Yale Law Journal, May 1996 105
n7 p1963-2012
Alien Nation: Common Sense About America's
Immigration Disaster. (book reviews) Peter
H. Schuck.
Full Text: COPYRIGHT Yale Law Journal
Company Inc. 1996
Alien Nation: Common Sense About America's
Immigration Disaster. By Peter
Brimelow.(*) New
York: Random House, 1995. Pp. xix, 327. $24.00.
Peter H. Schuck(dagger)
It's a damn good thing for Peter
Brimelow and his
son, Alexander James Frank Brimelow, that
Alexander was born in this country in 1991.
Peter, a recently naturalized Briton, obviously
loves the boy and wants him to live in the
United States with Peter and his Canadian wife.
But if Alexander had been born elsewhere, he
would not be an American citizen, and if his dad
had his way with our immigration policy, perhaps
none of the Brimelows, dad included, could have
entered as immigrants. The Brimelows are
fortunate that the law did not and does not
reflect Peter's radically anti-immigration
prescriptions. And so, I shall argue, are the
rest of us. Part of the allure of this
high-spirited,(1) chatty, often personal,(2) but
otherwise uncharming book is that the author
acknowledges such ironies. Indeed, he skillfully
exploits them to construct a case for radical
reform of immigration policy that verges on
total elimination of immigration to the United
States. Thus, he ruefully tells us that he feels
"slightly, well, guilty that [Alexander's]
fellow Americans had so little choice" in
conferring a citizenship that Alexander, like
many children of illegal aliens and temporary
visitors, acquired through the fortuity of birth
on American soil.(3) He shrugs off the prospect
(now happily hypothetical in his own case) that
when Congress adopts his proposal to cut off
legal immigration entirely, even the nuclear
family of an American citizen could not
immigrate to the United States. Had that been
the law when he came, he says in his amiable,
no-big-deal style, "I would probably be
writing a book on Canadian immigration policy
right now."(4)
Although it is tempting to dismiss this book
as another ideological tract, one to which only
the already-converted will attend, that would be
a mistake.(5) The book must be taken seriously,
first, because it is already influencing the
public debate on immigration.(6) Alien Nation
has grand ambitions. It not only raises
fundamental questions about immigration's effect
on the past, present, and future of American
society (which is common enough in this era of
apocalyptic politics) but also proposes to
answer them (which is more unusual). Brimelow
wishes to jettison the basic structure of our
immigration policy established by the
Immigration and Nationality Act Amendments of
1965.(7) The 1965 law abolished the national
origins quotas, which had been in effect since
1921,(8) replacing them with a system that
allocated hemisphere-specific limits among seven
preference categories (based on skills, family
relationships, and refugee status) and in which
all countries of origin in the eastern
hemisphere were subject to the same
20,000-immigrant limit.(9) The immigration
reform laws enacted in 1978, 1986, and 1990
preserved the essential structure (while
altering the details) of this system.(10)
Brimelow proposes to end this system in favor
of "a drastic cutback of legal
immigration."(11) This proposal is perhaps
the only instance of understatement in a book
suffused with hyperbole. Calling his plan a
drastic cutback is rather like calling Jack the
Ripper unfriendly. Brimelow would stop all
immigration immediately (but temporarily) and
seems to propose a permanent termination of all
family-based, refugee, and asylee
immigration.(12) Presumably, he would permit
only skills-based immigration, but he does not
indicate how many of these immigrants he would
admit. Of all the reform proposals advanced
during this season of discontent, Brimelow's are
surely among the most radical.(13)
Another reason to take Alien Nation seriously
is its assertion that race(14) ought to matter
in immigration policy. In the superheated
environment in which racial issues are debated
(and often evaded) today, they continue to be
perhaps the most divisive and incendiary in
American society. In the immigration policy
context, they are explosive. Until the 1950s,
racism pervaded and polluted American public
law. Until only thirty years ago, it defined the
very structure of our immigration law. Even
today, the major receiving nations, all
democracies, have embedded ethnocultural
favoritism in their immigration and citizenship
policies.(15) In Europe, even more virulent
forms of racism and xenophobia increasingly
taint immigration politics.(16)
Racism in the United States has declined
dramatically in recent decades, despite frequent
denials of this fact.(17) I believe--although
the point is certainly arguable(18) and much
turns on difficult definitions--that racism as
such no longer plays a crucial role in
immigration law; certainly it plays a less
significant role than it did before 1965. Even
so, immigration fundamentally shapes a number of
racially charged policy questions, such as the
future level and composition of the population,
affirmative action, multicultural education, and
legislative districting.(19)
Indeed, when commentators discuss how
immigration affects labor markets, public
budgets, urban development, political strategy,
population growth, and the environment, they
frequently refer to statistical data that break
down the empirical effects of immigration, such
as welfare utilization or fertility rates, by
race. The public does not need experts to inform
it that the proportion of nonwhites in the
population is growing; the "browning"
of America is obvious to anyone who walks down
the street, rides a subway, or visits a
classroom in almost any large city.
