It's no secret that immigration reform lately has consumed
and divided congressional Republicans -- and many Democrats.
Missing, though, from the emotional arguments concerning amnesty
for illegal aliens, guest-worker programs, and a wall along the
U.S.-Mexican border is an understanding of why so many risk life
and limb to come to the U.S. and what, if anything, we can do about
it.
Even a cursory review of immigration patterns here and in Europe
shows that people tend to flee regimes with dysfunctional economies
that are rife with corruption and heavy-handed government
intervention and seek places where the rule of law, respect for
property rights, and market economies rein supreme. Most
dramatically, more than 10 million have fled Mexico's sputtering
economy, where the gross domestic product is only one-sixth that of
the U.S. ($5,877 per capita compared to more than $36,000).
Similarly, hoards of citizens from economically moribund nations
such as Jamaica (per capita GDP $3,156), Cuba ($2,516), the
Dominican Republic ($2,413), El Salvador ($2,129), Guatemala
($1,675), China ($1,179), the Philippines ($1,047), Vietnam ($470)
and Haiti ($467) flock to the U.S. Many of these immigrants work
long hours in order to send tens of billions of dollars in
"remittances" back to desperate family members. Small wonder why,
as my Heritage Foundation colleague Steve Johnson points out,
Ecuadorians hide in shipping containers to reach America and why
one of the most popular Web sites in Venezuela is
iwanttoleave.com.
The story in Europe is similar. The United Kingdom (per capita GDP
$26,391) attracts immigrants from impoverished Pakistan ($546);
France ($22,723) draws them from its former colony of Algeria
($1,916); Spain ($14,709) from Morocco ($1,278), and Germany
($23,002) from Turkey ($3,082).
So long as the leaders of these countries pursue economic policies
that suffocate innovation, penalize risk-taking, and ban foreign
goods and investment, this flow of humanity to the U.S. will
continue. Indeed, according to the Index of Economic Freedom, the
annual survey of economic freedom compiled by The Heritage
Foundation and The Wall Street Journal, the countries from which we
draw our illegal population rank at or near the bottom of the 157
countries surveyed.
Despite having rejected the sort of pro-growth policies long
associated with economic prosperity, these and other impoverished
nations continue to receive billions in loans and grants -- with
few questions asked -- from international financial institutions
such as the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF),
as well as from U.S. agencies such as the Agency for International
Development. Foreign aid, it seems, resembles our welfare system
prior to the 1996 reforms: Needy nations receive generous subsidies
from the developed world but are asked to do nothing in
return.
All the more reason, then, for lawmakers to jettison this failed
model and insist that all future loans and grants be contingent on
the recipient nations adopting specific free-market reforms. They
must recognize property rights, eliminate corrupt judicial
practices, lower tariff and non-tariff barriers to trade, make
regulatory policies on businesses, banks and labor markets less
intrusive, and lower the fiscal burden of government. Think of it
as an international version of welfare's requirement that
recipients work in exchange for their benefits.
According to William Easterly, a former World Bank official, the
developed world has dispensed $2.3 trillion to developing nations
over the last half century. Yet, as he points out in his excellent
new book, "The White Man's Burden," despite trillions in aid,
economic opportunity in the majority of countries where foreign-aid
bureaucracies have intervened has actually deteriorated.
What can lawmakers do? Efforts are underway in Congress to
authorize yet another round of funding for the World Bank and the
IMF to replenish their coffers in anticipation of still more debt
relief for poor countries. This offers lawmakers frustrated with
the current immigration policy wars the chance to open up a new and
promising front. Congress should attach restrictions to the release
of those funds. Bar the Treasury Department from releasing the U.S.
contribution to the international development banks until they
agree to restrict future foreign assistance to only those countries
that adopt pro-growth economic policies.
Sure, even if wildly successful, this is still only a long-term
solution to a problem now pitting Americans against one another.
But the rising tide of economic freedom may offer the only way to
ultimately reverse the current unsustainable volume of illegal
immigration into America.
Mike Franc, who has held a number of positions on Capitol Hill, is vice president of Government Relations at The Heritage Foundation.
First appeared in Human Events Online