On June 29, 2013, Robert Reich publishes a video entitled The Truth About Immigration And The Economy, which is re-publish on NationOfChange.org.
The battle over immigration reform is often about economic fear — fear that immigrants are hurting the economy for native born Americans. But that fear is based on several economic myths:
MYTH ONE: Immigration reform will strain already overburdened government safety net programs like Social Security and Medicare.
Wrong.
The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office finds that immigration reform will actually reduce the budget deficit by hundreds of billions of dollars.
Why is that? Because while they seek citizenship, undocumented workers will be required to pay into Social Security and Medicare even though they won’t be eligible for them.
They’re also younger on average than the typical worker, so even when they’re citizens they’ll be paying into Social Security and Medicare far longer.
MYTH TWO: New immigrants take away jobs from native-born Americans.
Wrong again.
The economy doesn’t contain a fixed number of jobs to be divided up among people who need them. As an economy grows, it creates more jobs. And what we’ve seen over the last 200 years is that new immigrants to America fuel that growth, and thereby create more jobs for everyone.
We’ve also learned that new immigrants are by definition ambitious. They wouldn’t have borne all the risks and hardships of immigrating to the United States if they weren’t. And that ambition and hard work help the economy grow even faster.
The Congressional Budget Office estimates that immigration reform will increase economic growth by more than 3 percent 10 years from now, 5 percent in 20 years.
Ambition also helps explain why the children of new immigrants earn more college degrees, on average, than the children of native-born.
And why their incomes are higher than their parent’s incomes.
All of which also helps grow the economy and create more jobs.
MYTH THREE: We don’t need new immigrants.
Wrong again.
The American population is aging rapidly. Forty years ago there were five workers for every retiree. Now there are three. If present trends continue, there will be only two workers for every retiree by the year 2030.
No economy can survive on a ratio of 2 workers per retiree.
But because new immigrants are on average younger than native-born Americans, they’ll help bring that ratio back down. They’re needed so we can continue to have a vibrant economy.
Get it? Three wrongs don’t make a right. The right answer is immigration reform is not only good for undocumented workers. It’s also good for the rest of us.
Robert Reich is wrong because he continues to think in terms of one-factor economics––the labor worker. As tectonic shifts in the technologies of production continue there will be exponentially less job opportunities and labor will continue to experience its worth devalued in ALL economies.
If we do not subscribe to an OWNERSHIP CULTURE whereby wealth-creating, income-generating physical productive capital assets are broadly owned by EVERY man, woman and child, then yes, the majority of people will struggle with minimum wage earnings at best and become increasingly dependent on taxpayer supported welfare, open and concealed. We have to face up to the reality that tectonic shifts in the technologies of production are destroying jobs and devaluing the worth of labor.
The role of physical productive capital is to do ever more of the work, which produces income. Full employment is not an objective of businesses. Companies strive to keep labor input and other costs at a minimum. Private sector job creation in numbers that match the pool of people willing and able to work is constantly being eroded by physical productive capital’s ever increasing role.
Furthermore, productive capital is increasingly the source of the world’s economic growth and, therefore, should become the source of added property ownership incomes for all. If both labor and productive capital are independent factors of production, and if productive capital’s proportionate contributions are increasing relative to that of labor, then equality of opportunity and economic justice demands that the right to property (and access to the means of acquiring and possessing property) must in justice be extended to all. Yet, sadly, the American people and its leaders still pretend to believe that labor is becoming more productive, and that is the faulty thinking that is pervasive in academia and conventional economics.
http://www.nationofchange.org/truth-about-immigration-and-economy-1372515249