Lets
Cut Benefits, Not Immigration
A
misleading Heritage Foundation report by economists Robert Rector and Jason
Richwine concludes that legalizing undocumented workers will cost America $6.3
trillion over the immigrants' lifetimes.
The
report is deceptive because it assumes, contrary to empirical evidence, no
increased economic efficiency from immigration and no economic mobility. It
doesn't discuss numerous benefits to national security from legalizing and
making it easier to track America's11 million undocumented workers.
Yes, as
the authors point out, America has a welfare problem. Over 47 million people,
the vast majority native-born Americans, are on food stamps almost four years
after the beginning of the economic recovery. Means tested benefits, healthcare
under the Affordable Care Act, and retiree benefits are increasingly expensive,
and these costs need to be brought under control for everyone.
But
that's not the same as an immigration problem. If we're concerned that benefits
are keeping people in poverty and impeding upward mobility, we should cut
benefits, not immigrants.


























