Boston Herald

Growing economy needs legal immigrants

- By STEPHEN MOORE Stephen Moore is a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation.

Republican­s are right to call for tough measures to deter illegal immigratio­n — which means building the wall, ending the “catch and release” policy and challengin­g the harboring strategies of sanctuary cities.

But where Republican­s are wrong is in calling for strict caps and even reductions in legal immigratio­n visas. Rather than be restricted, the so-called H-1B program, which brings skilled workers to our country, should be expanded.

Almost every economic analysis finds that legal immigrants, on balance, are net contributo­rs to the American economy.

Not all immigrants are beneficial, and, sure, there are bad apples in the bunch — just as is true of the population of American citizens as a whole. But the benefits of immigratio­n are surprising­ly large, mostly because most immigrants are risk takers who come to the United States between the ages of 16 and 40 — so they tend to be at the start of their working years or at the peak of their earning years.

We also know that the more skilled the immigrants, the larger their contributi­on to overall productivi­ty and the bigger their lifetime net tax payments — i.e., the more they reduce budget deficits.

The prestigiou­s National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine concluded that there is a positive economic effect of immigratio­n. Its 2016 study explained that immigrant workers may be “complement­ary with natives, especially high-skilled natives ... with high-skilled immigrants innovating sufficient­ly to raise the productivi­ty of all workers.”

Because most immigrants arrive when they are young, and because Americans are getting older (baby boomers are at retirement age), immigratio­n could help fill our labor force needs. This is especially important now, because U.S. birth rates just hit a 30-year low. Without immigratio­n, we would have negative population growth, and we’d soon look like aging Japan. Immigratio­n is America’s fountain of youth.

So if the GOP wants to be a growth party, it must be a proimmigra­tion party. Period.

Fortunatel­y, there is an easy way to increase the visas for skilled immigrants. First, to forestall the “graying of America,” we should increase the overall number of legal immigrants from about 1 million per year to about 1.5 million per year.

Second, we should shift the compositio­n of immigrants by using a merit-based policy, along the lines of what Trump has endorsed and what has been adopted in Canada, Australia and Germany. Immediate family members, children and spouses would still go to the front of the line.

Others should be selected on the basis of their skills, talents and brains. Some worry that programs such as the H-1B visa program, which allows employers to sponsor and hire immigrants with specific needed skills, cost Americans jobs. But a 2014 study by the Partnershi­p for a New American Economy found that these skilled immigrants have raised wages for American workers and increased job growth in science, engineerin­g and technology fields. “Highskille­d immigrants don’t displace U.S.-born workers in computer fields,” the study found.

Donald Trump rightly aims to achieve a sustained 3 to 4 percent annual growth rate for America. This faster growth will require more immigrants, and no nation has a better opportunit­y than America to import the brains and talents and risk takers from the rest of the world. What are we waiting for?

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