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Peeking Into the Legal Immigration Numbers

We’ve spent a lot of time focusing on illegal immigration policy, both from an enforcement standpoint and from a welfare perspective.  It’s also important to delve into our current legal immigration process in preparation for any wholesale reforms of our broader system.

From listening to proponents of open borders, you would get the impression that we barely admit any new legal immigrants, and as such, the only practical way for people to come here is by breaking our laws.  The reality is just the opposite.  We have granted more people permanent legal resident status over the past 15 years than in any other period in American history, including the turn of the 20th century when the country was still relatively young and growing.  Moreover, a massive share of the recent immigration has been from developing or third world countries, particularly the very native countries of most illegal immigrants.

It would be wise for lawmakers to begin studying the annual immigration yearbook from the DHS.  On page 5, you can find the total number of entrants obtaining LPR status  every year.  While historically, we have admitted between 300,000 and 600,000 new permanent legal residents every year (this has nothing to do with temporary worker visas), over the past decade we have accepted over 1 million new immigrants almost every year.  During the ‘90s we admitted 9.7 million new immigrants and during this past decade we let in 10.3 million new immigrants, smashing the previous record of 8.2 million during the great decade of immigration from 1900-1909.  Again, there is no way someone can reasonably suggest that this is restrictionist.

From which countries have we been accepting new immigrants in recent years?

Here is a list of major countries and regions that comprise the lion’s share of our legal immigrants over the past decade and in 2011.  The numbers were compiled from the DHS immigration yearbook.

Country/Region

2011 Numbers

2011%

2000-2009 Numbers

2000-2009 %

Latin America

403,771

38%

4,205,180

40.80%

Mexico

142,823

13.40%

1,704,166

16.50%

Africa

97,429

9.20%

759,734

7.30%

Europe (including Russia)

90,712

8.50%

1,349,609

13.10%

China

83,603

7.90%

591,711

5.70%

India

66,331

6.20%

590,464

5.70%

Total

1,062,040

10,299, 430

 

As you can see, we have been very generous in taking in many new LPRs from the developing world, particularly Latin America, and most notably, Mexico.  The idea that we don’t accept enough immigrants from Latin America and Mexico is absurd.  Going back to the fall of the Soviet Union, a major immigration-inducing event, we’ve accepted roughly 616,000 new LPRs from Russia.  During the same time, we’ve had about 4.7 million new immigrants from Mexico, and about 10 million from Latin America at large.

To a large extent, our immigration system has been random.  We bring in about 50,000 new immigrants every year through the diversity visa lottery, which expands the pool of immigration from third-world countries.

This random policy has consequences.  As Senator Sessions has pointed out on numerous occasions, just 0.068 percent of visa applications were denied in 2011 on the grounds of being a welfare risk.  Only about 10% are chosen based on their educational and occupational abilities.  In the earlier part of the last century, this wasn’t a major problem because there wasn’t a robust welfare state saddling our children with debt.  But with the welfare state in place, our current system is putting a strain on the welfare system.  Here are some tidbits from a 2011 study conducted by the Center for Immigration Studies:

  • In 2009 (based on data collected in 2010), 57 percent of households headed by an immigrant (legal and illegal) with children (under 18) used at least one welfare program, compared to 39 percent for native households with children.
  • Households with children with the highest welfare use rates are those headed by immigrants from the Dominican Republic (82 percent), Mexico and Guatemala (75 percent), and Ecuador (70 percent). Those with the lowest use rates are from the United Kingdom (7 percent), India (19 percent), Canada (23 percent), and Korea (25 percent).
  • Welfare use tends to be high for both new arrivals and established residents. In 2009, 60 percent of households with children headed by an immigrant who arrived in 2000 or later used at least one welfare program; for households headed by immigrants who arrived before 2000 it was 55 percent.

When policy-makers discuss reforming our legal immigration system, they need to take a look at the numbers of immigrants and the types of immigrants that we have let in over the past two decades.  They need to decide if we are going to continue on the current trajectory, bring in even more low-skilled immigrants, or move towards a system that prioritizes higher-skilled immigrants.  Conservatives need to decide if they desire to continue the Kennedy immigration paradigm from 1965 or not.   Tossing out platitudes about being a nation of immigrants is not sufficient.  We need to agree on which immigrants serve our national interests, and then make it easier for them to go through the process.

We need a substantive policy discussion on how to make the immigration system benefit the broader population as well as the immigrants coming to America.  A system that focuses on high skilled immigrants and family unification would benefit everyone.  This is something that can be done irrespective of how we deal with the divisive issue of those who came here illegally.  Hence, piecemeal trumps ‘comprehensive.’

