February 18, 2006
Sick in the
City: Bloomberg on Health Care for Illegals
When a recent caller to
New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s weekly radio
show complained about the costs of providing health care
to illegal immigrants, Hizzoner said it wasn’t so. He
even added:
“Unfortunately, the
undocumented workers
[sic]
don’t avail themselves of
services until their situation is dire.”
And Bloomberg claimed that
illegals eschew medical services for fear of being
reported to federal immigration authorities.
This is what New Yorkers
call chutzpah. Bloomberg is
simply flat-out wrong. Indeed, in September 2003 the
Mayor himself issued Executive Order 41 [PDF]
highlighting “…a list of services provided and
administered by the city that non-U.S. citizens
may access regardless of immigration status.”
Among the services:
EO 41 went on to promise:
“If you share your immigration status or other
confidential information with City employees,
they will not report this information to anyone,
except in limited circumstances such as when required by
law.” [See
Bloomberg To Illegals: Make Yourselves At Home,
by Michelle Malkin ]
Immigrants in New York
City also benefit from New York State’s Medicaid
program, the largest in the country and notorious for
waste and inefficiency, is. At $34 billion per year it
is even more expensive than California’s system, which
covers more than twice as many people. [Medicaid State
Data:
PDF ]
Medicaid spending per
eligible recipient in 2003 was:
(Table 1)
It’s difficult to gauge
the share of Medicaid spending attributable to illegal
immigrants. But Joseph Salvo, a prominent New York
demographer,
estimates that at least 400,000 illegal immigrants
live in New York City—about 5 percent of the population.
Total NYC Medicaid spending was
$22 billion in 2004. So it’s not unrealistic to
impute $1.1 billion (5 percent of $22 billion) to
illegals.
It could be more. Although
illegal immigrants are younger than the general
population, they are also poorer and less likely to be
covered by private employment-based insurance. Their
share of Medicaid spending could easily exceed their
population share.
More importantly, illegals
are the most rapidly growing segment of New York City’s
immigrant population. Exhibit #1; the striking rise in
the city’s
Mexican immigrant population, which according to
census figures went from
32,689 in 1990 to 122,550 in 2000. City demographers
say the true growth is probably higher, to 200,000, and
is not expected to slow.
Mexicans are now the
fifth largest immigrant group in the city, up from
17th in 1990. Births to Mexican-born
mothers—6,408 in 2000—are second only to births to
immigrant Dominicans—the city’s
largest immigrant group.
Jeffrey Passel, a demographer with the Pew Hispanic
Center who has studied the issue, finds that nationally
80 to 85 percent of Mexican immigration since 1990 was
illegal. “Any place that’s getting a lot of new
immigration from Mexico, virtually all of it is
undocumented, and that certainly includes New York,”
says Passel. [Record
Immigration Is Changing the Face of New York's
Neighborhoods, By Nina Bernstein, New York
Times, January 24, 2005]
Of course, Medicaid costs
are defrayed by state and federal funds. There is no
local tax support. Politically, therefore, Mayor
Bloomberg is insulated. To that extent, he can afford to
be generous with other people’s money.
But the bottom line: through city, state and federal
taxes, New York City residents are indeed subsidizing
illegal immigrants’ health care.
Contact Mayor Bloomberg
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email
him) is President of
ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis.