{"id":14516,"date":"2017-07-10T13:51:19","date_gmt":"2017-07-10T17:51:19","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/live-immigrationreform.pantheonsite.io\/?p=14516"},"modified":"2018-12-28T12:44:29","modified_gmt":"2018-12-28T17:44:29","slug":"economic-benefits-immigration-importing-haystack-find-needle","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.immigrationreform.com\/2017\/07\/10\/economic-benefits-immigration-importing-haystack-find-needle\/","title":{"rendered":"The Economic \u201cBenefits\u201d of Immigration: Importing a Haystack to Find a Needle"},"content":{"rendered":"

USnews.com<\/em><\/a> recently featured a report titled \u201cImmigration and Economics: By the Numbers.\u201d The article is chock full of gushing praise for immigrant entrepreneurs, claiming that they \u201cenhance productivity and create jobs for Americans and visa-holders alike.\u201d And it cites a study commissioned by Carbonite, a Boston-area software company founded by former IBM executive, and Guyanese immigrant, Mohammed Ali. That study found \u201cthat 40 percent of Fortune 500 companies were founded by immigrants or the children of immigrants. And more than half of U.S. startups valued at $1 billion or more\u2026were started by immigrants.\u201d<\/p>\n

But, like most mainstream media reporting on the costs of immigration, the U.S. News piece has it all backwards. Most companies aren\u2019t started by a single individual. So it is more than likely that nearly all of the cited businesses would have gotten off the ground and flourished, even without the immigrant who happened to be part of the founding group. More importantly, however, immigrants don\u2019t drive the U.S. economy. America\u2019s enormous, flexible, and resilient economy drives immigration to the United States.<\/p>\n

People fleeing civil strife see economic freedom as the ultimate protection against oppression. Individuals who immigrate to the U.S. seeking better life often find that building a business gives them control over their economic destiny in a way that was impossible in their old country. And foreign entrepreneurs don\u2019t immigrate to countries with onerous requirements for starting up businesses. Instead they go where they can make the most of their talent and capital.<\/p>\n

That\u2019s why the U.S. has always had a large number of immigrants in the ranks of its successful business people. But that is a measure of how good the United States is<\/a> for immigrants with business aspirations. It is not necessarily a measure of how good immigration is for the United States.<\/p>\n

For every immigrant who becomes a millionaire, there are hundreds more with minimal education, trapped in low-wage jobs, dependent on government assistance in order to live at a subsistence level. The average illegal alien<\/em> household takes in roughly $14,387<\/a> more in benefits than it pays out in taxes. Lawfully present aliens<\/em> in low-skill\/low-wage jobs<\/a> may receive even more<\/em> in taxpayer-funded benefits – since they can legally apply for government assistance.<\/p>\n

Meanwhile, of the millions of immigrants lawfully admitted to this country each year only seven percent<\/a> are sponsored by U.S. employers. Fewer than one percent<\/a> enter under programs set up to attract highly skilled workers and already established business people to the U.S.\u00a0 The remainder are admitted because of family ties to earlier immigrants who are likely to be living at, or near, the poverty line. This has been true for decades<\/a>.<\/p>\n

U.S. News may be able to demonstrate that some immigrants have been unusually successful in the United States. What it can\u2019t prove is that those few immigrants who have reached the upper echelons of wealth are in any way offsetting the costs of millions of immigrants whose main source of income is the American taxpayer. Showing that individual foreigners have made positive contributions to our economy is a long way from conclusively demonstrating that uncontrolled mass migration is a good long-term policy for the United States.