Mexicans create jobs in Texas, study says
SMU center’s research sees need for freer migration
Far from taking jobs away from Texans, Mexicans are helping create additional employment opportunities, providing valuable labor for a growing economy and helping the deepening integration with Mexico, according to the Texas-Mexico Center at Southern Methodist University.
The findings of the first research study by the center comes as the Trump administration cracks down on unauthorized immigrants, referring to them as criminals and calling for a wall between both countries.
The center’s study called for “freer migration” across the border and fewer barriers to international crossings, touting Texas as an example of cooperation with Mexico.
The nonpartisan Texas-Mexico Center was created in 2017 with a $4 million donation from Monterrey, Mexico-based Gruma, and its unit, Dallas-based Mission Foods, with the goal of highlighting the deepening economic and cultural integration underway between Texas and Mexico. As many as 1 million jobs in Texas are attributed to trade with Mexico. Gruma alone generates about 1,000 direct jobs and more than 4,500 indirect jobs in the north region.
“We know Texas leads the way in strengthening collaboration between neighbors,” Juan Gonzalez Moreno, chairman and CEO of Gruma, said in a statement.
“And through this center, we reaffirm our belief that working together we will continue to elevate and strengthen the Texas-Mexico-United States relationship. This research will create better work and business opportunities on both sides of the border,” he added.
The study relied on data from the U.S. Census Bureau and its Mexican counterpart, known as INEGI.
The study, with contributions by the Bush School of Government at Texas A&M University, the Federal Reserve Board of Dallas and Colegio de Mexico in Mexico City, stressed the importance of labor from Mexico, which in many parts of the United States, is in decline.
The report’s rosy outlook is a thorn on the side of the Trump administration.
U.S Attorney General Jeff Session recently visited the border and compared immigrants to criminals. Sessions decried illegal migration and insisted that legality must come before anything, downplaying the need for more workers during a booming economy.
“Our citizens want our government to think about them for a change. They have dreams, too,” Sessions said. Among the study’s findings:
Trade with Mexico does not hinder interstate trading in the U.S. States are still more likely to trade among themselves than across the border with Mexico, which shows the border trade relationship supports both national and international trade.
Because of the integration across value chains, there is clear evidence that Mexican and U.S. workers are complements for each other rather than substitutes.
Revisions of NAFTA need to maintain cross-border integration.
Freer migration reduced Mexico’s wage inequality.