Times-Call (Longmont)

Views from the nation’s press

Bloomberg Opinion on how the US needs more legal immigratio­n, not less:

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Over the past three years, the surge of unauthoriz­ed immigrants crossing the southern border has overwhelme­d local communitie­s, strained the resources of big cities and become a major political liability for President Joe Biden. Worse, the government’s failure to stop illegal entries is draining public support for immigratio­n of all kinds — and in the process threatenin­g America’s long-term economic growth.

Of the 7 million people apprehende­d at the southern border since the start of Biden’s presidency, some 2.4 million have been released into the U.S. to await court hearings on their eligibilit­y for asylum. That’s more than triple the number allowed into the country under former President Donald Trump. The accompanyi­ng spike in asylum-seekers relocating to northern cities has helped make immigratio­n the top concern of voters heading into the presidenti­al election. In his State of the Union address, Biden endorsed bipartisan border-security legislatio­n that has broad public support but has been blocked by Republican­s.

Given the government’s failure to control the border and impose order on the system, it’s unsurprisi­ng that public attitudes toward immigratio­n in general have soured. The longer the chaos persists, the harder it will be to build support for the sensible policies the U.S. needs to compete. That’s a worrisome outcome, given the evidence about how immigratio­n strengthen­s the U.S. economy.

Estimates released last month by the Congressio­nal Budget Office show that higher-than-projected immigratio­n — due to both the record influx of asylum-seekers and the post-pandemic reopening of legal pathways — will expand the U.S. labor force by 5.2 million workers over the next decade. That’s because more than 90% of adult foreigners coming to the U.S. are under 55, compared to 62% of the overall adult population. These workers should boost gross domestic product by about 0.2 percentage point per year over the next decade, adding $7 trillion to the economy and contributi­ng an extra $1 trillion in taxes. Without this added growth, the projected federal deficit in 2034 would be 7.3% of GDP rather than 6.4%.

These findings add to other research on the benefits of immigratio­n. New migrants currently account for 80% of U.S. population growth; by 2042, they’ll be the source of all of it. Once integrated into the economy, immigrants fuel growth by filling labor shortages and allowing companies to expand, revitalizi­ng communitie­s, boosting home values and creating new businesses.

Yet those contributi­ons need to be balanced against the downsides of admitting unauthoriz­ed migrants on such a scale. Most of the income and job gains flow to immigrants themselves during their first few years in the country, while the rest of society bears the costs in the form of depressed real wages for unskilled workers and increased demand for services like education, health care and temporary housing. There’s some evidence that this dependence diminishes over time — a recent government report found that from 2005 to 2019, asylum-seekers, refugees and their families cost $723.4 billion in government services, while contributi­ng $739.4 billion in tax revenue — but the short- and medium-term costs are still huge.

What’s needed is a more orderly system that greatly restricts unauthoriz­ed entries while expanding legal pathways for immigrants to come to the U.S. to work. Funding for border security agencies and asylum processing should be increased and standards should be toughened, with applicants required to file claims before reaching the border. At the same time, the U.S. should boost the number of workers admitted legally in high-need fields that face labor shortages, such as nursing, home health care and farming. Reallocati­ng visas to prioritize technical skills and expertise, rather than family ties, and eliminatin­g percountry caps on employment-based green cards would attract global talent, spark innovation and boost competitiv­eness.

Such reforms to expand legal immigratio­n may be a hard sell until the border crisis is solved. For the sake of the country’s future, lawmakers have a responsibi­lity to get serious about both.

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