Statement on Immigration Research
(Update: On Tuesday,
May 16, the Senate passed Sen. Jeff
Bingaman's (D-NM) amendment to S. 2611
that significantly reduced the number of
legal immigrants who could enter under
the bill's "guest worker" program. As a
result of this change, our estimate of
the number of legal immigrants who would
enter the country or would gain legal
status under S. 2611 falls from 103
million to around 66 million over the
next 20 years.)
If enacted, the
Comprehensive Immigration Reform Act (CIRA,
S.2611) would be the most dramatic
change in immigration law in 80 years,
allowing an estimated 103 million
persons to legally immigrate to the U.S.
over the next 20 years—fully one-third
of the current population of the United
States.
Much attention has
been given to the fact that the bill
grants amnesty to some 10 million
illegal immigrants. Little or no
attention has been given to the fact
that the bill would quintuple the rate
of legal immigration into the United
States, raising, over time, the inflow
of legal immigrants from around one
million per year to over five million
per year. The impact of this increase in
legal immigration dwarfs the magnitude
of the amnesty provisions.
In contrast to the
103 million immigrants permitted under
CIRA, current law allows 19 million
legal immigrants over the next twenty
years. Relative to current law, then,
CIRA would add an extra 84 million legal
immigrants to the nation’s population.
The figure of 103
million legal immigrants is a reasonable
estimate of the actual immigration
inflow under the bill and not the
maximum number that would be legally
permitted to enter. The maximum number
that could legally enter would be almost
200 million over twenty years—over 180
million more legal immigrants than
current law permits.
Immigration
Status
To understand the
provisions of CIRA, largely based on a
compromise by Senators Chuck Hagel
(R–Nebraska) and Mel Martinez
(R–Florida), it is useful to distinguish
between the three legal statuses that a
legal immigrant might hold:
-
Temporary
Status: Persons in this category
enter the U.S. temporarily and are
required to leave after a period of
time.
-
Near-Permanent, Convertible Status:
Persons in this category enter the
U.S. and are given the opportunity
to “adjust” or convert to legal
permanent residence after a few
years.
-
Legal
Permanent Residence (LPR):
Persons in this category have the
right to remain in the United States
for their entire lives. After five
years, they have the right to
naturalize and become citizens. As
naturalized citizens, they have the
constitutional rights to vote and to
receive any government benefits
given to native-born citizens.
A key feature of
CIRA is that most immigrants identified
as “temporary” are, in fact, given
convertible status with a virtually
unrestricted opportunity to become legal
permanent residents and then citizens.
Another important
feature of both CIRA and existing
immigration law is that immigrants in
convertible or LPR status have the right
to bring spouses and minor children into
the country. Spouses and dependent
children will be granted permanent
residence along with the primary
immigrant and may also become citizens.
In addition, after naturalizing, an
immigrant has the right to bring his
parents into the U.S. as permanent
residents with the opportunity for
citizenship. There are no numeric limits
on the number of spouses, dependent
children, and parents of naturalized
citizens that may be brought into the
country. Additionally, the siblings and
adult children (along with their
families) of naturalized citizens and
the adult children (and their families)
of legal permanent residents are given
preference in future admission but are
subject to numeric caps.
Key Provisions
of CIRA
Four key provisions
of CIRA would result in an explosive
increase in legal immigration.
Amnesty for
Current Illegal Immigrants: CIRA
offers amnesty and citizenship to 85
percent of the nation’s current 11.9
million illegal immigrants. Under the
plan, illegal immigrants who have been
in the U.S. for five years or more (60
percent of illegals) would be granted
immediate amnesty. Illegal immigrants
who have been in the country between two
and five years (25 percent of illegals)
could travel to one of 16 “ports of
entry,” where they would receive amnesty
and lawful work permits.
In total, the bill
would grant amnesty to 85 percent of the
current illegal immigrant population, or
some 10 million individuals.