Nevertheless, the immigration debate has
carefully elided discussion of the normative
questions raised by these current and future
demographic shifts: Are these changes good or
bad for American society? Should they be slowed,
accelerated, or left undisturbed? Which kinds of
arguments support these evaluations? Our
delicate discursive etiquette in matters of race
consigns such questions largely to outspoken
nativists such as Patrick Buchanan and to those
who wish to pursue eugenic goals through
immigration restriction.(20)
In more polite, punctilious company, these
issues are left to evasive innuendo--or utter
silence. Yet if the immigration debate is to
have intellectual integrity and contribute to
sound policy, this void must be filled. We must
somehow learn to discuss racial questions
candidly and fearlessly, but also with respect,
sensitivity, and humility. This need is
especially compelling in the immigration policy
debate. After all, three decades after the
national origins quotas were repealed, we still
select most immigrants according to their
national origins. We do so explicitly in our
refugee, "diversity," and
nation-specific (e.g., Cuban) programs, and
implicitly in our family-based and legalization
programs.(21) And individuals' national origins,
of course, are highly correlated with race.(22)
Brimelow wishes to advance this debate but
doubts that he will receive a fair hearing. He
expects to be labeled a racist, which he archly
defines as "anyone who is winning an
argument with a liberal."(23) His
prediction, if not his definition, is surely
correct. Race is very much on his mind.(24) But
is he a racist? Since Brimelow himself raises
the question of his own racism and draws the
reader's attention to it, a reviewer is tempted
to seek an answer. The issue of his motivation,
however, is an unwelcome diversion from the
merits of Brimelow's claims, and I relegate it
to a long footnote.(25)
In the end, the more interesting,
significant, and policy-relevant issue is not
the attitudes that underlie Brimelow's claims
but the validity of those claims. If Brimelow's
argument that the 1965 Immigration Act has been
a national calamity were correct, we would be
extraordinarily myopic and perverse to ignore or
deny that fact--even if his argument were
infected by racism. For reasons that I shall
explain in the remainder of this Review, I
believe that his claim is false--or at least
premature. But while Alien Nation is a bad book,
it is also a valuable one--all the more so
because it is so seductively easy to read. On
the way to its erroneous conclusions, it makes
many important points that are easily overlooked
or have been driven underground in current
immigration debates. It forces us to think more
clearly about how and why his arguments are
wrong. And it reminds us to resist the patriotic
smugness and national self-delusion that come so
easily to Americans and to be vigilant to assure
that Brimelow's dire prophecies are not
fulfilled.
The book's argument can be reduced to five
distinct but related empirical claims whose
significance can only be understood in the light
of certain normative assumptions about the
nature and purposes of American society. The
first is a claim about demography; it asserts
that immigration to the United States has
reached unprecedented levels that are
problematic in part because of the racial
composition of the post-1965 flow. The second is
a claim about carrying capacity; it holds that
these high immigration levels are stretching
American society's environmental resources
(broadly defined) beyond the breaking point. The
third is a claim about economic impacts; it
contends that the post-1965 immigrants fail to
pull their weight in the labor market and drain
off scarce fiscal resources. The fourth is a
claim about cultural assimilation; it states
that the post-1965 immigrants are not embracing
American values as completely or as swiftly as
their predecessors did. The fifth is a claim
about politics; it maintains that the post-1965
immigrants are altering the terms of political
discourse in ways that weaken the American
polity and call into question its viability as a
nation-state. I shall discuss each of these
claims in turn.
