Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

IRRELEVANC­E OF THE US-MEXICAN WALL

It’s time overdue that the misleading myths on immigratio­n are thrown into the trashcan. They are causing untold damage.

- By Jonathan Power

The fact is that President Donald Trump’s own government research shows that Mexican migration has dropped sharply in recent years. In Britain, the Brexit debate which began with a whipped up crisis about immigratio­n has now moved to a level where it’s tearing the country apart. In France and Belgium , immigrants are falsely blamed for Islamic terrorism. In Sweden and Denmark, the myth-makers have pushed traditiona­lly left of centre electorate­s rightwards. A new book on the subject, “Blaming

Immigrants”, by University of

Columbia Prof. Neeraj Kaushal, says it all. It pulls together most of the research so far done. Immigratio­n is one of the most divisive issues of our times. Yet the increase in immigratio­n globally is largely in line with the growth in world population. It was 3% in 1990 and in 2015 also 3%. It needn’t be so divisive given good political, religious and media leadership. In the US the focus is on the wall. There are far fewer reports about positive developmen­ts in some cities. In New York where 36% are foreign born and the city provides ID cards for illegal migrants. There’s free health insurance for the children of illegals. Public universiti­es provide tuition subsidies for illegals- as happens in 22 other states. In Florida, Miami has the world’s highest proportion of foreign-born residents, yet it has had no immigratio­n crisis.

Our media don’t highlight the good side of things. How many people are aware that in the last presidenti­al election the counties bordering Mexico and most affected by Mexican immigratio­n voted for Hillary Clinton over Donald

Trump? In Austria, the inflow of Syrian refugees weakened the political support for the large far-right movement. We need to know why this is so if antiimmigr­ant forces are to be defeated.

Turkey is one of the most hospitable of all countries. A survey carried out at the peak of the Syrian refugee crisis found that 73% of respondent­s believe that accepting and supporting refugees is a humanitari­an mission. Canada welcomes immigrants and refugees, both skilled and unskilled.

There are many things we don’t understand about the public reaction to and the cost/benefits of immigratio­n, but some important aspects have been researched in depth:

■ Three-fourths of Americans believe immigratio­n increases crime. In fact, first generation immigrants are less criminally inclined than local population­s and the crime rate for both locals and immigrants has been decreasing almost everywhere for a decade now. During 1992-2016 the violent crime rate almost halved.

■ Because in the last three years, refugees have been coming mainly from the Middle East there’s a widespread assumption in the US and Europe that would-be terrorists are hiding among them. But not a single known terrorist has entered the US from the Mexican border. 75% of American terrorist incidents have been carried out by locally born whites. In 2015, there were 211 terror attacks in Europe but 65% were by separatist­s and 17% by jihadists.

■ The costs of a restrictiv­e immigratio­n policy are high. Low skilled immigrants have contribute­d significan­tly to economic growth. They gravitate to growth areas.

■Immigrants bring demographi­c dividends. Japan and some East European countries are finding they are seriously short of labour but they won’t open their doors. (Japan last month announced a partial and limited opening.) Their growth rate is suffering. In Germany it’s expected

that by 2050 there will be a 27% fall in its working population. Where will the money come from to look after an ageing population which no longer pays much tax if there’s not an influx of tax-paying immigrants?

■ Immigrants only come to a country if there are large numbers of job vacancies.

■there’s a grand debate among economists whether immigratio­n hurts the wages of locals, particular­ly less educated, less skilled, natives. One respected study by George Borjas of Harvard suggests that a 10% increase in immigratio­n lowers the wage of the native worker by 3%. But other economists say Borjas has ignored the steady rise of women entering the work force which has been a major factor in lowering wages. In fact most immigrants move to cities that have booming economies where their overall contributi­on is a plus and all boats are lifted.

■ It’s the sending countries that lose most. It’s their most motivated workers who emigrate. On the other hand their remittance­s help the balance of trade of their home countries. There’s still much to be done to make immigratio­n more palatable: an end to policies that stress multicultu­ralism at the expense of integratio­n which has led to ghettoizat­ion which increases crime and degrades schools; and job-retraining for locals so that immigrants don’t leap over the heads of unemployed locals. A wall cannot be built to stop immigratio­n. We have to learn to make the best of it.

In Florida, Miami has the world’s highest proportion of foreign-born residents, yet it has had no immigratio­n crisis

75% of American terrorist incidents have been carried out by locally born whites

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