[Mb-civic] Undocumented workers contribute plenty - Derrick Z. Jackson - Boston Globe Op-Ed
William Swiggard
swiggard at comcast.net
Wed Apr 12 03:53:19 PDT 2006
Undocumented workers contribute plenty
By Derrick Z. Jackson | April 12, 2006 | The Boston Globe
AT THE New York rally for legalization of immigrants, Chung-Wha Hong,
the executive director of the New York Immigration Coalition, said, ''We
are inseparable, indivisible, and impossible to take out of America."
In Phoenix, Victor Colex, a 37-year-old fence builder who makes between
$7 and $8 an hour, told the Washington Post, ''We are not asking for
favors. We only want to work, for our families and parents and children."
In Boston, 26-year-old Robin Martini, a legal immigrant from Guatemala,
told the Globe, ''We give a grain a day of ourselves to this country. We
want to be part of it. We respect the laws. We pay our taxes. We want a
piece of the American dream.
Americans seem to get this, in a conflicted way. A new Washington
Post-ABC News poll says that 63 percent of Americans now support
legalization of immigrants who have lived here for a certain number of
years. A new CBS News Poll found that 74 percent of Americans favor
letting illegal immigrants who have been in the country at least five
years stay and work in the United States providing they pay a fine, pay
any back taxes they owe, speak English, and have no criminal record.
The conflicted nature of the acceptance comes in other poll findings
that show that Americans still believe that immigrants are a major drain
on national resources. A Time magazine poll found that 84 percent of
Americans were ''very" concerned (61 percent) or ''somewhat" concerned
(23 percent) that it costs taxpayers too much to provide healthcare and
education to immigrants. A Fox News/Opinion Dynamics poll last week
found that 87 percent of Americans say they are concerned that
immigrants ''overburden government services and programs."
But the evidence is becoming clear that it is justified that immigrants
give us more than a grain a day. They give their dollars. They are an
inseparable and indivisible part of the economy.
In articles published in The Tax Lawyer, a publication of the American
Bar Association, and in the upcoming issue of the Harvard Latino Law
Review, Francine Lipman, a professor at Chapman University's law school
in Orange, Calif., writes that the widespread belief that undocumented
immigrants cost us more than they give us is ''demonstrably false."
In her review article, Lipman wrote that there are 7 million
undocumented workers, which is 1 out of every 20 in the United States.
Such undocumented workers live in households where the average annual
income is $27,400, compared with nearly $48,000 for legal immigrant
families.
They cannot access or easily access many public services, yet in 2003
alone the labor of undocumented workers poured $7 billion in taxes into
Social Security even though they cannot legally claim those benefits.
Lipman calls this ''an abyss in federal relief for hard-working, poor
families. Undocumented working poor families have higher effective
income tax rates than their neighbors who enjoy higher income levels."
They perform jobs that are inseparable from our standard of living.
Undocumented workers are about 5 percent of our overall labor force but
-- according to the Pew Hispanic Center's analysis of Census data -- are
between 22 and 36 percent of America's insulation workers, miscellaneous
agricultural workers, meat-processing workers, construction workers,
dishwashers, and maids. The American Farm Bureau, the lobbying group for
agricultural interests, says that without guest workers, the United
States would lose $5 billion to $9 billion a year in fruit, vegetable,
and flower production and up to 20 percent of production would go overseas.
Often ignored by anti-immigration forces is that undocumented workers
pay sales taxes and real estate taxes -- directly if they are
homeowners, indirectly if they are renters. Analysts at Standard &
Poor's wrote last week that there is no clear correlation between
undocumented families and local costs, as the states with the highest
numbers of such families also have relatively low unemployment rates,
high property values, and strong income growth, ''all of which
contribute to stable financial performance."
Except, of course, for the undocumented families themselves. Standard &
Poor's wrote that the least we could consider in this debate is to
redistribute the $7 billion contributed by undocumented workers into
Social Security. It said, for instance, that the money could go toward
the estimated $11.2 billion it takes to educate the nation's 1.8 million
undocumented children. Better still is to take the people who give us a
grain a day in the shadows and let them flower in the sunlight of
legalization.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2006/04/12/undocumented_workers_contribute_plenty/
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