I. DEMOGRAPHY
Brimelow emphasizes that total immigration to
the United States, legal and illegal, is
"at historic highs."(26) As Brimelow
recognizes, the significance and truth of this
assertion turn on several issues.(27) Should
immigration be measured in absolute terms or
relative to something else, such as the total or
foreign-born population? Is it more meaningful
to measure immigration on an annual basis or
over longer periods of time? How many illegal
aliens are being counted? Should immigration be
measured net of permanent departures by aliens
and U.S. citizens, and if so, how many
departures are there? Except for legal
admissions, which require the Immigration and
Naturalization Service (INS) to issue visas,
none of these indices is based on hard, reliable
data; all can be, and often are, contested.
In absolute terms, legal immigration in 1995,
the most recent year for which statistics are
available, was 720,000.(28) This represents a
decline of ten percent from the 1994 figure of
804,000, which in turn represented a decline of
eleven percent from the 1993 total of
904,000.(29) The 1993-1995 decline represents
the largest two-year drop in legal immigration
since the Depression.(30) This decline,
moreover, was a broad one, occurring in five
major categories: employment-based admissions,
dependents of aliens previously legalized under
the amnesty provisions of the Immigration Reform
and Control Act of 1986 (IRCA), family-based
admissions, asylees adjusting to permanent
status, and certain special programs (Amerasian
children, Indochinese and Soviet parolees, and
registered nurses).(31) The 1995 total was the
lowest total since 1988, when 643,000 were
admitted.(32)
These figures might seem to refute Brimelow's
"historic highs" claim, blurring his
apocalyptic vision of America being deluged by
immigrants. Before reaching that conclusion,
however, we must examine the data more closely
and from different angles. Admissions figures
tend to fluctuate from one year to another,
confounding efforts to discern significant
trends on the basis of short-term changes. For
example, the admissions total in 1991 was
approximately 1.8 million;(33) it then declined
over the next four years to 720,000 in 1995(34)
(when the INS had expected the total to increase
again(35)). These fluctuations often reflect
temporary special factors, including the
evolution of particular short-term programs. The
most important example is the legalization
program under IRCA. This one-time spike in the
admissions totals produced dramatic increases in
the admissions totals beginning in 1989 but
leveling off in 1992. IRCA legalizations,
however, have had little effect on the figures
since 1993,(36) and, for political reasons, such
a legalization is unlikely to be repeated in the
foreseeable future.
Brimelow, then, is right to focus on
longer-term trends. He is also correct to
include illegal aliens in the total. Data on the
number of illegal aliens are controversial and
inexact, although expert estimates have narrowed
considerably in recent years.(37) Estimates are
based largely on extrapolations from the number
of aliens apprehended at the Mexican border and
from census surveys. Both methods are
problematic.(38) Moreover, the gross category of
illegal aliens must be broken down into
subgroups for more precise, meaningful policy
analysis. For example, different policies are
needed to deal with the two, roughly equal,
categories of illegal aliens: those who enter
the United States illegally ("entrants
without inspection" (EWIs)) and those who
enter legally on temporary visas but then become
illegal when they violate the terms of their
visas ("overstays"). As another
example, illegal aliens differ in how long they
remain in the United States. Many illegals are
temporary "sojourners," the duration
of whose stays in the United States depends on
seasonal, family, and economic factors, or are
"commuters" who cross the border
frequently. A growing share of the illegal flow
from Mexico, however, now consists of
"settlers"--mostly women and children
planning to live with their families in the
United States more or less permanently.(39)
Because settlers' prolonged, illegal residence
in the United States affects American society in
more complex and significant ways than does the
residence of sojourners, they pose the greatest
challenges to politicians and policymakers.
In discussing illegal aliens, Brimelow is
somewhat sloppy with the data, such as they are.
Noting both the 1.3 million illegals apprehended
by the Border Patrol in 1993(40) and estimates
that it catches about one-third of those
attempting to cross, he suggests that "a
remarkable 2 to 3 million illegal immigrants may
have succeeded in entering the country in
1993."(41) But this suggestion ignores two
well-known phenomena: multiple apprehensions of
the same individuals who make repeated attempts
until they cross successfully and sojourners who
travel back and forth across the border
repeatedly but are sometimes apprehended. Both
of these common situations inflate the number of
illegals. More important, he cites a
"cautious" INS estimate that
"300,000 to 500,000" net illegals
remain each year.(42) His source for this
estimate, however, is an unnamed INS spokesman,
and the estimate is higher than the published
estimates-300,000 is the figure most commonly
used by researchers in the field, including INS
researchers(43)--that he could have readily
cited.
