Hasty
Call for Amnesty
Editorial
The New York Times
February 22, 2000
The A.F.L.-C.I.O.'s
call for the government to grant amnesty to an estimated six million illegal
immigrants currently living in the United States and to eliminate most sanctions
on employers who hire them in the future was a surprising turnabout. Until now,
organized labor has fought hard to keep illegal workers from taking jobs from
higher-paid union workers.
The A.F.L.-C.I.O.'s
proposal is attractive to many groups. Unions welcome the chance to go after
a huge new pool of unorganized workers. Employers welcome the chance to hire
cheap labor without fear of criminal liability. And illegal immigrants who have
worked hard for years and raised families under harrowing circumstances would
welcome access to medical care and other services denied to illegal aliens.
But the A.F.L.-C.I.O.'s
proposal should be rejected. Amnesty would undermine the integrity of the country's
immigration laws and would depress the wages of its lowest-paid native-born
workers.
Back in 1986, Congress
granted amnesty to an estimated three million illegal immigrants as part of
a law that also promised to crack down on further illegal immigration by imposing
sanctions on employers who knowingly violated the law. At that time, this page
endorsed amnesty because it was tied to measures that promised to keep further
rounds of illegal immigration in check. But 14 years later there are twice as
many illegal workers, and employer sanctions are widely deemed a joke. Workers
pretend to show employers proof of citizenship or work visas and employers pretend
they do not know the proof is fake.
The primary problem
with amnesties is that they beget more illegal immigration. Demographers trace
the doubling of the number of Mexican immigrants since 1990 in part to the amnesty
of the 1980's. Amnesties signal foreign workers that American citizenship can
be had by sneaking across the border, or staying beyond the term of one's visa,
and hiding out until Congress passes the next amnesty. The 1980's amnesty also
attracted a large flow of illegal relatives of those workers who became newly
legal. All that is unfair to those who play by the immigration rules and wait
years to gain legal admission.
It is also unfair
to unskilled workers already in the United States. Between about 1980 and 1995,
the gap between the wages of high school dropouts and all other workers widened
substantially. Prof. George Borjas of Harvard estimates that almost half of
this trend can be traced to immigration of unskilled workers. Illegal immigration
of unskilled workers induced by another amnesty would make matters worse. The
better course of action is to honor America's proud tradition by continuing
to welcome legal immigrants and find ways to punish employers who refuse to
obey the law.
Copyright 2000
The New York Times |