31 Mar Report shows Economic Impact of State Anti-Immigration Laws
The Immigration Policy Center reported that fans of anti-immigrant laws such as Arizona’s infamous SB 1070 often claim that they are trying to save the jobs and tax dollars of average, hard-working Americans. However, as a new report from the Center for American Progress (CAP) and the IPC makes clear, this is a claim without credibility. The report provides a stark illustration of a basic economic fact: you can’t uproot hundreds of thousands of unauthorized workers, consumers, and taxpayers from a state’s economy without wrecking it in the process. The report examines two very different futures for the economy of Arizona. In the first scenario, the proponents of S.B. 1070 get their wish and all unauthorized immigrants leave the state, taking their labor, their spending power, and their tax dollars with them. In the second scenario, unauthorized immigrants are offered a pathway to legal status, thereby enabling them to earn higher wages, spend more, and pay more in taxes. Not surprisingly, the deport-them-all scenario ends up being an economic disaster for Arizona, while the legalization scenario provides a much-needed economic boost. As the report explains,
“…undocumented immigrants don’t simply ‘fill’ jobs; they create jobs. Through the work they perform, the money they spend, and the taxes they pay, undocumented immigrants sustain the jobs of many other workers in the U.S. economy, immigrants and native-born alike. Were undocumented immigrants to suddenly vanish, the jobs of many Americans would vanish as well. In contrast, were undocumented immigrants to acquire legal status, their wages and productivity would increase, they would spend more in our economy and pay more in taxes, and new jobs would be created.”
According to the report, deporting all of Arizona’s unauthorized workers, consumers, and taxpayers would eliminate 581,000 jobs and reduce state tax revenues by $4.2 billion. Conversely, legalizing the state’s unauthorized immigrants would create 261,000 jobs and increase tax revenues by $1.7 billion. In other words, the deportation scenario would be tantamount to economic suicide at a time of high unemployment and budget deficits. But that is exactly what the supporters of S.B. 1070 are advocating.