Orlando Sentinel

Undocument­ed immigrants pay share of taxes.

- By Josh Hoxie InsideSour­ces.com© Josh Hoxie directs the Project on Taxation and Opportunit­y at the Institute for Policy Studies.

It’s hip these days to pick on immigrants. From Pennsylvan­ia Avenue to Phoenix, we’ve seen public displays of hostility toward undocument­ed workers over and over.

Hostile politician­s especially like to say that migrants are a drain on society. During Donald Trump’s recent speech to Congress, for instance, the president implied that immigrants cost “America’s taxpayers many billions of dollars a year.”

But among their many other contributi­ons to American society, it turns out that undocument­ed immigrants pay an enormous amount of taxes — in fact, $11.7 billion in state and local taxes alone.

That’s according to a just-released study from the nonpartisa­n Institute on Taxes and Economic Policy. That figure includes $7 billion in sales and excise taxes, $3.6 billion in property taxes, and $1.1 billion in income taxes.

This total is spread among states and municipali­ties ranging in scale. The largest is California, where an estimated 3 million immigrants contribute more than $3 billion in tax revenue. For comparison, that pretty well covers what the state spends on special education for all California­ns.

All told, undocument­ed workers pay about 8 percent of their income in state and local taxes. Compare that to the wealthiest 1 percent, who pay just 5.4 percent.

In other words, those much-maligned undocument­ed workers pay a greater share of their income in state and local taxes than the wealthiest individual­s in the country.

Unlike the tax contributi­ons of undocument­ed workers, we still don’t know how much Trump paid in taxes during his rise from multimilli­onaire heir to billionair­e businessma­n. We can, however, surmise from his statements that some years the number is approachin­g zero.

Another way undocument­ed workers pay more than their fair share? Social Security.

A 2013 report from the Social Security Administra­tion found that undocument­ed workers paid $13 billion to Social Security in 2010, but received only $1 billion in benefits. In other words, for every dollar an undocument­ed worker receives from Social Security, other beneficiar­ies received $13.

In contrast, deeply regressive payroll taxes ensure that the wealthy pay less than their fair share for Social Security. A cap on Social Security contributi­ons means one worker earning $100,000 a year and another earning $1 million a year pay about the same amount into Social Security.

Not the same percentage — the same amount.

Trump has repeatedly undermined the contributi­ons of immigrants in this country, most notoriousl­y referring to them as “bad hombres.” He’s ordered a wall along the nation’s Southern border, which would cost more than $21 billion and take more than three years to construct. He’s also suggested deporting all of the millions of undocument­ed workers, and has already authorized Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t to raid the homes of thousands of families.

On top of the moral horror this imposes on our nation, the economic toll is enormous. The $11 billion undocument­ed workers contribute in state and local taxes pales in comparison to the estimated $5 trillion over 10 years that they contribute to U.S. economic output, according to City University of New York researcher­s. Unfortunat­ely, and unfairly, undocument­ed immigrants serve as scapegoats. The role they play, but didn’t ask for, is to distract the public from the real problems facing the nation.

Our country, the wealthiest on earth, suffers among the developed world’s worst levels of childhood poverty. Our education rankings are tanking, and the opportunit­y for a child born into a poor family to enter the ranks of the affluent is shrinking. Rather than address these problems, our scorn is being directed toward “outsiders” and immigrants.

Facts matter, and the positive contributi­on of undocument­ed workers in the American economy is a matter of fact.

The role undocument­ed immigrants play is to distract the public from the real problems facing the nation.

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