Texas hasn't updated a 2006 study that found undocumented immigrants
contribute more than they cost
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[December 07, 2024] The
Texas Tribune
In 2006, Texas State Comptroller Carole Keeton Strayhorn set out to
assess the impact undocumented Texans have on the state economy and
found that they contributed more to Texas than they cost the state.
“This is the first time any state has done a comprehensive financial
analysis of the impact of undocumented immigrants on a state’s budget
and economy,” Strayhorn, a Republican, wrote at the beginning of the
report.
It was also the last time Texas did such a study.
The state has not updated Strayhorn’s analysis or conducted a similar
review since it was issued 18 years ago. But a series of reports
released by nonprofits and universities have confirmed what Strayhorn’s
office found.
Those findings contradict notions that undocumented immigrants strain
state resources — a common argument made by some state Republican
leaders in interviews and lawsuits challenging the federal government’s
immigration policies.
“Texans are hardworking and generous people, but the cost of illegal
immigration is an unconscionable burden on the taxpayers of our great
state,” Attorney General Ken Paxtonsaid in January 2021. “Texas will
always welcome those who legally immigrate, but we cannot continue
forcing taxpayers to foot the bill for individuals who skirt the law and
skip the line.”
The studies also offer hints of the cost that Texans could pay if the
incoming Trump administration follows through on its promise to conduct
mass deportations of undocumented immigrants across the country.
Strayhorn’s analysis estimated that the absence of 1.4 million
undocumented immigrants living in Texas in 2005 would have cost the
state about $17.7 billion in gross domestic product, which is a measure
of the value of goods and services produced in Texas.
“Blanket mass deportations would be devastating not only for Texas’
economy, but for Texas families,” said Juan Carlos Cerda, Texas state
director for the American Business Immigration Coalition, a
pro-immigrant group of business leaders. “We’re talking about industries
like construction, agriculture, health care, manufacturing that are
growing but depend heavily on immigrant labor — and many of these
workers have been in the state for decades.”
As President-elect Donald Trump prepares to return to office, Texas
state leaders have been eager to help him carry out his pledged
immigration crackdown. A major pillar of Trump’s first campaign that
lifted him to office in 2016 was a promise to build a wall along the
U.S.-Mexico border. This time he vowed mass deportations.
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Since his victory, Texas Land Commissioner Dawn Buckingham has offered
the incoming administration 1,400 acres in the Rio Grande Valley that
could be used as a staging area for deportations.
Texas is home to about 11% of immigrants in the United States and an
estimated 1.6 million undocumented persons — the second-most in the
country after California.
When Strayhorn’s office studied their impact on the state’s economy, it
found that undocumented Texans at the time produced about $1.6 billion
in state revenues collected from taxes and other sources — exceeding the
roughly $1.2 billion in state services, like public education and
hospital care, they received.
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 The study also found that local
governments “bore the burden” of $1.4 billion in health care and law
enforcement costs that were not compensated by the state.
Since then, there have been a handful of studies that reached
similar conclusions.
“Beneath all of the sound and fury, however, is one incontrovertible
fact: TEXAS NEEDS THE WORKERS!!” stated a 2016 paper published by
the Perryman Group, a Waco-based economic and financial analysis
firm. The group’s review estimated that undocumented Texans
contributed $11.8 billion to the state — after subtracting the $3.1
billion Texas spent on them for health care, education and other
public services.
The paper added: “While there are many considerations, the fact is
that undocumented workers in Texas generate millions of jobs and
billions in tax revenue. Restrictive immigration policy will cause
substantial economic and fiscal losses, and optimal policy would be
crafted to minimize these dislocations.”
José Iván Rodríguez-Sánchez is a research scholar for the Baker
Institute Center for the U.S. and Mexico at Rice University’s Baker
Institute for Public Policy in Houston. In 2018, he replicated
Strayhorn’s analysis and also found the economic benefits of
undocumented Texans outweigh the costs to the state.
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“These papers tell us the importance of these people for the U.S.,”
Rodríguez-Sánchez said this week. “They are also not only good
workers, but also they are paying taxes, buying houses or buying
goods and commodities.”
State Sen. César Blanco, an El Paso Democrat, tried to require the
state comptroller’s office to update the study regularly in a 2015
bill that he sponsored when he served in the Texas House. But the
bill did not advance far.
In an interview, Blanco pointed to the reviews done by non-state
agencies and said the information can instruct lawmakers.
“It’s important to realize that immigrants are part of the backbone
of Texas’ economy,” Blanco said. “Each state should study it.”
Comptroller Glenn Hegar in 2013 said his office would update
Strayhorn’s study or conduct a similar one.
“It is obvious that Texans deserve to know what illegal immigration
costs the taxpayers each year,” he said in a statement at the time.
“In order for Texas to truly understand the costs of illegal
immigration to our state, we do need updated numbers. Whether it is
updating that specific study or conducting a similar one, is
something my administration will do.”
But that has not happened. His office did not respond this week to a
request for comment.
In 2021, a spokesperson for Hegar’s office told the Dallas Morning
News that the Legislature had not formally asked the agency to study
the matter.
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This story was originally published by The Texas Tribune and
distributed through a partnership with The Associated Press.
All contents © copyright 2024 Associated Press. All rights reserved
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