Cross-posted from The Madison Project

COMMENTS

  • Grant

    The real problem here is the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965. We desperately and immediately need to repeal it and flip our immigration/national origin policy back and once again favor immigrants from our ancestral Europe. Not only are they much more willing to assimilate, they’re more educated and culturally similar. We’ve been giving Europeans the shaft since Ted Kennedy promised the ’65 Act wouldn’t change the racial/cultural makeup of the United States. That was quite obviously a lie. The Rubio Amnesty Plan will the the final nail in the coffin, completing a decades-old Democratic dream.

  • coninkalifornia

    I’m skeptical of the straight comparison to the early 1900′s era just because the country was much smaller (90 million people in 1910) and much less wealthy ($540 billion 1910 GDP in 2005 dollars) then. I have to believe that our capacity to absorb immigrants is vastly more today.

    Isn’t the vast majority of the nation’s entitlement spending going towards retirement-aged individuals? What is the age of the average immigrant? My guess it’s less than 65.

    I think we should approach this issues from a regulatory and market-oriented approach. Why should immigration be heavily regulated? To what extent is illegal immigration the outcome the bureaucratic burdens of legal immigration (not just people skipping the system, but people here and working through the system but missing a deadline or not being able to afford the fees, which are very expensive, and loosing status)?

    If the problem is the illegality and “rule breaking” – how about making the system more simple and user-friendly?

    But if the problem is ‘undesireable’ immigrants – that’s a different issue and one, dare I say, is a complete loser politically. The “less immigrants because of welfare costs” argument is about as useful as “47%” and “legitimate rape.”

  • lineholder

    Seen the latest OIG report on Unlawfully Present Beneficiaries? $91 million in fraud over three years in the 2575 cases reviewed. With over 133K cases found (amount of fraud for full amount remains unknown)
    https://oig.hhs.gov/oas/reports/region7/71201116.asp

    Potential for same scope of fraud exist in other welfare social programs, both at federal and state levels.

    Seen this?
    Pew Hispanic Research Group: “Twenty-six percent of illegal Latino immigrants in the US haven’t tried or are not interested in attaining citizenship.

    Why would they? They’ve been allowed to bypass and ignore the laws of the United States and to manipulate the system to get what they want. Why would they choose to become citizens, which requires accepting the responsibilities of citizenship, when they get the rights and benefits through the lawlessness of the Liberals?

  • coninkalifornia

    so an overwhelming majority of Latino immigrants have tried or are interested in attaining citizenship?

    what, exactly, are the ‘responsibilities’ of citizenship that legal, non-citizen residents don’t have?

    do you know what procedures are for attaining citizenship, the timeline, the fees? maybe that has something to do with it.

  • vandalii

    When you say “entitlement spending” and “retirement-aged individuals” in the same sentence, your statement is mostly accurate, but not for the reason you posit. The retirement aged individuals spent their entire life paying into a system that they truly are entitled to, not because they’re a drain on society, but beause they earned it.

    I suspect the “entitlement” you are actually concerned about is the so-called welfare and medicaid “entitlement” that folks below a certain income level believe should be theirs (i.e. “entitlement mentality”) despite a lack of any logical reason they “deserve” to be cared for. *That* is the group we’re talking about in the legal immigration discussion (illegals are a whole ‘nother kettle of fish, but I digress). The exceeding low percentage of immigration denial due to welfare risk compared to actual participation by legal immigrants in welfare-related support shows we are not paying any attention at all to criteria intended to improve our nation rather than drag it down.

  • lineholder

    Obeying the law is high on the list of responsibilities, isn’t it? Here’s some more facts for you….

    • In Los Angeles, 95% of some 1,500 outstanding warrants for homicides are for illegal aliens. About 67% of the 17,000 outstanding fugitive felony warrants are for illegal aliens.

    • There are currently over 400,000 unaccounted for illegal alien criminals with outstanding deportation orders. At least one fourth of these are hard core criminals.

    • 80,000 to 100,000 illegal aliens who have been convicted of serious crimes are walking the streets. Based on studies they will commit an average of 13 serious crimes per perpetrator.

    • Illegal aliens are involved in criminal activities at a rate that is 2-5 times their representative proportion of the population.

    • In 1980, our Federal and state facilities held fewer than 9,000 criminal aliens but at the end of 2003, approximately 267,000 illegal aliens were incarcerated in U.S. correctional facilities at a cost of about $6.8 billion per year.

    • At least 4.5 million pounds of cocaine with a street value of at least $72 billion is smuggled across the southern border every year.

