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Without Merit
Why have skills-based immigration at all?
By Mark Krikorian
National Review Online
May 31, 2007
Among the concessions that Jon Kyl
supposedly extracted from Ted Kennedy in exchange for
immediate, permanent amnesty for all illegal aliens was a change in the
legal-immigration system that placed more emphasis on an immigrant’s education
and less on family relationships. The goal of such a “merit-based” system is to
eliminate some of the current immigration categories for adult relatives in
order to limit future chain migration of family members. At the same time, the
current employment-based immigration categories would be replaced by a system
along the lines of how Canada and Australia select some of their immigrants,
awarding points for various attributes (education level, English ability, age,
etc.)
So at least these parts of the bill are good, right?
Wrong.
It’s true that the nepotism problem in our immigration system is serious. The
Raleigh, N.C., newspaper recently illustrated the chain migration problem by
talking to Mexican immigrant Pablo Baltazar. He snuck over the border 30 years
ago, got amnesty as a result of the 1986 immigration law, and has brought over
his nine siblings and their spouses (each of whom has his or her own relatives)
and children. Through the power of demographic compound interest, the Baltazar
clan is “now too numerous to count,” in the reporter’s words.
The problems this causes include slower assimilation due to constant infusions
of unassimilated relatives from the old country, and the takeover of the
immigration flow by people from a handful countries. National Review Online’s
own Stanley Kurtz has explored the issue in the context of Muslim family chain
immigration to Europe (see here and here).
But Kurtz and others have also discovered that the Senate bill’s provisions that
would supposedly end family chain migration are a sham, like almost everything
else in it. For the first eight-ten years or more, the measure would actually
increase family immigration so as to accommodate almost everyone (maybe seven
million people) on the current waiting lists for the family categories slated
for eventual elimination — siblings of U.S. citizens and adult sons and
daughters of citizens and legal residents. (See how much the bill would increase
total immigration in this pdf chart from Numbers USA, the most active group
fighting this noisome bill.)
Borjas also surmises that the changes would be gutted in short order: “Any bets
on how long it would take weak-kneed legislators to back off, strip the point
system of its ‘discriminatory’ impact, and make the whole thing meaningless?” We
don’t need to guess because we already know; Ted Kennedy recently told a
newspaper in his state that “The day it passes we’re going to put in legislation
to try to fix it.” And he’ll succeed, for he is truly Sun Tzu to the Senate
GOP’s Colonel Klink.
But suppose we lived in an alternate universe where Sen. Kennedy’s promises
actually meant something (the same universe where “temporary” really means
temporary) — would the system set out in the bill be worth it then?
Well, it certainly would cost less. Robert Rector of the Heritage Foundation has
calculated that the average low-skilled immigrant household consumes nearly
$20,000 more in government services that it pays in taxes. College-educated
immigrants, on the other hand, pay more in taxes than they use in services.
Likewise with the other problems that attend low-skilled
immigration: higher-skilled immigrants would be more likely to speak English,
less likely to be involved in gangs, and less likely to cluster together in
neighborhoods brimming with third-world dysfunction.
On the minus side, a large-scale flow of higher-skilled
immigrants would have the same effect on Americans who compete with them as the
low-skilled flow has had on less-educated Americans; a
Canadian
government report found recently that that country’s policy of encouraging
high levels of skilled immigration significantly lowered the wages of Canadian
college graduates.
Likewise, a large, ongoing flow of educated immigrants
designed to make life easier for corporate human-resources departments has the
potential to cause an atrophying of American education. After all, business is
the most important special interest in the country, and a large, reliable flow
of foreign schoolteachers, nurses, engineers, et al. eliminates much of the
incentive for business to pressure for education reform.
But to answer whether we should have a merit-based system, you need to clarify
for yourself the purposes of having any immigration at all. Others may answer
differently, but as I see it, immigration policy is not an employee-procurement
system for American business, but rather a citizen-recruitment program for the
American people. And while higher-skilled immigrants will be more likely to
master the initial indicators of Americanization — speaking English, keeping a
job, paying your bills and taxes, and in general exhibiting behavior in lines
with middle-class norms — they may be less likely to develop the
deeper, emotional connections that mark true Americanization. Higher-skilled
immigrants are more likely to arrive here with a fully formed modern national
consciousness and have both the means and the inclination to pursue
transnational lives — both through the formality of dual citizenship, and also
emotionally, by living in two countries simultaneously without developing a
genuine attachment to either.
There isn’t room here to get into it, but large-scale immigration of any kind
conflicts with the goals and characteristics of a modern society, whether in
economics, fiscal policy, assimilation, security, etc. The answer is not zero
immigration, but zero-based budgeting in immigration — starting from zero and
adding those narrow, targeted categories of people who should be admitted
regardless of the problems that immigration causes. This would include the
spouses and unmarried minor children of American citizens and a capped number
(say 50,000) of the most desperate refugees in the world. The third part of such
an immigration flow would be
a very small number of
the most gifted people in the world.
This could be done via a point system, though the one outlined in the Senate
bill is obviously inadequate. Such a system would still share with the current
arrangement a credential-based, central-planning mindset that lends itself to
micromanagement and false specificity. Maybe the simplest path would be to just
admit anyone who scores above 145 on an I.Q. test.
At bottom, the whole debate over a merit-based immigration policy assumes the
need for immigration for its own sake — gratuitous immigration, if you will. If
America had some “need” for large-scale immigration, then selecting people based
on education and English-language ability would clearly be preferable to
admitting people based on family connections. But before making that decision we
need a debate on the desirability of mass immigration, as such. Instead, we’re
stuck with dishonest and ill-informed poseurs telling us bigots and yahoos to
shut up and do what’s right for America.
Mark Krikorian is Executive Director of the
Center for Immigration Studies.
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