The Comprehensive
Immigration Reform Act (CIRA, S.2611), which recently passed the
Senate, provides amnesty to illegal immigrants and creates a
massive "guest worker" for life program. Earlier this month, The
Heritage Foundation released an analysis calculating that the bill,
if enacted, likely would result in 103 million immigrants obtaining
legal status or entering in the U.S. legally over the next twenty
years.
All of these individuals would have the right to permanent
residence and could become citizens and vote in U.S. elections.
On May 18th, the
White House Office of Media Affairs issued a press release
challenging the Heritage study.
The White House defended the Senate bill, charging that the
Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated the bill would add only
8 million new legal immigrants, "a fraction of the Heritage
report's claims."
The Heritage
estimate that 103 million immigrants would gain legal status under
S.2611 explicitly included: legal immigrants who would enter the
country under current law; illegal immigrants currently residing in
the U.S. who would receive amnesty; and the increase in new legal
immigration that likely would result from the bill.
The CBO figure of
eight million immigrants promoted by the White House differed from
the Heritage estimate because the figure:
- was limited to 10
years rather than 20 years;
- excluded
immigration allowed under current law; and
- excluded illegal
immigrants currently residing in the U.S. who would receive legal
permanent residence due to S.2611.
CBO's
Clarification
In a subsequent
memo provided to Senator Jeff Sessions (R -AL) on May 24th, CBO
clarified the number promoted by the White House.
This CBO memo shows the White House figure was less than half of
the actual CBO estimate of persons who would receive permanent
status under S.2611.
The CBO memo
indicated that, over the next ten years, S.2611 would result in 11
million current illegal immigrants receiving legal permanent
residence and 7.8 million new legal immigrants entering the
country. Combined with 9.5 million immigrants who will enter under
current law, the result would be 28.3 million persons becoming
legal residents over ten years. This is almost three times the
level permitted by current law.
Differences in CBO
and Heritage Estimates
The CBO number of
28 million is still considerably lower than the original Heritage
estimate of 49 million over ten years. The difference is caused by
four factors.
Amnesty
Rates: CBO estimated that most current illegal immigrants would
receive legal permanent residence and the right to citizenship but
assumed that many would not qualify for direct amnesty; instead,
they would achieve permanent residence through participation in
employment-based visa programs. This would, in turn, reduce the
number of foreign residents entering the U.S. with employment visas
during the first ten years. This factor accounts for a difference
of roughly five to six million between the Heritage and CBO
estimates.
The CBO estimate
assumed that only 50 to 66 percent of individuals eligible for
amnesty under S.2611 would receive it, claiming that this ratio is
based on experience from the 1986 amnesty.
The Heritage Foundation assumed, given the very lenient standards
of evidence in S.2611, that almost all of those deemed potentially
eligible for amnesty would receive it; this estimate also assumes
that current count of 12 million current illegal immigrants in the
U.S. may be low and that there may be a large number of fraudulent
amnesty claims filed.
Dependents:
Under the bill, immigrants placed on a track to amnesty or in the
guest worker program may bring into the U.S. spouses and dependent
children from abroad. The number of spouses and dependent children
that may be given legal permanent residence status through this
provision is not limited by S.2611.
Historically,
foreign workers receiving employment-based visas have brought 1.2
dependents with them. On the other hand, many illegal immigrants
currently residing in the U.S. already have families with them, and
therefore the Heritage analysis assumed that only 0.6 dependents
would be brought into the U.S. for each current illegal immigrant
receiving permanent residence. By contrast, CBO estimated that
current illegal immigrants obtaining legal permanent residence will
bring very few dependents from abroad-roughly one dependent for
every seven illegal immigrants gaining permanent residence. CBO
also seems to assume a lower ratio of dependents to workers in the
guest worker program in general. The CBO numbers appear to be well
below historic norms in immigrant programs. This factor accounts
for a five to six million-person difference between the
estimates.
Guest Workers
and Green Cards: CBO assumed that the permanent guest workers
in Section 408 of the bill would be subject to the green card caps
granting legal permanent residence under Section 501. Because there
was no language in the bill stating that the permanent guest
workers would be subject to this cap, the Heritage analysis assumed
the green card cap would not apply. This resulted in a difference
of eleven to twelve million persons between the estimates. (After
the publication of both the Heritage and the CBO estimate Senator
Jeff Sessions successfully introduced an amendment, with
concurrence from Senator Mel Martinez (R-FL), a chief sponsor of
S.2611, stipulating that the Section 501 caps would apply to guest
workers.)
Emigration
The White House also claimed that The Heritage Foundation study was
flawed because it failed to take into account that many immigrants,
given the right to become permanent U.S. citizens, would instead
choose to leave. The White House states that "emigration rates may
be 25 to 30 percent."
There seems to be little basis for this claim. The Census Bureau
finds that the less developed a nation is, the less likely
immigrants from that nation are to leave the U.S. and return
home.
Its data show that the return rate for Hispanic immigrants is
around 7 percent per decade.
If enacted, CIRA would probably reduce return rates even further by
greatly increasing incentives for immigrants to stay in the U.S.
The CBO estimates
include a fairly significant emigration factor; the assumed rate of
emigration and the basis for determining that rate are
undisclosed.
Immigration Under
the Amended Bill
S.2611 has been
amended by Senator Bingaman (D-NM) to reduce the largely unlimited
potential inflow under the guest worker program. The bill has also
been amended by Senator Sessions to include guest workers under the
employment green card caps in the bill. These amendments reduce the
vast flow of 103 million immigrants projected under the original
bill. The amended bill would still grant permanent residence (and
the opportunity for citizenship) to some 60 million persons by over
the next twenty years. Finally, it should be noted that our
estimates assume zero future illegal immigration. In reality,
S.2611 is likely to increase future illegal immigration.
Robert Rector is Senior
Research Fellow in Domestic Policy Studies at The Heritage
Foundation.