Monday, March 2, 2009

from NY to Israel Sultan Reveals The Stories Behind the News








The High Cost of Immigration


Posted: 01 Mar 2009 07:02 PM PST


The logic of immigration goes something like this. Business needs labor,
opening the door to immigration brings in labor which helps meet the
needs of business, generates new businesses, and gives everyone a better
life.




These days the real process goes something like this. Businesses need
disposable dirt cheap labor. Third world immigrants arrive with a host
of social and medical problems, and large non-working and non-contributing
extended families. Without training or useful skills they will low paying
niches that often slide into crime. Meanwhile their families become social
burdens and consume a great deal of social services. This raises
expenses
for the state, which in turn raises taxes on business.

Businesses decide it's cheaper to do business in the unregulated third world
where they'll be able to hire the same exact employees they're getting here
for a fraction of the wages and without the taxes or social services they have
to provide here. The immigrants however remain behind becoming an even
bigger burden to the state, which raises taxes even further and drives more
businesses overseas, creating a cycle of job losses and social problems,
that can't be broken until immigration, tax or social welfare policies
change.

Immigration properly handled can be a boon, however two major factors have
turned immigration into a loss. First of all the quality of immigrants has
dropped a great deal. Today the same Irish immigrants who built up America
have trouble getting in the Golden Door against the press of Third World
immigrants. Yet it's clear which group has more to offer and which will take
less and give more back.

Secondly the expanding matrix of social services expands costs on local
communities and governments, which are then passed along to businesses
and working class people.

Immigration then serves to precipitate depression.Since capitalist systems
naturally run in boom and bust cycles, but immigration policy
does not, the
system is set up to insure a surplus of immigrants that will quickly become
a crime wave during the bust part of the cycle. The social problems created
by this can be seen in virtually every major urban city. The problem is worse
in Europe as the recent Paris riots demonstrated.

Immigration only works when there is social and economic mobility.
Surplus immigration however creates a permanent underclass with
the accompanying rage, violence and cultural assaults of an angry
underclass.

The problem is that immigration has stopped being an economic process, and
become a political one. Slogans such as "A Nation of Immigrants" only worsen
the problem by treating immigration as inevitable, rather than a choice.
When a political process supersedes an economic one, the result is inefficiency
and general chaos. That is the status of immigration today. Since the days
when Tammany Hall first discovered that immigrants were a fantastic asset
for voting in Democratic politicians, immigrants have become a handy tool
for liberal politicians looking to maintain a plantation voting base. The logic
behind immigration remains that same political logic, "if we let them, they
will vote for us". (Not that conservative politicians are immune from this type
of thinking either.)

Immigration has become a poorly structured and politicized process, and the
result is that the high cost of immigration only continues to grow. Businesses
which are given the choice between employing Pedro or Ahmed for 12 dollars an
hour in America or 12 cents an hour at home, will make the perfectly logical
economic decision to move abroad. And businesses that don't, as well
as ordinary Americans will be stuck with the social health and welfare
costs for Pedro and Ahmed's extended families.

This situation naturally results in a large demand for undocumented immigrants
who can be paid much less. However typically even undocumented immigrants
have families who add to the social health and welfare costs, even more so than
legal immigrants as they have fewer job options and less likelihood of possessing
the skills or literacy to get a better paying job. And of course undocumented
immigrants are far more likely to engage in criminal activities.


Politicians tend to be well aware of the situation, but turn a blind eye to
keep businesses happy. The costs continue to mount, and the distinction
between legal and illegal immigration fall apart. Unable to grasp the
nettle and move for deportation, politicians instead move for
legalization, and once the illegal immigrants are legalized, that only drives a
demand for more illegal immigrants to take their place.

This kind of self-defeating process can't go on indefinitely, but it can go on
long enough to destroy social and business structures, while creating a
massive welfare state, extremes of social instability and commonplace
crime and violence. The way forward is to reform immigration, to
view it as a job interview rather than a sovereign right, and to bring
in
only what the country can support, not only for today's economic boom,
but for tomorrow's economic bust as well.












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