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March 2000
Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
The Second Great Migration: Economic and
Policy Implications
The United States is now experiencing
a large and sustained wave of immigration. Many observers
have compared this influx to the Great Migration at the beginning
of the twentieth century. Our labor force is again being swelled
by immigration, just as during the Great Migration.
Today, we will discuss some of the economic
and policy implications of this second Great Migration. First,
we will discuss the number and composition of immigrants,
and the factors determining these immigration flows. We will
then describe the economic performance of immigrants and their
effects on the economy. Finally, we will look at policy options.
Number and Composition of Immigrants
As shown in figure 1, the current
immigration wave is the largest in U.S. history. During this
decade, 9.1 million immigrants have been legally admitted,
slightly exceeding the previous record of 8.8 million set
nine decades earlier during the first Great Migration. In
addition, net illegal immigration is estimated to be 2.8 million
during this decade.
As a result of recent rapid immigration,
the number of foreign-born residents is also at an all-time
high—more than 25 million. As a share of the population,
foreign-born residents are 10 percent—up from 5 percent
in 1970—but below the 15 percent peak reached during
the first Great Migration.
During the last two decades, one-quarter
of the growth of the work force has been due to immigration.
In particular, immigration has played a crucial role in sustaining
labor force growth during the current expansion.
The first Great Migration was marked
not only by a large number of immigrants but also by a change
in their origins, as southern and central Europe replaced
western and northern Europe as sending areas. Similarly, figure
3 indicates that the second Great Migration has been associated
with a dramatic change in immigrant origins, as Latin America
and Asia have replaced Europe and Canada as sending areas.
Some observers have expressed concern
that current immigrants are more likely than past immigrants
to be at the low end of the skills and education distribution.
Notably, figure 4 reveals that a disproportionate number of
immigrants lack high school diplomas. While the number of
natives without a diploma has dropped sharply during the last
few decades, the decline among immigrants has been much less
rapid, resulting in a growing disparity.
But, this is only part of the story.
The United States actually attracts labor disproportionately
from both extremes of the skill and education distributions.
Immigrants are disproportionately likely to be high school
dropouts, but they are also disproportionately likely to have
master's degrees or above, as shown in figure 5. The movement
of high-skilled labor to the United States is referred to
by the sending countries as "brain drain."
Determinants of Immigrant Flows
What determines the number and
identity of immigrants? Economic forces—along with cultural,
political, and personal factors—determine which foreigners
want (and are financially able) to immigrate to the United
States. Immigration policy then determines which members of
this group are legally allowed to enter the country.
Economic Forces
Different economic forces attract
low-skilled and high-skilled labor to the United States. The
United States attracts low-skilled labor because such labor
is relatively scarce here. This scarcity drives up the wages
of low-skilled labor, relative to developing countries in
which such labor is plentiful and cheap. For example, wages
in the United States are about 9 times higher than in Mexico,
and the gap is longstanding (figure 6).
The attraction of high-skilled workers
to the United States arises from demand as well as supply
factors. Because many of the industries that require very
high-skilled workers are located here, demand for these workers
is high, resulting in higher salaries. Also, some high-skilled
workers from Europe and Canada prefer the lower U.S. tax burden.
Policy
Of the foreigners who want and
can afford to immigrate, which are legally allowed to do so?
Several major laws have shaped current policy. The Immigration
Act of 1965 repealed the national-origins quotas that had
favored western and northern Europe and provided the catalyst
for the predominantly Latin American and Asian immigrant flow
that we see today. A 1986 law provided a one-time amnesty
to 3 million undocumented immigrants, and a 1990 law allowed
more employment-related immigration.
Current law allows several groups of
foreigners to immigrate, usually subject to numerical limits.
With minor exceptions, it prohibits all other foreigners from
immigrating. The law places a strong emphasis on family reunification
and gives a much more limited role for employment-related
immigration. As shown in figure 7, family-related immigration
has grown sharply since 1970.
Figure 8 depicts the five major groups
that are allowed to enter as permanent residents. First, unlimited
entry is allowed for immediate relatives—spouses and
minor children of citizens and parents of adult citizens.