A similar slippage occurs when he discusses
emigration by U.S. citizens and permanent
residents, which of course bears on the total of
net immigration. The best estimates are that 1.6
million emigrated during the decade of the
1980s, an outflow that has been steadily
increasing since the 1940s and equaled the
number emigrating during the 1920s.(44)
Emigration seems to be accelerating during the
1990s.(45) He seeks to minimize this factor by
stating that the post-1965 immigrants are less
likely to emigrate than their pre-1920
predecessors, a trend that he attributes to the
growth of the welfare state.(46) He may be
correct, but the data do not establish his
claim. First, the emigration data do not
distinguish between noncitizen emigrants who
were once immigrants and emigrants who were U.S.
citizens (some of whom were never immigrants).
Second, the decline in emigration began in the
1930s (if measured in absolute terms) and in the
1940s (if measured as a proportion of
immigration).(47) It thus began long before the
late 1960s, when Brimelow's two betes noires--the
post-1965 immigration and the major growth in
the welfare state-occurred. This chronology
casts some doubt on his welfare-state
explanation for declining emigration rates.
In a sense, however, these are mere details;
they do not contradict Brimelow's position that
the current level of net legal immigration is,
by historical standards, quite high in absolute
terms. The 1994 net legal immigration of just
over 600,000 (804,000 immigrants minus 195,000
emigrants) is almost three times higher than the
annual figures during the 1950s (for Brimelow,
the last halcyon period before the Fall), when
net legal immigration averaged just over
209,000.(48) It is also almost twice the level
recommended by the politically astute,
blue-ribbon Select Commission on Immigration and
Refugee Policy only fifteen years ago.(49) Even
the figure of 600,000 immigrants understates
recent growth, of course, because it fails to
include illegal immigrants, of whom there
presumably were relatively few prior to the
mid-1960s and almost none in the early decades
of the century.(50) Adding 300,000 resident
illegal aliens to the immigrant population each
year(51) produces a grand total of at least
900,000 new resident immigrants each year, net
of emigration. This number is high indeed, at
least in absolute terms.
If we consider current immigration in
relative, rather than absolute, terms--that is,
new admissions or total foreign-born as a
percentage of the total U.S. population--Brimelow's
claim that immigration is at historically high
levels must be qualified somewhat, as he
acknowledges.(52) But even when viewed in these
relative terms, the recent inflows have been
substantial. Although the legal immigrants who
entered in recent years constituted only 3.1% of
the total U.S. population during the 1980s (the
comparable shares for the first three decades of
this century were 10.4%, 5.7%, and 3.5%
respectively),(53) the steady accumulation of
immigrants over time has produced a growing
cohort of foreign-born in the United States. In
1994, over 22 million people, 8.7% of the total
U.S. population, were foreign-born.(54) Although
the percentage of the foreign-born remains far
below the 13.2% share it comprised in 1920, it
is the highest percentage since then, and the
foreign-born share has almost doubled since
1970, when it was 4.8%.(55) The fact that one
out of every eleven persons in the United States
is a first-generation immigrant gives
immigration a much higher political and media
profile today than it possessed only a
quarter-century ago, when fewer than one in
twenty were foreign-born.
Brimelow, however, does not simply ground his
demand for drastic restriction on the size of
the post-1965 cohort. He also claims that this
newer immigration is fundamentally different
from that which preceded it in two other
respects: its continuity and its racial
composition.
Continuity. One of the book's principal
themes is that America has not always been a
country that admitted immigrants. The
traditional notion that there has been a steady
stream of immigrants to the United States is one
of those hoary, politically useful (to some)
myths. The truth is that immigration to the
United States has always come in waves--that is,
until Congress unleashed the tsunami of
1965.(56) Beginning in the colonial period,
immigration exhibited recurrent cycles of growth
and decline. The many peaks and valleys were
sensitive to conditions in Europe and job
opportunities in the United States. When jobs
were plentiful, immigrants came, many only as
sojourners; when jobs were scarce, many of the
earlier immigrants returned to the old country,
and few new immigrants arrived. This punctuated
pattern of immigration-- occasional spurts
followed by short-term "pauses" or
longer "lulls"(57)--resulted mostly
from the convulsions of war and the business
cycle.(58) This pattern was also socially
benign. Like the period between meals, the
pauses and lulls facilitated digestion, a
process that would have been far more dangerous
and uncomfortable had the newcomers entered
America's maw in large and constant gulps.