After receiving
amnesty, illegal immigrants would spend
six years in a provisional status before
attaining LPR status. After five years
in LPR status, they would have the
opportunity to become naturalized
citizens and vote in U.S. elections. As
well, the spouses and dependent children
of current illegal immigrants would have
the right to enter the U.S. and become
citizens.
There would be no
numeric limit on the number of illegal
immigrants, spouses, and dependents
receiving LPR status; under the amnesty
provision, such individuals would not be
counted against any other cap or limit
in immigration law.
The New
“Temporary Guest Worker” Program:
CIRA creates an entirely new “temporary
guest worker” (H-2C) program. There is
nothing temporary about this program;
nearly all “guest workers” would have
the right to become permanent residents
and then citizens.
Foreign workers
could enter the U.S. as guest workers if
they have a job offer from a U.S.
employer. In practical terms, U.S.
companies would recruit foreign workers
to enter the guest worker program and
immigrate to the U.S. Most likely,
intermediate employment firms would
specialize in recruiting foreign labor
for U.S. employers.
Guest workers would
be allowed to remain in the U.S. for six
years.
However, in the
fourth year, the guest worker could ask
for LPR status and would receive it if
he has learned English or is enrolled in
an English class.
There are no
numeric limits on the number of guest
workers who could receive LPR status.
Upon receiving LPR status, the guest
worker could remain in the country
permanently. He could become a U.S.
citizen and vote in U.S. elections after
just five more years.
The spouses and
minor children of guest workers would
also be permitted to immigrate to the
U.S.
When guest workers
petition for LPR status, their spouses
and children would receive it as well.
Five years after obtaining LPR status,
these spouses could become naturalized
citizens. The bill sets no limit on the
number of spouses and children who could
immigrate under the guest worker
program. After workers and their spouses
have obtained citizenship, they would be
able to bring in their parents as legal
permanent residents.
The bill does
provide numeric limits on the number of
guest workers who can enter the country
each year, but the number starts high
and then grows exponentially. In the
first year, 325,000 H-2C visas would be
given out, but if employer demand for
guest workers is high, that number could
be boosted by an extra 65,000 in the
next year. If employer demand for H-2C
workers continues to be high, the number
of H-2C visas could be raised by up to
20 percent in each subsequent year.
The 20 percent
exponential escalator provision allows
the number of H-2C immigrants to climb
steeply in future years. If the H-2C cap
were increased by 20 percent each year,
within twenty years the annual inflow of
workers would reach 12 million. At this
20 percent growth rate, a total of 70
million guest workers would enter the
U.S. over the next two decades and none
would be required to leave. While it is
unlikely that so many workers would
enter, the program does have the
potential to bring ten of millions of
immigrants to the U.S.
The “guest worker”
program, then, is an open door program,
based on the demands of U.S. business,
that would allow an almost unlimited
number of workers and dependents to
enter the U.S. from anywhere in world
and become citizens. It is essentially
an “open border” provision.
Additional
Permanent Visas for Siblings, Adult
Children, and their Families: The
permanent entry of non-immediate
relatives—such as brothers, sisters, and
adult children—is currently subject to a
cap of 480,000 per year minus the number
of immediate relatives (the parents,
spouses, and minor children of U.S.
citizens) admitted in the prior year.
CIRA eliminates the deduction for
immediate relatives from the cap.
This effectively
increases the number of non-immediate
relatives who could attain LPR status by
254,000 per year.
Additional
Permanent Employment Visas: The U.S.
currently issues around 140,000
employment-based visas each year. Under
CIRA, the U.S. would issue 450,000
employment-based green cards per year
between 2007 and 2016.
After 2016, the
number would fall to 290,000 per year.
Under current law,
LPR visas going to the spouses and
children of workers with
employment-based visas are counted
against the cap. Under CIRA, these
spouses and children would be removed
from the cap and given legal permanent
residence without numeric limits.
Historically, 1.2
dependent relatives have entered the
U.S. for each worker under
employment-based immigration programs.
This means that
some 990,000 persons per year would be
granted LPR status until 2016 and, after
that, 638,000 per year.