About 300,000 enter each year, accounting for more than one-third
of legal immigration. Second, the law allots 226,000 visas
for other family members—adult children of citizens,
siblings of adult citizens, and spouses and children of noncitizen
permanent residents. These visas are fully used, with waiting
periods ranging from 16 months to 11 years. Third, 55,000
visas are assigned to "diversity" immigrants chosen
in a lottery open to natives of Europe and certain other regions
who have a high school education or meet a work-experience
requirement. Fourth, refugees who face persecution abroad
are also admitted, subject to an annual limit of about 110,000.
In general, the diversity and refugee slots are also fully
used.
The remaining 140,000 visas are for
employment-related immigration—130,000 for workers plus
another 10,000 for investors with at least $1,000,000 in capital
who create at least 10 jobs. Spouses and minor children of
the workers and investors count against the 140,000 limit.
The law uses complex criteria to assign
these visas to workers thought to have special abilities or
to fill labor shortages. Some highly skilled workers may enter
without job offers. However, 80,000 of the visas are limited
to workers with job offers and subject to a cumbersome labor
certification process that requires employers to advertise
extensively for domestic applicants. Due to the strict criteria,
the certification rules and backlogs at the Immigration and
Naturalization Service, one-third of the employment visas
are unused. Forty thousand workers and a few hundred investors
are admitted each year, along with 50,000 family members.
Due to these difficulties, employers
have turned increasingly to a wide variety of temporary-worker
visas, which are separate from the above categories. Figure
9 depicts the sharp increase in these visas in recent years.
There are a variety of temporary worker
visas, such as H2-As for farm workers and H2-Bs for other
low-skilled workers. But the largest and most prominent category
is the H1-B visa, granted to workers in what the law considers
"specialty occupations," including many high-tech
jobs. These workers generally must have a college degree and
(in some cases) work experience. These visas require a job
offer but not labor certification.
A limitation of the H1-B visa program
is that it makes it very difficult for workers to change employers.
H1-B visas are now limited to 115,000 per year (not including
spouses and children who are admitted on separate H-4 visas).
This cap is significantly below the demand by high-tech firms
and other employers.
The Economic Performance of Immigrants
Many immigrants to the U.S. fare
well here, both in terms of their own economic outcomes and
in terms of contributing to the country as a whole. For example,
would the Allies have won World War II if Enrico Fermi had
not immigrated to Chicago and perfected the self-sustaining
nuclear reaction?
As we have demonstrated, however, many
immigrants today are less skilled than past cohorts of immigrants
and also less skilled than natives. How do they fare in the
economy as compared with natives? As figure 10 shows, how
well immigrants do is related to their country of origin.
European immigrants outperform natives in the labor market,
while Mexican immigrants work at earnings deficits that average
40 percent. As less-skilled workers have come to dominate
immigration flows to the United States, we can see in figure
11 that the earnings power of recent immigrants has been declining.
A male immigrant arriving today can be expected to earn one-third
less than a male native worker. In 1960, the difference would
only have been 12 percent. The reasons for the wage differences
are no mystery. The majority of recent immigrants are young,
have lower education levels and little work experience and
speak limited English.
One outcome of having a limited education
in a marketplace that increasingly rewards skills is ending
up in the bottom of the income distribution. As you can see
in figure 12, almost one-quarter of immigrants today are in
the lowest tenth of the income distribution. This has increased
from about 7 percent in 1960. Intense immigration in the past
thirty years partly explains why the United States has experienced
increased income inequality despite prevailing long-term economic
growth.
So far the economic picture of most
immigrants may seem bleak. The initial situation of immigrants
is less troubling, however, if they assimilate and eventually
achieve the economic outcomes of natives. One encouraging
sign is the high labor force participation rate of Latin American
immigrants: 94 percent vs. 91 percent for natives. However,
since their initial wages are lower, wage assimilation requires
that immigrants' earnings grow faster than those of natives.
