida ballot of a measure
even stronger than California's Proposition 187, which
attacked the manifest absurdity of taxpayer subsidies to
illegal immigrants (and so has naturally been overturned
by a federal judge).
Meanwhile, immigration enthusiasts Left and Right
continue to add to the confusion. Their role reminds us
of the tag-line from the Erich Segal romance Love
Story: "Being in love means never having to say
you're sorry." Being an immigration enthusiast means
never having to acknowledge contrary facts, analyses, or
arguments. Moral self-regard conquers all.
In the Washington Post (November 4), [Pay
archive] Stuart Anderson of the Cato Institute
rebukes Rep. Smith for citing economist George Borjas to
the effect that immigration has negative consequences
for American wage rates and employment. "Perhaps
Smith did not see Borjas's article in the Spring '95
issue of the Journal of Economic Perspectives,"
Anderson sneers. He then quotes a passage apparently
saying the opposite.
Problem: this passage nowhere appears in Borjas's
article. And Borjas in fact concludes that negative
consequences can be detected when the national labor
market, rather than specific metropolitan areas, is
studied. The whole point of his Journal of Economic
Perspectives [PDF]
article was that only when immigration drives down wage
rates does it generate a measurable benefit (still
nugatory) for native-born Americans overall.
In Time magazine's attempted exorcism of
immigration critic and Republican presidential specter
Pat Buchanan (November 6), Robert Wright cites the
much-misquoted Borjas as estimating that unskilled
immigration accounts for "one-fifth of the widening
of the wage gap between workers with different levels of
schooling." But Wright then triumphantly announces
that "these differences in educational level account
for less than a third of the overall growth in wage
inequality. And one-fifth of one-third is
one-fifteenth."
Problem: Borjas's estimate is actually that one-third
of the increase in the "wage gap" between skilled and
unskilled workers is caused by immigration.
And anyway, this "wage gap" is a completely different
phenomenon from "wage inequality," which is the term of
art used by economists to describe aggregate income
differences among all workers, regardless of skill
levels. Education does account for about a third of this
aggregate difference. But the balance is caused by other
factors, such as worker experience. And immigration may
well contribute to the differing impact of these other
factors too. As usual with this taboo subject, no
economist has dared to ask.
In Reason magazine (November),
amplified by the Wall Street Journal's Notable
and Quotable echo-chamber (October 18), editor Virginia
Postrel claims that "even in the nativist 1920s . . .
the U.S. did not close its Southern border. Until 1965,
there was no numerical limit on immigration from the
Western Hemisphere . . . the border was essentially
open."
Problem: it wasn't. Although the Western Hemisphere
did not have an absolute numerical limit, immigrants
were required to meet various criteria including, as a
practical matter, a job offer. This choked off Western
Hemisphere immigration during the 1924—1965 Great Lull.
Only some 299,000 Mexicans immigrated legally during the
entire decade of the 1950s. About the same number now
enter every year.
Journal editor Robert Bartley presumably knows
this, because NR senior editor Peter Brimelow pointed it
out in contesting Bartley's objection to the
NR cover story that led to Brimelow's
Alien Nation (June 22, 1992; February 1,
1993). Maybe Bartley was attending a Dow Jones executive
seminar on managing diversity when Miss Postrel's Quote
was Noted.
Still, although Miss Postrel got her facts wrong, we
applaud her attempt to introduce them into the rarefied
theoretical atmosphere of Reason. For libertarians,
discussions of how many immigrants might dance on a
national identity card in principle have replaced any
serious consideration of Washington's highly
interventionist immigration policy in practice. Now that
Miss Postrel has noticed the
1924 Immigration Act, perhaps Reason will address
the workings of the disastrous 1965 Act—sometime around
2036.
While we're on the subject, immigration enthusiasts
continue to claim that immigrant welfare and education
levels are not troublesome, citing the Urban Institute's
1994 report
Immigration and Immigrants by Michael Fix and
Jeffrey Passel. But NR has shown without contravention,
not once (August 29, 1994) but twice (April 17, 1995),
that Fix and Passel had eliminated the immigration
problem by the ingenious expedient of eliminating
problem immigrants. For example, all Mexicans were
excluded from its education calculations because many
are illegal. But Mexico is also the largest source of
legal immigrants.
Yo, Urban Institute (fax: 202-452-1840)! What about
setting this record straight? You have nothing to lose
but your moral self-regard. And those Ford Foundation
grants.