Washington Times
By Kellan Howell
April 27, 2015
Economic
and civil rights experts say increased immigration spurred by President
Obama’s executive orders poses a bigger threat to the black community
than police brutality
or racial profiling, which have sparked protests in black communities
across the country.
“It’s
a bigger threat to black livelihood,” Peter Kirsanow, a member of the
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, said, adding that illegal immigration
“dwarfs” the more inflammatory
issues of police brutality, saying, “When you look at the hundreds of
thousands of blacks thrown out of work over the years as a result of the
competitive pressure the downstream effects are profound.”
The
number of unemployed black workers in the U.S. is soaring, according to
data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Over 12.2 million black
people of working age were
not in the labor force in March, meaning they had neither been employed
nor actively sought a job for at least four weeks.
The
labor force participation rate for black men ages 20 and older is more
than 5 percentage points lower than it is for white men, and for those
in the labor force, the
black unemployment rate is more than double the white unemployment
rate, at 10.1 percent versus 4.7 percent.
Loosened immigration policy will only compound the problem.
Peter Kirsanow, a member of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, said ... more >
As
more illegal immigrants enter the U.S., encouraged by the president’s
sweeping executive actions, they flood low-skilled labor markets once
dominated by blacks, which
ultimately decreases wages and increases job competition for
low-skilled black workers, said Mr. Kirsanow.
“The
long-term, large-scale flow of immigration into the United States has
worked to erode both the wages and employment prospects of
African-American workers,” said Sen.
Jeff Sessions, Alabama Republican and chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee subcommittee on Immigration and the National Interests, in a
statement to The Times.
“Yet
the Senate’s ‘Gang of Eight’ plan would have doubled future immigration
from its existing record levels. As a nation, our first duty is always
to our own citizens,
especially those who have sacrificed so much for this country. Any
responsible immigration plan must promote higher wages, rising
employment and improved working conditions for people already living
here,” he said.
Increasing unemployment rates in the black community can lead to numerous other negative social consequences, Mr. Kirsanow said.
“When
unemployment rates increase, black institutionalization rates also
increase. Individuals who don’t have jobs are less likely to be married
or to get married, which
means you are more likely to have kids out of wedlock. It’s a
self-perpetuating negative cycle,” Mr. Kirsanow said. “These are the
things that the Congressional Black Caucus and the president have
refused to address and are things that are tremendously harmful
to the prospects of black Americans economically, socially and
culturally.”
A spokeswoman for the Congressional Black Caucus did not reply to a request by The Times for comment.
While
Mr. Kirsanow opposed the president’s immigration policies, his
colleagues on the Civil Rights Commission came out in support of
President Obama’s executive orders
issued in November, jumping on the political bandwagon at the time.
However,
a 2008 briefing report to the Civil Rights Commission on the effects of
immigration on wages and employment opportunities for black workers
clearly stated that
more illegal immigration hurts low-skilled black workers.
“About
six in 10 adult black males have a high school diploma or less, and
black men are disproportionately employed in the low-skilled labor
market, where they are more
likely to be in labor competition with immigrants,” the report reads.
“Illegal immigration to the United States in recent decades has tended
to depress both wages and employment rates for low-skilled American
citizens, a disproportionate number of whom are
black men.”
Commission
Chair Martin Castro, who was not a member of the commission when the
2008 study was conducted, has said that the report was missing key data
that contradicted
the overall findings and plans to call for a review of the study.
Some
economists say that increased immigration doesn’t hurt low-skilled
American workers because the two groups don’t typically do the same
jobs.
Low-skilled
Americans, nearly all of whom speak English, tend to work in jobs that
require communication skills, while low-skilled immigrants, who mostly
don’t, tend to
do jobs that require manual labor, Alex Nowrasteh, immigration policy
analyst at the Cato Institute, explained.
He
cited research from economists Gianmarco Ottaviano and Giovanni Peri,
who found in their studies in 2008 and 2010 that more immigration tends
to raise overall wages
for U.S.-born workers.
But
while economists agree that immigration improves living standards and
wages on average, studies are divided on whether immigration reduces
wages for certain groups
of workers. Some studies suggest that immigration has reduced wages for
low-skilled workers without a high school diploma and college
graduates.
A
2007 study by economists George Borjas and Lawrence Katz found that
increases in immigrant workers from 1990 to 2006 reduced the wages of
low-skilled workers by 4.7
percent and college graduates by 1.7 percent.
In
2009 Mr. Borjas, a Harvard professor, specifically studied the effects
of immigration on the economic status of black men and found that a 10
percent immigrant-induced
increase in the supply of a particular skill group reduced black wages
by 2.5 percent, lowered the employment rate of black men by 5.9
percentage points and increased the incarceration rate of blacks by 1.3
percentage points.
“It
is evident that there is a negative correlation between changes in
employment propensities and the immigrant share, and that the
correlation is stronger for black
men,” Mr. Borjas wrote.
But
Mr. Nowrasteh explained that more people coming in to the country is
good for the U.S. economy, and said that the bigger threat to wages for
low-skilled workers is
technological change.
“Studies
on skilled-bias technological change find a lot of the new machines,
computers [and] ways to automate manufacturing increase the wages of
high-skilled people
a lot more and potentially decrease the wages of lower-skilled people,”
Mr. Nowrasteh said, adding that the same economic effects have been
observed in countries that don’t accept many immigrants.
Multiple polls show that Americans across the board, regardless of race or political alignment, want less immigration.
In
a nationwide survey conducted between August and October of 2014, The
Polling Company, Inc. asked over 1,000 adults: “If U.S. businesses have
trouble finding workers,
what should happen?”
In
total, 75 percent said businesses should raise wages and improve
working conditions to attract American workers, while only 8 percent
said more immigrants workers should
be allowed in to the country to fill those jobs.
Eighty-six
percent of blacks surveyed said businesses should increase wages rather
than hire more immigrants, and 71 percent of Hispanics said the same
thing.
Seventy-four
percent of Republican responders and 79 percent of Democratic
responders also said businesses should increase wages to attract
American employees.
In
a January 2015 Gallup poll, 39 percent of Americans said they were
dissatisfied with current immigration levels and wanted less immigration
rather than more.
Mr.
Kirsanow explained. But the effect on low-skilled minority workers must
be considered by lawmakers in forming comprehensive immigration reform
policies, he said, adding
that it must start with following the laws already in place.
“We
are not serious about securing the border; we are not serious about
enforcement; we are not serious about e-verify. All of these things
would be extremely helpful
to low-skilled workers and, particularly, black Americans,” Mr.
Kirsanow said
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