Americans could more readily accept immigrants,
who in turn had the time, space, and incentive
to assimilate swiftly into American society.
Like almost every other good thing in
Brimelow's account, however, this Edenic
paradise of leisurely assimilation ended
abruptly in (you guessed it!) 1965. Far from
being wave-like, the post-1965 immigration has
waxed but
never waned; even now it shows no sign of
receding.(59) The flow has been both continuous
and continually rising (short-term fluctuations
aside). In particular, the business cycle has
had little effect on this immigration flow.(60)
Brimelow has a ready explanation for this new
development: In addition to jobs, the welfare
magnet both attracts immigrants and keeps them
here.(61) If Brimelow is correct about this--if
immigrants' motives have changed and the
business cycle no longer disciplines immigration
flows--the implications for both immigration and
welfare policy would be far-reaching. But is it
true?
Brimelow seeks to persuade us with strong
assertions and vivid charts that draw our
attention to the contrasting peaks and valleys
before 1965 and the continuous ramping upward
thereafter.(62) The unwary reader, however,
should be forewarned: There is less to this
evidence than meets the eye.(63) First, the
major declines in immigration occurred during
periods of either world war (1915-20, 1940-45)
or deep economic depression (after 1873 and
1893, and during the 1930s).(64) Because we have
managed since 1965 to avoid both of these
evils--a point to which I shall return in the
Conclusion--Brimelow cannot show that the
historical responsiveness of immigration to the
business cycle no longer operates. Only a new
world war or depression can test his claim.
Second, the pre-1965 trough may not have been
as deep as the numbers suggest. No numerical
restrictions on immigration from the western
hemisphere even existed before 1965, and thus
any number of Mexicans could enter the United
States legally by paying a fee, passing a
Spanish literacy test, and obtaining a labor
certification. Presumably, many did not bother
to do so and instead entered illegally, which
could not have been too difficult at a time when
the Border Patrol was much smaller and less
effective than it is today. Even if many did not
enter the United States illegally, they were not
counted in the totals contained in the official
statistics, It is, therefore, a delicious irony,
unremarked by Brimelow, that the same 1965 Act
that he so thoroughly deplores also imposed a
numerical restriction very much to his liking.
Third, the charts do not really tell us much
about whether the causes of immigration
fluctuations changed over time. We know that
other things did not remain equal; for example,
the legal rules governing immigration were in
flux. Shortly after numerical limits on
immigration were established in the
mid-1920s,(65) the Great Depression drove
immigration levels down, and World War II kept
them low. Thus, the numerical caps could not
really have begun to bite until the late 1940s,
more than twenty years after their inception, at
which point a different, more complex mix of
factors (including massive refugee
resettlements) were shaping immigration flows.
Finally, Brimelow's claim that the welfare
state explains immigration's relentless rise
during the post-1965 period is hard to square
with the fact that this ramping up began in the
1950s, long before the Great Society expansion
of the welfare state commenced.
Nevertheless, Brimelow might be correct that
the business cycle no longer regulates
immigration flows as it once did,(66) and that a
legally mandated pause in immigration would
enable the United States to better integrate the
large post-1965 cohort. Such a new pause might
facilitate the successful assimilation of this
cohort, much as the pre-1920s cohort benefited
from the earlier lull. A new pause might also
ease immigration-related social anxieties
resulting from the constant addition of
newcomers.(67) Group mobility theory, the
historical pattern of assimilation, and common
sense lend some plausibility to this notion. It
is intriguing that immigrants themselves--by a
large majority--believe that immigration should
either be kept at present levels or reduced, and
support for this position increases with their
time in the United States.(68) Whether
immigrants possess some special insight into how
large-scale, continuing immigration retards the
assimilation of recent immigrants, or simply
wish for selfish reasons to pull up the ladder
now that they have climbed aboard, is unclear.