Figure 13 suggests that immigrants experience faster wage
growth, although they do not reach wage parity with average
natives. If we compare them with comparable natives, however,
by controlling for education and English fluency, figure 14
predicts complete assimilation—wage parity with comparable
natives—after 16–20 years in the United States.[1]
The Role of Immigration in Economic
Growth
Does the individual earnings power
of immigrants determine the size of their contribution to
economic growth? Not exactly. Just as benefits to trade are
larger between dissimilar countries, so are benefits to immigration
larger when immigrants and natives differ. In fact, the more
different immigrants are, regardless of whether they have
less or more skills than natives, the bigger the gains to
immigration. These gains cause native incomes to rise. A reasonable
calculation of this increase in income puts the number at
about 14 billion dollars per year (in 1997).[2]
However, the gains from immigration
are not distributed evenly throughout the economy. There are
winners and losers. The winners include employers of immigrants
who pay lower wages, consumers who pay lower prices, suppliers
of goods and services to immigrants who have more customers,
and skilled natives whose relative wages rise. The losers
are the most vulnerable Americans, the ones most likely to
compete with immigrants for jobs. They see their wages lowered,
although research suggests not by much. Let's look at a couple
of these effects in more detail.
As consumers, of course, we all benefit
from immigration. In Texas we enjoy cheaper prices for labor-intensive
goods and services precisely because we have a plentiful supply
of immigrant labor. Babysitting, housekeeping and gardening
(figure 15) are all cheaper in Texas than the national average.
Another effect of immigration is an increase in the demand
for existing goods and services. The revival of many inner-city
neighborhoods is due to the growth of immigrant enclaves and
immigrant-run businesses. This has had positive effects on
property values, as has increasing homeownership rates among
the foreign-born (figure 16).
The Fiscal Impact of Immigration
A hundred years ago, during the
first Great Migration, the discussion about immigration may
have ended here with consumers and producers benefiting while
some native workers lose out. There was little fiscal impact
of immigrants since there was no publicly provided social
safety net. Today's society, however, has commitments to an
array of transfer programs as well as to public education.
So do taxpayers win or lose from immigration? To figure this
out, we first take the expected tax contribution of immigrants
and their descendants. From this number we subtract the expected
costs of public services provided to them. Public services
include (but are not limited to) welfare and Medicaid as well
as public schools, police, fire and public health services.
As shown in figure 17, the average fiscal impact of immigrants
and their descendants is positive at around $80,000. [3]
This fiscal impact, however, varies
by the education level of the immigrant (much as it would
with a native). Immigrants with a high school degree or better
and their descendants contribute more in taxes than they use
up; this is how most taxpayers benefit from immigration. The
fiscal impact of a low-skilled immigrant, however, is negative
$18,000. This number is low because the larger negative impact
of the original immigrant is largely offset by the future
contributions of his descendants. This implies that taxpayers
who locate near low-skilled immigrant clusters might lose
from immigration. Low-skilled immigrants use more public schools,
and this is one reason for the costs they impose, but do they
also use public assistance disproportionately?
Due to their higher poverty rates and
larger families, immigrants are more likely to participate
in assistance programs (figure 18). On average, 22 percent
of immigrant households receive some type of assistance, compared
with 15 percent of native households. This is not a large
enough difference in welfare participation to suggest that
immigrants are coming to the U.S. for the welfare payments.
If they were, there wouldn't be any immigrants in Texas! To
illustrate this point more clearly, we can adjust for variables
such as family size, education, age and state of residence.
As figure 19 shows, the adjusted welfare gap is only 2 percentage
points.[4]
An important benefit from the descendants
of immigrants is that they, as well as their parents, increase
the labor force and help keep pay-as-you- go government programs
afloat. To demonstrate this, figure 20 shows the age distribution
of immigrants versus natives. Notice that 'new' immigrants
are in fact over-represented in the age groups 10–39.
The fact that immigrants are younger and have more children
slows the deterioration of the worker-to-retiree ratio. As
figure 21 indicates, this ratio will be halved in most developed
countries over the next 50 years (although less so in the
United States). We can get a glimpse of the benefit of immigration
to social security from figure 22. In this simulation, allowing
50 percent more immigrants into the economy increases the
balance of the social security trust fund and extends its
solvency by two years (from 2033 to 2035). The fact that the
simulation does not account for the higher fertility of immigrants
suggests the true effect of increasing immigration on the
trust fund is larger than that shown here.