    • 56% of illegal aliens charged with a reentry offense had previously been convicted on at least 5 prior occasions.

    • Illegal aliens charged with unlawful reentry had the most extensive criminal histories. 90% had been previously arrested. Of those with a prior arrest, 50% had been arrested for violent or drug-related felonies.

    • Illegal aliens commit between 700,000 to 1,289,000 or more crimes per year.

    • The overall financial impact of illegal alien crimes is estimated at between $14.4 and $81 billion or more per year. Factor in the crime as a result of the cocaine and other drugs being smuggled in and the number may reach $150 billion per year.

    If you need more details, I can get them for you.

    Oh, and that amount doesn’t include fraud committed to social welfare programs that never get reported because our government doesn’t have effective policies in place…and won’t follow up on it when it is illegal aliens who abuse and misuse the system even when the policies do exist.

    Respecting the rule of law is one of the responsibilities of citizenship. Why should they give up the “easy life” Liberals have provided for them?

  • Finrod

    That was my thought as well. You can’t boast about how immigration numbers are 20 percent larger than a century ago when the country’s population is more than 200 percent larger than a century ago. Well, you can, but then people like me post snarky comments about it.

    The problem of non-citizens sucking up welfare money is a separate problem. Fix the eligibility rules of welfare and this problem goes away.

  • vandalii

    You mean like BHO’s uncle? ;-)

  • lineholder

    The eligibility rules are in place of Medicare, Finrod, yet widespread fraud still exists. You can see the link to the OIG’s report below.

    CMS won’t pursue it. If it was a physician’s group that had committed $91 million in fraud, they’d be hot on it. When it involved illegal immigrants, they won’t pursue it. ‘

    I happen to have some familiarity with how claims are processed. It is possible that the claim system could be programmed to run periodic reports using specific data elements to determine if fraud exists. The offending “element” could then be flagged and investigated.

    CMS won’t do it. Same is true for other federal welfare programs. I have no idea of what if any preventive measures might exist at the state level.

    The point is that as much as we talk about the situation with immigration, people automatically assume that illegal immigrants will be busting down the door to become legal citizens. Liberals hold it over the heads of Repubs. Repubs cower in fear at the thought of it.
    Some immigrants will, yes. But there is an abundance of evidence to indicate that others will not. At least 26%. They’ve been allowed to treat our legal system as meaningless…actually they’ve been literally encouraged to do so by Liberals…and now we have a situation where even if amnesty is approved, we could still find ourselves with a broad swathe of citizens who choose to remain illegal.

    What do we do then?

    We need to have rule of law enforced. Period.

  • lineholder

    It has to do with behavioral patterns. Illegal immigrants, just by the very meaning of the word illegal, have been allowed to adopt behaviors that are in opposition to or violation of US laws. How much respect for our legal system do you think this inspires in this individuals?

    How easy or difficult would it be for that lack of respect for the law to spread to other areas of human behavior?

    Apparently, according to data that is available, relatively easy. Makes sense with human nature being what it is.

    They’ve gotten a pass on it from those who have been positions to enforce the law but won’t. It perpetuates a mindset that they can engage in illegal behaviors without any consequences and without having to accept responsibilities.

    If the become a legal citizen, then they lose that pass. Well, if they’ve found ways to not only survive but also thrive by engaging in illegal behaviors, why would they change that?

  • joshinca

    They might actually choose to keep that pass and continue to engage in illegal behaviors rather than become legal citizens.

    Dream on.

    The problem with mass immigration generally and the pathway to citizenship for illegal aliens in particular is that they are not Americans (duh). And one of the ways that manifests is in a complete lack of respect for the concept of rule of law. Which is hardly surprising considering where the the immigrants come from and how they got here. Latino and Asian immigrants, in general, see the law as a corrupt imposition by the powerful at the expense of the average person and something that should be ignored as much as possible.

    Individuals in those groups have no problem with limits on freedom by dems in exchange for benefits because they have absolutely no intention of obeying those limits. Which ultimately will lead to the US having the same type of petty and grand corruption that plagues most countries in the world.

  • GreyCloak

    Odd comment. Of course, my predecessors came over from Europe over 150 years ago, except for an Irishman that got off the boat in 1776 and enlisted in the Continental Army.

    As to recent Europeans, I’m proud of a Polish cleaning lady that supports her family back home and has worked long enough in the US to collect Social Security. I’m not so sure about my Ukrainian friend who’s long since become a citizen, and collected a year’s unemployment this past year. As to assimilation, I know a German and an Egyptian that have become US citizens in the past year or two. Neither would recommend that their friends come over these days, for different reasons. But they love America and have been quite successful.