The attractiveness of a pause, however,
depends in part on how the pause is defined and
on its duration. Brimelow's approach is to
permit either no immigration or only
skills-based admissions (the reader can't be
sure).(69) Others, however, will see no magic,
and much mischief, in terminating all
family-based and humanitarian admissions. For
those categories, a more modest reduction in
immigration, one that is temporary and whose
overall effects can then be gauged, would almost
certainly reconcile the competing considerations
better than complete cessation.
Brimelow's effort to shift the burden of
proof to defenders of immigration by appealing
to social risk aversion also relies on a
simplistic all-or-nothing approach. On the final
page of his book, in a section entitled
"What If?," Brimelow argues that
immigration's uncertain effects argue for
terminating or radically restricting it. If
immigration advocates turn out to be wrong, he
suggests, we will be left with many disastrous
and perhaps irreversible consequences, whereas
if the restrictionists are wrong, the worst that
will happen is that the United States must deal
with a labor shortage.(70) Risk aversion is a
perfectly legitimate policy criterion, and if
one shared Brimelow's views of immigration's
effects, one might well accept this effort to
shift the burden of proof. If instead one
believes, as I do, that legal immigration is on
the whole desirable, the more relevant policy
criterion--one that should be particularly
congenial to a conservative like Brimelow--becomes
"if it ain't broke, don't fix it"--or,
more precisely, "if it's just partly broke,
just fix that part."
Racial Composition. To Brimelow, the most
disturbing aspect of the Fall is the changing
racial complexion of the United States. Before
1965, he notes, immigrants came overwhelmingly
from the traditional source countries of
northern and western Europe. In those glory
days, "not all immigrants were alien to
American eyes," and "native-born
Americans were receiving continuous ethnic
reinforcement."(71) But since the
abandonment of the national origins quotas in
1965, the vast majority of newcomers have been
Hispanic and Asian,(72) with a significant new
black inflow from Africa and the non Spanish
Caribbean. In what he calls the Pincer
Chart,(73) he shows (while acknowledging the
uncertainties of long-term demographic
projections) that whites, who were 81% of the
population in 1790 and 75.7% in 1990, will
decline to a bare majority (52.7%) in 2050.(74)
Well before then, moreover, Hispanics will
replace blacks as the largest single minority
group. Brimelow then has the immigration liberal
pose the key question: "So what? Why do you
care so much about race?"(75) This is the
essential question, and Brimelow provides
several answers. In particular, he points to the
reinforcement and distortion of affirmative
action effected by immigration and to
immigration's threat to social cohesion. Because
these issues impinge most significantly on
cultural assimilation and political power,
however, I defer discussion of them to Parts IV
and V.
II. Carrying Capacity
Continued immigration, Brimelow despairs,
will be a demographic and environmental disaster
for the United States.(76) Nevertheless,
although his warnings are certainly worth
attending to, his predictions are highly
arbitrary and unrealistic; he aims more to shock
than to persuade. Interestingly, his predictions
bear a striking resemblance to certain modes of
argument--use of simplistic extrapolations from
present to future, disregard for the complexity
and subtlety of social adaptations, and
presentation of stark doomsday scenarios--that
conservatives properly mock when
environmentalists and other social reformers
advance them.
The centerpiece of Brimelow's analysis is a
chart that he calls "The Wedge,"(77)
which relies on projections developed by Leon
Bouvier, a respected demographer and leading
immigration restrictionist.(78) Had we
terminated all immigration in 1970, Brimelow's
"Wedge" purports to show, the U.S.
population in 2050 would have been 244 million
(i.e., less than the current total). But
continuing immigration at present levels, he
predicts, will produce a total in 2050 of 383
million, of which 36% will be post-1970
immigrants and their descendants. The
"Wedge" consists of the additional 139
million Americans who will have descended from
post-1970 immigrants,(79) unneeded and unwanted
bodies that will place an unprecedented strain
on the natural and human environments. He also
predicts that more immigrants, especially those
from the Third World whom the post- 1965 rules
have brought here, will bring new (and in some
cases, old) diseases, high rates of fertility
and crime, and low rates of education and skill.
They will crowd out the rest of us, swamping our
classrooms, extending our slums, polluting our
air, and destroying our amenities and
communities.(80) These dire consequences, he
says, are already occurring.