Estimating
Future Immigration Under CIRA
Most provisions of
CIRA are straightforward; in many
categories, the number of future
immigrants allowed is either directly
stated or can be easily calculated from
the law’s provisions. In some areas,
however, the law’s impact is uncertain.
To estimate future legal immigration
under the bill, three assumptions have
been used in this paper:
-
Spouses and
children of workers: Dependent
spouses and children represent a
major component of current
immigration. In the current
employment-based visa program, 1.2
dependents enter for each incoming
worker.
This paper
assumes this ratio will continue in
the employment-based program and
will also apply to those entering
under the new guest worker program.
This is a conservative assumption:
guest workers are likely to have
lower education levels and thus to
have larger families. Finally, many
current illegal immigrants who would
receive amnesty under the bill
already have families in the U.S.;
therefore the ratio of incoming
spouses and children to amnesty
recipients is assumed to be only
0.6, or half the ratio of the
employment-based program.
-
Parents of
naturalized citizens: Parents of
naturalized citizens currently make
up eight percent of all new legal
immigrants. This paper assumes that
half of all adult immigrants will
naturalize after five years of LPR
status and that 30 percent of the
parents of these naturalized
citizens will immigrate in the three
years after their children’s
naturalization.
-
Growth in
the guest worker program: The
number of immigrants in the guest
worker program will be driven by
employer demand. The bill allows the
number of H-2C visas to increase by
20 percent per year; this level of
growth would result in an
extraordinary 60 million guest
workers in the U.S. over the next
twenty years. This paper assumes
that the number of immigrants in the
guest worker program would increase
at a more moderate rate of 10
percent per year. Alternative
estimates for 20 percent growth and
zero growth in the program are also
presented.
A Flood of Legal
Immigrants
Under CIRA,
immigrants could enter the country or
attain lawful status within the country
through eight channels. In each channel,
immigrants would be granted permanent
residence and the right to become
citizens. The first channel represents
immigrants who would have entered under
current law; the second channel
represents illegal immigrants who are
currently in the country and would be
given legal permanent residence under
the bill. The other six channels
represent new inflows of legal
immigrants that would occur as a result
of the bill. The total number of new
legal immigrants over a twenty year
period would be as follows: (See
Charts 1 and
2.)
-
Visas under
current law: Roughly 950,000
persons receive permanent residence
visas under current law each year.
Over 20 years, the inflow of
immigrants through this channel
would be 19 million. This represents
the status quo under existing
law.
-
Amnesty:
The bill would grant amnesty to
roughly 10 million illegal
immigrants. These individuals are
currently living in the U.S.;
amnesty would allow them to remain
legally and to become U.S. citizens.
-
Expanded
family chain migration: The
number of family-sponsored visas for
secondary family members, such as
adult brothers and sisters, is
currently limited to 480,000 per
year minus the number of visas given
to immediate family members
(spouses, minor children, and
parents of U.S. citizens). The bill
changes the law so that the total
quota on secondary family members
would be 480,000 without deductions
for immediate family members. The
net increase in the number of
immigrants under this provision
would be around 254,000 per year, or
5.1 million over 20 years.
-
Employment-based green cards:
The bill would increase the number
of employment-based visas from
140,000 to 450,000 per year. For the
first time, it would also exempt the
spouses and children of workers from
the cap. Total annual immigration
under this provision is likely to be
450,000 workers plus 540,000 family
members annually. The net increase
above current law over 20 years
would be around 13.5 million
persons.
-
The guest
worker (H-2C) program: CIRA
would allow 325,000 persons to
participate in the guest worker
program in the first year. This
number could rise by 65,000 in the
next year and then by 20 percent per
year. Assuming 10 percent annual
growth in the annual number of guest
workers entering the country (well
below the bill’s maximum), the total
inflow of workers under this program
would be 20 million over 20 years.
-
Spouses and
children of guest workers: Guest
workers could bring their spouses
and children to the U.S. as
permanent residents; the added
number of entrants would be 24
million over 20 years.
