Aging United States must
get the economics right on immigration
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[September 14, 2017]
By Mark Miller
CHICAGO (Reuters) - “Immigrants - we get
the job done” is one of the most famous lines from "Hamilton," the hit
Broadway musical. But the play’s creator, Lin Manuel Miranda, might well
have written: “Immigrants - we keep the country young.”
The Trump administration's move last week to end protections and
benefits for young people who were brought into the United States
illegally as children is a nightmare for undocumented people and
so-called Dreamers.
But the immigration crackdown also adds to the challenges the United
States faces in adjusting to an aging population.
The U.S. 65-and-over population will nearly double over the next three
decades, from 48 million to 88 million by 2050, according to the U.S.
Census Bureau. That will make us a much older country - 21 percent will
be over age 65, up from 13 percent in 2010 and 10 percent in 1970.
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The shift reflects the aging of the baby boom population and declining
fertility rates. But the United States is aging less rapidly than most
other major industrialized nations - and that is due, in part, to the
influx of young immigrants and their families. We need that trend to
continue - not stop - because the old and young are so interdependent.
Simply put, anti-immigrant policy reflects not only a lack of ethics,
empathy and compassion - it is founded on bad economics.
That starts with Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ claim last week that
illegal immigration has “denied jobs to hundreds of thousands of
Americans by allowing those same jobs to go to illegal aliens.” Most
mainstream economists will tell you there is no evidence that this is
true.
Immigrant workers do not cause any significant decline in wages or
employment for U.S.-born citizens. Immigrants and U.S.-born workers
usually do not compete for the same jobs, and immigrants are not the
cause of any significant decline in wages or employment for U.S.-born
citizens. Rather, immigrants “complement the work of U.S. employees and
increase their productivity,” according to a review of research on the
topic by The Brookings Institution (http://brook.gs/2xRz6jf).
IMMIGRATION AIDS SOCIAL SECURITY
Meanwhile, as the country ages, the need for immigration is evident in
four key areas: Social Security, caregiving, healthcare and housing.
Social Security faces a long-term financial imbalance that would force
sharp benefit cuts in 2034 unless we increase tax contributions, cut
benefits or implement some combination of the two. The problem stems
from falling fertility rates and labor force growth – which reduces
collection of payroll taxes that fund the system – and also from the
retirement of baby boomers, which increases benefit costs.
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When the Obama administration put the Deferred Action for Childhood
Arrivals (DACA) program in place in 2014, Social Security’s actuaries
estimated that then-prevalent immigration patterns had the net effect of
raising U.S. fertility rates from roughly two children per woman to
roughly 2.5 children. The actuaries also found that DACA would have a
modest positive effect on the long-range shortfall facing the program.
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Elderly people sit on a park bench after sun set in Encinitas,
California, U.S., July 5, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake
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Cutting immigration rates in half - the stated goal of the Trump administration
- would cost Social Security $2.4 trillion in lost payroll tax revenues over the
next 75 years, according to an analysis of Social Security data by Nancy Altman,
president of the Social Security Works advocacy coalition.
One factor is that illegal immigrants contribute payroll taxes on their wages
but are unable to claim benefits since they do not have valid Social Security
numbers. “They will make up a number and give that to their employers,” Altman
said. “That gets reported and money is sent in but the Social Security
Administration can’t match it to an earnings record.” The funds are credited to
a special Earnings Suspense File that now contains upward of $1.2 trillion.
“There’s so much misunderstanding of this issue,” Altman said. “Anti-immigration
advocates say immigrants are robbing us by taking all these federal benefits the
rest of us are paying for when actually the opposite is true.”
A key issue in the housing market is an adequate supply of young people to
purchase the homes of aging boomers. Immigrants account for 32 percent of the
growth in households and 36 percent of growth in the number of homeowners during
this decade, according to a 2013 study co-authored by Dowell Myers, an urban
demographer and housing specialist at the University of Southern California.
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Myers cautions that the importance of immigrants in meeting housing demand
fluctuates depending on a number of other factors, including the general health
of the housing market and the number of native-born young people.
It was an important factor in the 1990s when the number of young native-born
households was very low, and it played a supporting role during the Great
Recession - but less so in the current strong market. “Immigrants are important
for filling housing demand in some decades, and not in others,” he said.
The healthcare profession is experiencing shortages in many key occupations that
will worsen as the country ages. Caregiving occupations, in particular, are
headed toward a crisis-level shortage of workers. And 18 percent of certified
nursing assistants, and 27 percent of home care aides were immigrants, Census
Bureau data shows (http://reut.rs/2w4tHsK).
We need a fact-based, forward-looking discussion about immigration policy. “All
this dialogue about immigration needs to be focused on the future,” said Myers.
“Any immigration plan you put in place now will impact us for decades to come.”
(Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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