Straight-line extrapolations from the present
could indeed yield 383 million people in
fifty-five more years. This is a lot of people,
and the prospect of somehow squeezing all of
them into our schools, beaches, parking spaces,
and housing stock is not a pleasant one. Doing
so would surely strain our natural and social
environments. But straight-line extrapolations
in such matters seldom prove to be correct. For
all the scientific gloss of hard numbers,
demography is as much art as science. Long-term
demographic projections, like economic ones, are
necessary and often valuable. Nevertheless, they
necessarily assume that human choices are more
fixed than they actually are and that the future
will therefore be much like the recent past and
present (except, of course, for such changes as
the demographer can envision and accurately
predict). Wise demographers know and say that
this assumption is false, but they usually have
little choice but to proceed as if it were true.
Demographic projections such as those cited
by Brimelow emphasize the population-increasing
effects of those immigrant groups whose
fertility rates are higher than the fertility
rates of natives. These higher rates reflect the
greater proportion of immigrants, relative to
the general population, who are in their
childbearing years, cultural factors, and other
causes. When high-fertility groups' share of the
immigration stream and of the total U.S.
population increases, the projected future
population of the United States increases
accordingly. This "shifting shares"
phenomenon--the larger proportion in the
population of high-fertility groups such as
Filipinos, southeast Asians, and some
Hispanics--drives much of the prediction of
future U.S. population growth.(81)
This argument, however, resembles earlier
"race suicide" theories that
immigration historians and demographers have
convincingly debunked by showing that immigrant
fertility rates generally converge with those of
the native population.(82) The important
question, therefore, is how quickly this occurs.
It appears that when women from high-fertility
countries migrate to the United States, they
both reduce and delay their childbearing to the
point at which their fertility rates approach
the overall U.S. norm. Indeed, compared to
demographically similar native women, their
rates sometimes are lower.(83) Admittedly,
immigrants do accelerate U.S. population growth;
since 1980, net immigration has accounted for
about 37% of population growth.(84) But the
extent and speed of their contribution to that
growth in the future are difficult to predict
and easy to exaggerate.
Much of Brimelow's concern about carrying
capacity seems to relate to the dangers of
overcrowding.(85) Even thirty years after the
dreaded deluge began, however, the United States
remains a country with a relatively low
population density.(86) This concern does not
simply reflect the vast uninhabited (and perhaps
uninhabitable(87)) spaces in the American West.
Even America's largest and densest cities are
thinly populated relative to other cities in the
world, including the most famously attractive
ones.(88) Indeed, the population density of New
York City is about half what it was in 1910;
other major cities are also less densely
populated.(89) We have a long way to go before
we reach density levels that other Western
democracies find perfectly acceptable, even
desirable. Our standards of acceptable density
may be different from those in Europe, but our
standards are not immutable, as the historical
urbanization, suburbanization, and "edge
city" cycles in the United States attest.
Demographic extrapolations from the present
to the future are further confounded by the
dynamics of markets, politics, and other
powerful social processes that respond to
developments that impose widespread social
costs, These processes do not sit idly by while
change unfolds but instead shape and constrain
change, thereby altering its future trajectory.
Demographic models cannot readily incorporate
this fact, which is nicely captured in
"Stein's Law" (stated by economist
Herbert Stein): If a trend can't go on like this
indefinitely, it won't.(90) Population growth,
for example, bids up the prices of housing,
education, and other goods; people therefore
tend to have fewer children,(91) other things
being equal.(92) If increased job competition
pushes immigrants' unemployment high enough for
long enough, they will tend not to migrate here.
If competition for natural resources and other
environmental goods becomes more intense, those
goods will become more costly, which both
rations their use and attracts additional
supply; these behavioral responses in turn tend
to reduce the price. If policymakers perceive
that population growth harms the environment,
the economy, and other areas of public concern,
they will propose policy changes accordingly.
I am not suggesting that we can blithely
count on these responses to eliminate any
adverse effects of population growth--far from
it. How well society reacts to these
developments depends on the quality of
information flows, the nature of politics, the
efficiency of markets, and other factors. Even
if optimal outcomes are unlikely under these
conditions, however, Brimelow's dire predictions
should be taken with more than a grain of salt.