Policy Options in the Short and Long
Run
How can policy changes address
the labor shortage? You know you have tight labor markets
when the AFL-CIO is calling for amnesty for undocumented workers!
This may even be a surer sign than Chairman Greenspan citing
the nation's labor shortage as 'the greatest threat' to the
record-long economic expansion. Immigrant labor has been an
integral part of the economic boom and now the question is
whether we can continue to turn to immigrants to satisfy labor
demand. Today's presentation suggests that we can. Although
immigration is not a free lunch, the benefits still appear
to outweigh the costs at current levels of immigration.
To get immigration policy more in line
with the needs of the marketplace, we present both short-run
and long-run policy options for consideration. These options
would increase the role of employment, which has been de-emphasized
in existing immigration policy. In the short run, working
within the existing policy framework, we suggest two things:
increasing the number of employment-based visas available
to foreign-born workers and simplifying the rules for obtaining
and keeping those visas. There are several proposals already
under consideration to achieve the first objective. These
include temporarily increasing the number of H1-B visas, expanding
the H2-A and H2-B programs, and instituting a guest-worker
program. Chairman Greenspan, when remarking on the labor shortage,
endorsed Senator Gramm's bill to increase the availability
of H1-B visas, legislation that stemmed from President McTeer's
insight into this topic in a Wall Street Journal op-ed
in May of last year.
Another one of President McTeer's suggestions
was to scrap the cumbersome labor certification procedures
that help keep one-third of permanent employment visas from
being used. We'd like to extend that argument to the temporary
visa programs. Government-defined "specialty worker"
requirements exclude a majority of professions. Under the
current H1-B provisions that require a college degree, the
equivalent of Bill Gates wouldn't be able to immigrate to
the United States. Similarly, H2-A provisions are also strict—they
require that the employer provide housing for his workers,
as well as complete a labor certification process. As a consequence,
the average farmer who needs to hire seasonal help is not
able to do so, at least not legally. Both temporary visa programs
restrict the worker to one employer, a practice that has led
critics to liken them to forms of indentured labor. Clearly
these processes can be streamlined, and the strict rules can
be scrapped. Let the market provide the incentives that determine
what workers come here. Simply extending to foreign-born workers
the right to switch employers would then ensure that they
are paid competitive wages.
Now what about a policy scenario for
the long run? We suggest working toward a common North American
labor market. Viable long-run policy must satisfy labor demand
at both ends of the skill distribution—low and high.
While most political emphasis has been placed on shortages
in the high-3 tech sector, the reality is that three-fourths
of all new jobs in the coming decade will be in the services
and retail trade industry. These growth patterns are much
the same as those that were realized in the past decade. To
date, illegal immigration has addressed the needs of employers
where policy has fallen short. As figure 23 shows, both of
our NAFTA partners rank high as source countries for illegal
immigration—Mexico first and Canada fourth. Canada is
plentiful in skilled labor and Mexico is plentiful in unskilled
labor. Both are already coming here, legally and otherwise.
The best policy response to these economic realities is to
integrate our labor pools into one common North American labor
market, just as European countries have done in the European
Union.
—Pia M. Orrenius and Alan D. Viard
| Notes
- Figures 13 and 14 from Immigration Policy
and the Skills of Immigrants to Australia, Canada,
and the United States by Heather Antecol,
Deborah Cobb-Clarke and Stephen Trejo, November
1999.
- The New Americans: Economic, Demographic
and Fiscal Effects of Immigration, James
Smith and Barry Edmonston, editors, National
Academy Press, Washington, D.C., 1997.
- Figure 17 from source in note 2.
- Heaven's Door: Immigration Policy and
the American Economy, George J. Borjas,
Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey,
1999.
About In Depth
This article is based on
a presentation by Pia M. Orrenius, economist and
Alan D. Viard, senior economist and policy advisor,
Research Department, Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
The views expressed are
those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect
the positions of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
or the Federal Reserve System. |
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