U.S.
tax revenue to rise if Obama legalizes some immigrants: report
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[September 04, 2014]
By Richard Cowan
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. government tax
collections would get a multi-billion-dollar boost if President Barack
Obama issued an executive order giving temporary legal status to
millions of undocumented residents, the liberal-leaning Center for
American Progress said in a report on Thursday.
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The group, which has close ties to the Obama administration,
estimated $21.2 billion in additional payroll taxes would be
collected over five years under one scenario available to Obama, who
has made immigration reform a priority of his second term.
That revenue increase is based on a scenario where 4.7 million
undocumented immigrants receive temporary legal status, allowing
them to get work permits. These immigrants live with at least one
child who is either a U.S. citizen or undocumented.
"Many workers and employers will be able to emerge from the
underground economy and pay payroll taxes for the first time," the
report said.
By citing the projected economic benefits, the report provides an
early glimpse of how the White House, Democrats in Congress and
immigration advocacy groups might try to build support for any
administrative action by Obama.
Obama, who had strong support from the Latino community in his 2012
re-election, had pushed Congress to pass a bill that would provide a
pathway to citizenship for some of the 11.7 million undocumented
people in the United States.
That effort made progress in the Democratic-led Senate, which passed
a sweeping immigration revamp last year, but it stalled in the
Republican-controlled House of Representatives, which refused this
year to pass the proposed legislation.
The Obama administration has since conducted an internal review of
administrative actions it can take on its own.
Opponents of the effort to legalize some of those who have crossed
into the United States illegally or overstayed their visas argue
that granting work permits to them would rob legal residents of jobs
and encourage more illegal migration.
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Of the 8 million illegal immigrants already working in a variety of
industries, about 3 million workers and their employers paid payroll
taxes in 2010, the Center for American Progress report said.
Granting work permits would mean the other 5 million workers "will
go on the books."
The report forecast the wages of previously undocumented workers
would rise by about 8.5 percent. Giving them full access to the U.S.
labor market would enable them to find jobs to match their skills
and maximize their earnings, it said.
The report also looked at the revenue impact if Obama included
broader groups of people in an executive action. If he aimed the
program at undocumented residents who had been in the United States
for at least 10 years, for example, it would effect 7.4 million
people and raise $33.4 billion in payroll tax revenues over five
years.
The report can be read at:
link
(Editing by John Whitesides and Paul Simao)
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