January 04, 2008
WSJ Edit Page Whitewashes The Immigration
Problem….Again
Crime rates have
declined in the last fifteen years. So have welfare
rolls. Employment is at record levels. All this at a
time when the illegal alien population has doubled, and
maybe even quadrupled.
So illegal aliens are
good for us. Right?
Well, that’s the implication of a recent
Wall Street Journal editorial
Keeping Book on Immigration. [December 31, 2007.
Subscription required, or see
here.]
We deconstruct this egregious piece of
post hoc ergo propter hocmisinformation:
WSJ: "Between 1994 and 2005,
the illegal immigrant population in the U.S. is
estimated to have doubled to around 12 million. Yet
according the Department of Justice, over that same
period the violent crime rate in the U.S. declined by
34.2% and the property crime rate fell by 26.4%,
reaching their lowest levels since 1973. Crime has
fallen in cities with the largest immigrant
populations—such as
New York,
Los Angeles,
Chicago and
Miami—as well as border cities like
San Diego and
El Paso, Texas."
VDARE.com:
Illegal aliens are on the rise, but so are mortgage
defaults, obese children, and sunspot activity. Does
anyone attribute lower crime rates to those things?
Immigrant gateway cities are places where
Hispanic immigrants have
displaced blacks as the largest minority. One would
expect, based on
national victimization surveys and
incarceration rates showing that
blacks commit violent crimes at far higher rates
than either non-Hispanic whites or Hispanics—to see
crime rates fall as Hispanics move in.
And they have.
But this begs the question of
Hispanic criminality per se. It’s clear,
based on national incarceration data [William J. Sabol,
Heather Couture, and Paige M. Harrison, "Prisoners in
2006," Bureau of Justice Statistics Bulletin,
December 2007. Appendix tables 7 and 8.
PDF], that Hispanics are far more likely to be in
prison than non-Hispanic whites.
In 2004 (latest available data) there were 290,500
Hispanic males in state or federal correctional
facilities. That’s an incarceration rate of 1,281 per
100,000 population.
The black incarceration rate—3,042 per 100,000—was
2.9-times the Hispanic rate and 6.9-times the white
rate.
The incarceration rate for
non-Hispanic white males was 487 per 100,000—far
less than half the Hispanic rate.
WSJ: "It's not because law-abiding foreign
professionals from India and China are compensating for
criminally inclined low-skill Latinos. Immigrants from
countries that comprise the bulk of our illegal alien
population—including
Mexicans,
Salvadorans and
Guatemalans—have lower incarceration rates than the
native-born."
VDARE.com:
Source, please? Our data, from the non-partisan GAO,
shows that approximately 27 percent of
prisoners in Federal custody are illegal aliens.
(That’s about seven-times larger than their population
share.) [Information on Criminal Aliens Incarcerated
in Federal and State Prisons and Local Jails, GAO,
April 7, 2005(PDF)]
The majority (63 percent) of incarcerated illegals
are
citizens of Mexico. Other major nationalities
include Colombia and the Dominican Republic (7 percent
each); Jamaica 4 percent; Cuba 3 percent; El Salvador 2
percent; and Honduras, Haiti, and Guatemala (1 percent
each).
The remaining 11 percent are from are 164 different
countries.
Only 21 percent of these illegals are in jail for
immigration offenses; most are in for
felonies.
WSJ: "Another popular belief is that
immigrants come here to go on the dole. The data show
that welfare caseloads have fallen as illegal
immigration has risen. As Peter Wehner and Yuval Levin
report in the December issue of Commentary
magazine, 'Since the high-water mark in 1994, the
national welfare caseload has declined by 60%. Virtually
every state in the union has reduced its caseload by at
least a third, and some have achieved reductions of over
90%'[Crime,
Drugs, Welfare—and Other Good News]
Apparently immigrants don't drive welfare caseloads
anymore than they drive the U.S. crime rate."
VDARE.com:
Government surveys indicate that immigrants generally,
and naturalized immigrants in particular, are more
likely to receive government benefits than natives.
For example: an analysis
of Census Bureau survey data found that 24.9 percent
of families headed by illegal Mexican immigrants and
33.9 percent of households headed by naturalized Mexican
immigrants and receive at least one major welfare
program.
By contrast, only 14.9 percent of native households
receive any welfare.
It’s not that immigrants don’t work. About 80 percent
of
all immigrant households receiving welfare have at
least one person working. But they are the working
poor—with incomes low enough to qualify for welfare.
Implication: Although immigrants may not come
here for welfare, they are not shy about taking what’s
available to them.
WSJ: "The best way to reduce
pressure on the border is by providing legal ways for
people to come and work. With the Bracero guest-worker
program of the 1950s, illegal entries from Mexico
declined to a trickle. A similar program today could
have much the same effect, while serving our homeland
security and economic interests."
VDARE.com:
The
Bracero program was a
"temporary" wartime
expedient designed to fill agricultural
positions with Mexican workers while Americans were
fighting abroad.
Good luck! The program remained in effect until
December 1964, by which time more than 425,000 braceros
were employed.
U.S. employers were required to pay the prevailing
agricultural wage, provide free housing, and cover
transportation costs. Those requirements were often
ignored.
Vernon M. Briggs, Professor
of Labor Economics at Cornell University’s School of
Labor Relations, summarizes the Bracero Program’s
destructiveness:
"The bracero program
demonstrated precisely how alien labor policies can
adversely affect citizen workers in the United States.
Agricultural employment in the Southwest was virtually
removed from competition with the nonagricultural
sector. The availability of Mexican workers
significantly depressed existing wage levels in some
regions, moderated wage increases that would have
occurred in their absence, and sharply compressed the
duration of employment (i.e., income earning
opportunities) for many citizen farmworkers."[Guestworker
Programs | Lessons from the Past and Warnings for the
Future, CIS, March 2004]
Not only do immigrants commit crimes themselves, they
create unemployment—and even
sometimes crime—the native-born.
But don’t look for that on the
WSJ Editorial page
anytime soon.
Edwin S. Rubenstein (email
him) is President of
ESR Research Economic Consultants in Indianapolis.