If our politics and markets are supple and
responsive enough to react swiftly and
intelligently to population pressures and other
strains on carrying capacity, the future need
not unduly arouse our fears. Indeed, since 1965,
our social institutions have performed
reasonably well in this regard, refuting the
Chicken Littles of environmental pessimism.(93)
III. Economic Impacts
Brimelow acknowledges the rich contributions
that the pre-1965 immigrants have made to the
American economy.(94) He insists, however, that
the post-1965 cohort is altogether different.
Relying heavily and uncritically on the work of
labor economist George Borjas, he argues that
"the effect of the 1965 reform has been to
uncouple legal immigration from the needs of the
U. S. economy."(95) This claim is actually
a composite of four separate claims. The first
is that labor market skills play a small and
shrinking role in admissions policy. Second, the
post-1965 cohort is less skilled than earlier
cohorts. Third and related, the post-1965 cohort
drains the economy more than earlier cohorts
because its members, especially illegal aliens,
are more likely to demand public assistance and
displace native workers. Fourth, this
displacement imposes particularly heavy burdens
on current and potential African-American
workers.
The first claim is correct. A major theme of
the debate surrounding the Immigration Act of
1990 was the need to increase the level and
relative share of skills-based admissions.(96)
In the end, however, the Act only slightly
increased the share of these admissions. In
1994, only 15% of admissions were skills-based;
moreover, roughly half of these consisted of
skilled immigrants' accompanying family members,
who may themselves lack skills needed in the
United States. Family ties accounted for 62% of
the admissions.(97) Because the 1990 Act
substantially increased both the total number of
immigrants and the numbers authorized for each
immigrant category, the absolute number of
skills-based immigrants did grow, thus obscuring
how minimally the share of skills-based
admissions had increased. Family unity, it
appears, continues to trump all other
immigration policy values.(98) Pending
legislation would increase the relative weight
of labor market skills, a reform whose
advantages are widely appreciated.(99)
The second claim--that the
"quality" of immigrants to the United
States has declined since the 1965 reforms--is
harder to assess. Good data on immigrant labor
markets are hard to come by, and analyses are
very sensitive to methodology. More to the
point, labor economists disagree about the
nature and validity of the data, methodology,
and conclusions used by Borjas and other
immigration analysts. There are several areas of
dispute. One concerns the extent to which the
"immigrant" category should be
disaggregated. Different subcategories of
immigrants--family-based admittees, skills-based
admittees, refugees/asylees, age groups, source
region or country groups, legals versus illegals--in
a given cohort exhibit quite different
characteristics. Lumping some or all of these
subcategories together can significantly affect
the outcome of the analysis. Reliance on census
data, which employ rather crude, self-reported
ethnic categories and almost certainly
understate income, is also controversial.
Several generalizations growing out of labor
market research do support some of Brimelow's
concerns. Many post-1965 immigrants are highly
educated, indeed, far more so than the native
population. Many others are more skilled in
absolute terms than the immigrants who preceded
them, but because the native population's skills
have increased even more in absolute terms and
because lower skilled groups comprise a larger
share of the total immigration flow, the
"quality" gap has widened in relative
terms.(100) Most of the immigrants who entered
illegally--those who qualified for the amnesty
under IRCA and those who have entered illegally
since then--are low-skilled Mexicans. The
education level of Mexican-origin immigrants,
even among those who are naturalized U.S.
citizens, is very low; overall, it averages
about seven and a half years of schooling.(101)
Other relatively low-skilled immigrant groups
are Asian refugees and the elderly.(102) On the
other hand, the recent arrivals also include
better educated individuals--predominantly
nonrefugees from Asia, Africa, and the Middle
East--who should help to reduce the gap in the
future.(103) This effect, however, will be
gradual because their numbers remain relatively
low. Again, pending legislation is likely to
increase the skill levels of future immigrant
cohorts.
Brimelow's third claim is that post-1965
immigrants inflict a net loss on the economy,
taking into account the combined effects of
their use of public services, their displacement
of native workers, their tax payments, and their
contribution to productivity. This claim is also
difficult to assess precisely, as the existing
studies seldom employ comparable definitions,
measures, data sets, and methodologies.(104) For
example, the outcomes of labor market impact
analyses depend on whether the studies assume
that particular labor markets (usually
metropolitan areas) are closed systems, or
whether they instead consider the significant
possibility (given the high degree of internal
labor mobility in the U.S. economy) that
immigrant concentrations in one area induce some
native workers to leave that area and discourage
other natives who might otherwise migrate there
from doing so.
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