-
Spouses and
children of illegal immigrants given
amnesty: Illegal immigrants who
received amnesty could bring their
spouses and children into the U.S.
as legal permanent residents with
the opportunity for full
citizenship. The number of spouses
and children who would enter the
U.S. as a result of amnesty would be
at least six million.
-
Parents of
naturalized citizens. The bill
would substantially increase the
number of naturalized citizens.
Naturalized citizens would have an
unlimited right to bring their
parents into the U.S. as legal
permanent residents. Over twenty
years, the number of parents who
would enter the U.S. as permanent
legal residents as a result of CIRA
would be around five million.
Overall, the bill
would allow some 103 million persons to
legally immigrate over the next twenty
years. This is roughly one-third of the
current population of the United States.
All of these new entrants would be
permanent residents and would have the
right to become citizens. This would be
a 84 million person net increase over
current law.
Legal Flow
Compared to Illegal Immigration
All of the
immigration discussed to this point
would be legal immigration. If illegal
immigration continued after enactment of
S.2611, the inflow of immigrants would
be even greater. Although illegal
immigration is considered a major
problem, the proposed legal immigration
under CIRA would dwarf it numerically.
The net inflow of illegal immigrants
into the U.S. population is around
700,000 per year.
Legal immigration
under CIRA would exceed five million per
year, seven times the rate of the
current illegal immigration flow. Annual
legal and illegal immigration together
now equals about 1.7 million; future
legal immigration alone under CIRA would
be three times this amount.
Range of
Estimates
The figure of 103
million new legal immigrants is based on
the assumption that immigration under
the guest worker program would grow at
10 percent per year. If guest-worker
immigration grows at the maximum rate
permitted by the bill, 20 percent per
year, the total number of new immigrants
coming to the U.S. over the next twenty
years would be 193 million. On the other
hand, if immigration under the H-2C
program did not increase at all for two
decades but remained fixed at the
initial level of 325,000 per year, total
legal immigration under CIRA would be 72
million over twenty years, or more than
three times the level that would occur
under current law. (See
Chart 3.)
The tables in the
Appendix show annual inflows of total
legal immigrants in each of the eight
channels mentioned above over the next
twenty years. The tables show the
estimated yearly rate of immigration
under three scenarios for the H-2C
program: zero growth, ten percent
growth, and twenty percent growth.
Dwarfing the
Great Migration
Between 1870 and
1920, the U.S. experienced a massive
flow of immigration known as the “great
migration”. During this period, foreign
born persons hovered between 13 and 15
percent of the population.In
1924, Congress passed major legislation
greatly reducing future immigration. By
1970, foreign born persons had fallen to
5 percent of the population.
In the last three
decades, immigration has increased
sharply. The foreign born now comprise
around 12 percent of the population,
approaching the levels of the early
1900’s. However, if CIRA were enacted,
and 100 million new immigrants entered
the country over the next twenty years,
foreign born persons would rise to over
one quarter of the U.S. population. There
is no precedent for that level of
immigration at any time in U.S.
history.
Conclusion
If enacted, CIRA
would be the most dramatic change in
immigration law in 80 years. In its
overall impact on the nation, the bill
would rival other historic milestones,
such as the creation of Social Security
or Medicare.
The bill would give
amnesty to 10 million illegal immigrants
and quintuple the rate of legal
immigration into the U.S. Under the
bill, the annual inflow of immigrants
with the option of becoming legal
permanent residents would rise from the
current level of one million per year to
more than five million per year. Within
a few years, the annual inflow of new
immigrants would exceed one percent of
the current U.S. population. This would
be the highest immigration rate in U.S.
history.
Within 20 years,
some 103 million new immigrants would
enter the U.S. This number is about
one-third of the current U.S.
population. All of these immigrants
would be permanent residents with the
right to become citizens and vote in
U.S. elections. CIRA would transform the
United States socially, economically,
and politically. Within two decades, the
character of the nation would differ
dramatically from what exists today.
Robert Rector
is Senior Research
Fellow in Domestic Policy Studies at The
Heritage Foundation.
Appendix and Tables