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The Myth of No-Cost Immigrants

AR Articles on Immigration
Fade to Brown (May 2003)
Waging War on America (Jun. 1998)
Halting the Flow (Aug. 1995)
Search AmRen.com for Immigration
More news stories on Immigration
Investor’s Business Daily, Nov. 14

Immigration Reform: Conventional wisdom says immigrants are not a financial burden to taxpayers because they work hard, pay taxes and rarely go on the dole. But it’s a myth, and a new study blows another hole in it.

The University of Florida finds that immigrant families have been costing that state a net $1,800 per household per year, a financial burden much larger than previously thought.

The findings surprised the study’s author, who is a pro-immigration Democrat. After crunching the numbers, economist David Denslow discovered immigrants—legal and illegal—were consuming much more in public services and paying much less in taxes than the average resident.

Chief among the government services they were consuming were education and Medicaid.

But wait a minute. Didn’t last decade’s welfare reform push a lot of immigrants off the dole?

Yes, but the decline in immigrant cash aid and food stamps has not resulted in a significant savings for taxpayers, because it has been almost entirely offset by increases in the cost of providing Medicaid to immigrant households.

In fact, a recent study by the Center for Immigration Studies found that the average welfare payout to immigrant households, both legal and illegal, has changed little and remains about $2,000 a year, which is 50% higher than the payout for natives.

{snip}

Between 1996 and 2001, the number of immigrant households using the welfare system grew by 750,000 to more than 3 million—accounting for almost 18% of all U.S. households on welfare. That share is expected to rise with continued high rates of immigration.

And if you think immigrants, most of whom are poor Mexicans, will stop depending on U.S. welfare as they settle into jobs and even careers here, think again.

CIS found that welfare use actually increases significantly with duration of stay in the U.S. Not until they have lived here more than 20 years does it start to go down on average.

{snip}

Original article

(Posted on November 17, 2005)

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