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May 29, 2007
“Path To
Citizenship” Goes Through U.S. Taxpayer’s Pocket
Here’s a question
Tamar Jacoby’s pollsters should ask Americans:
would you support a “path to citizenship” [Bushspeak
for amnesty] if you knew it would cost you, oh, say
$2.4 trillion?
Robert Rector, the reigning domestic policy expert
at Heritage Foundation, has shown that it will.
It works like this: In
recent testimony before the House Judiciary
Committee, Rector calculates the fiscal deficit of
households headed by
immigrants who lack a high school diploma. He finds
that the average
uneducated immigrant household:
 |
Receives $30,164 in government
benefits |
 |
Pays $10,573 in government
taxes |
 |
Generates a fiscal deficit of
$19,588 ($30,164 less $10,573) |
There are about 4.5 million such
households, implying that the fiscal deficit (benefits
received less taxes paid) for all
poorly educated immigrant households equals $89.1
billion (4.5 million times $19,588). More than half of
this deficit—$49.1 billion—occurs at the
state and
local government level.
Bottom line, according to Rector:
Eighty-nine billion dollars a year, or about 0.6 percent
of GDP, is transferred from
native taxpayers to
immigrant beneficiaries.
This amount far exceeds the
infinitesimal gains in native before-tax income that
earlier studies have attributed to immigration. Thus
Rector’s study shows that immigration is
reducing the living standards of U.S. natives.
Here’s how amnesty fits in:
About 41 percent of these
uneducated immigrant households are headed by illegal
aliens. They are
eligible for
many of the same benefits received by
legals, notably
public education. (At $7,737 per household,
public education accounts for more than one-quarter
of all government costs associated with immigrants.) And
while illegals themselves are technically ineligible for
welfare—unless you think they might lie—their U.S.-born
children receive the full gamut of means-tested welfare
benefits. The biggest difference occurs in Social
Security and Medicare.
In
an editorial [May 24, 2007] attacking Rector’s
fiscal impact study, the Wall Street Journal
notes what everyone already knows: immigrants generally
come here when they are
young and
working. Seventy percent are 20 to 54, compared to
only half of natives. Just two percent of immigrants are
over 65 when they arrive. So immigrants contribute
payroll taxes for some years before they collect
Social Security and
Medicare. Overall, they will pay about $5 trillion
more in payroll taxes over the next 75 years than they
will receive in
Social Security benefits. (Eventually, of course,
these legal immigrants will themselves become a
liability to the system, at which point the WSJ
would no doubt advocate more immigration—in other words,
a Ponzi scheme.)
But the WSJ
conveniently suppresses these inconvenient truths:
 | This subsidy from immigrants is
nowhere near enough to staunch the long-run actuarial
deficit facing Social Security or Medicare. |
The
2007 Trustee Reports project increasingly large
deficits in both Social Security and Medicare, with a
75-year deficit of $6.8 trillion in the retirement fund
and $11.6 trillion in the health insurance fund. The
Medicare Trust fund is expected to run out of cash by
2019, while Social Security will hang on until 2041.
The agreement allows
Mexican aliens to vest for Social Security after
working just 18 months in the U.S., and make up the
difference by "claiming" to have worked in
Mexico. We say "potential" because the
U.S.-Mexico agreement has yet to be signed by the
President—or even sent to Congress for review. While
costs will ultimately depend on specific terms and
language, any totalization agreement will hasten the
demise of both Social Security and Medicare.
And amnesty will accelerate Social
Security’s demise far more dramatically than
totalization.
Rector’s explanation: If the
government gives amnesty to 9.3 million illegal
immigrants—and there may be as many as 20 million—most
of them would eventually become eligible for Social
Security and Medicare benefits or Supplemental Security
Income and Medicaid benefits. Of course, not all of the
9.3 million adults given amnesty would survive till age
67—normal mortality rates would probably reduce the
population by roughly 15 percent before age 67. But that
means 7.9 million individuals would reach 67 and enter
retirement. Their average life expectancy would be
around 18 years.
Rector’s conclusion:
“The
net governmental cost (benefits minus taxes) of these
elderly individuals would be around $17,000 per
year. Over eighteen years of expected life, costs would
equal $306,000 per elderly amnesty recipient. A cost of
$306,000 per amnesty recipient multiplied by 7.9 million
amnesty recipients would be $2.4 trillion. These costs
would hit the U.S. taxpayer at exactly the point that
the Social Security system is expected to go into
crisis.” [The
Fiscal Cost of Low-Skill Immigrants to State and Local
Taxpayers by Robert E. Rector, Testimony
Delivered May 17, 2007]
The bottom line: amnesty will cost
Americans $2.4 trillion. Go on, Tamar. See how
popular that is.
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email
him) is President of
ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis. |