  • davesinsanantonio

    Before there is such a discussion, we must first establish what our national interests are. And, we must do so constantly in the face of lefies who will try to sidetrack such a discussion, or will constantly insist that certain ideological goals they have are our only real national interests.

    Then, once we get into specifics we must be alert for some of their dogma driven “facts” that aren’t true at all. For example, they will claim we are being evil by taking the best and the brightest and thus “colonizing anew” India and such places. The truth is most of those countries do not yet have the economic infrastructure to utilize such people, and that letting those people come here will allow their talents to flourish, and they will then send back home a significant portion of their incomes, which portion will probably exceed what they could earn if they stayed in their native countries.

    So, establish what our national interests are first, research what the related facts are, and insist that those facts be addressed by those who would try to make this all into some political football instead of a rational program that will help everyone instead of push their agenda.

  • bobmiller

    It should be a no brainer..

    We MUST decrease the TOTAL number of IMMIGRANTS allowed into the UNITED STATES.

    We need to insure that THERE are NO IMMIGRANTS allowed into the United States that are ALLOWED to take advantage of SOCIAL BENEFIT Programs..

    Insure that they have enough capital to pay for themselves for FIVE YEARS.

    Only one allowed into the UNITED STATES are those that can become CITIZEN within that five year time frame.

    No citizenship after five years they are deported.

    Prime EXAMPLE.. are OBAMA’S Aunt and Uncle.

  • paleen

    We don’t need to worry about where they come from but we do need to look at there ability to provide for themselves and to contribute to the country. This means education, financial stability, and needed skills. For some reason we make it hard for the best people and easier for the illiterate. This is stupid policy.

  • cbartlett

    “ability to provide for themselves and to contribute to the country”

    These are two very important key points. We might need to be careful when using the term “high-skilled” – it is sometimes offensive to people because low-information voters think you are only talking about doctors or scientists. Obviously some education and training are needed but someone who is simply willing to work in a trade they can learn and gain skills, can be just as valuable as a doctor or engineer. Many of the plumbers, electricians and air-conditioning repair people in our town are nearing retirement age and many do not have young people interested in coming in behind them to learn the business – we may be in trouble in about 10 or 15 years. (And, as my husband reminds me, the plumber charges more per hour than he can as a registered engineer.) The operative words are “willing to work” and “ability to provide for themselves”.

    I would revise the “contribute to the country” slightly to say “WANT to be an American and contribute to the country”. There are too many who come here (especially from Mexico) for the perceived benefits, but want nothing to do with the responsibilities. I have heard that Mexico’s largest export is poverty. I heard someone on the radio discussing Rubio’s immigration plan and said that Rubio’s biggest problem is that his background tends to make him rather idealistic. His parents came to America from Cuba to escape the horrible confines of communism. They really wanted to work for a better life for their children and were willing to sacrifice everything to “become Americans”. Rubio wants to pretend that all immigrants want this, but the truth is many of the ones from Mexico (not all, but it seems like a majority of the ones here in Texas) don’t really give a flying flip about “being American”. They don’t make any effort to learn the English language, learn anything about Amercian history or government or the Constitution, bother to follow the rule of law, etc. They just want the freedom to do what they want and get government provided education for their kids and healthcare when they need it. The increasing numbers that turn out for the Cinco de Mayo parades and celebrations every year, proudly carrying the Mexican flag, never ceases to amaze me. These are the same ones who certainly don’t bother to participate in similar July 4th events. I can’t help but think that no one should be “given” citizenship, and most definitely not the right to vote, unless you can say, and show/prove, that you really “WANT to be an American”.

  • GreyCloak

    Yah, Canadians are a problem. My company had to go through hoops to hire the husband of a Canadian diplomat … he wasn’t allowed to work here while she was assigned to DC.

    On a big project, another company brought in fifty Indians to do computer programming. They were well qualified. My company trained over fifty American college grads in History, English, and other useless (from an employment standpoint) fields to be programmers. All were successful.

    I like the H-1 program, because it allows us to bring in Indian techies (for instance) that graduated in the top-100 of their college classes … one such guy’s resume didn’t impress me so much … until I found out that his “class” comprised 75,000 students!

    On the other hand, how many folks are needed to pick oranges or lettuce … or mow lawns? A project in Texas required 3,000 workers to do welding and assembly on a refinery expansion … many locals failed drug testing or felony conviction evaluations for those jobs, so “foreigners” stepped forward to take those medium-skilled jobs.

    Please consider that we need far more “low-skilled” workers than “high-skilled.”

    And we have to ask ourselves, why aren’t enough Americans achieving technical education or stepping up for manual labor?