Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Research Paper First Draft

Mingdong Chen
Freshman composition
Ms. Nargiza Matyakubova
14 November 2013
Research Paper First Draft
                                     Immigrants are Creators of Economy, Not Takers
              There are approximately 35 million foreign people reached America from 1820s to 1920s, and about 400,000 immigrants arrived in 1870s alone (the costs and benefits of immigration). Since the Immigration Reform and Control Act were passed in 1986, the flow of immigration to the United States has been gradually growing steadily. Those people are included legal immigrants, undocumented immigrants or illegal immigrants, nonimmigrants, and border crossers. Some immigrants come to escape religious persecution; many others are poor and looking to improve their economic situation; still others come to experience greater freedom in the United States. Therefore, America of United States has always been considered a nation of immigrants who comes from all over the world, the representation of melting pot of cultures. More than one hundred years of making great efforts. Immigrants have offered an obbligato contribution to American economy and made America the economic engine of the world.
              Immigrants create businesses. According to the Small Business Administration, it is said that immigrants have high percentage more likely to start a business in the United States than non-immigrants. In other words, they create businesses at higher rates than do U.S. natives. This contribution is most notable in the high-tech sector, where immigrants were main founders in one-quarter of U.S. high-tech startups between 1995 and 2005.  Immigrants were key founders in over one-half of high-tech startups in Silicon Valley during that time, so Immigrants’ entrepreneurial activities benefit all Americans (Zavodny). They also take up 18 percent of all small business owners in the United States. Another example is that the nearly 1.5 million immigrants’ business owners in the United States represent 12.5 percent of all business owners. Immigrants build 12.2 percent of the total work force in the United States. They own a large share of businesses in the lowest-and highest-skill sectors and in several industries. What’s more, immigrant business ownership is geographically concentrated in a few states. Nearly 30 percent of all business owners in California are immigrants; one-fourth of New York business owners are foreign-born, as are more than one-fifth of business owners in New Jersey, Florida, and Hawaii (Robert the Great).
              Immigrant-owned businesses provide more jobs for Native American workers. According to the Fiscal policy institute, immigrant-owned small businesses employed about 4.7 million people in 2007. And those businesses created more than $776 billion annually (Furman and Gray). In 2000s, the total business income generated by immigrants is $67 billion, 11.6 percent of all business income in the Unites states. Immigrants contributed about one-quarter of all business income in California, and about one-fifth of all business income in New York, Florida, and New Jersey. These numerical findings prove that immigrants make large and important contributions to business ownership, formation, and income in the Unites States (Fairlie 70). According to the 2011 Current Population Survey, 7.5 percent of the foreign-born population is self-employed. Thus, we can expect that under S. 744, between 600,000 and 840,000 of the newly legalized immigrants would be self-employed (Kugler and Oakford).  According to the 2010 American Community Survey, there were 900,000 small-business owners among current immigrants—close to 18 percent of all incorporated business owners. Yet in the same year, immigrants accounted for just 16 percent of the workforce. The entrepreneurial nature of immigrants, however, is not being fully realized, given that there are 8 million undocumented workers. To be sure, some of these undocumented workers currently run their own business, but these businesses likely exist in the underground economy. Thus, legalizing these undocumented entrepreneurs will formalize their businesses and bring their employees above ground, leading to better job opportunities (Kugler and Oakford). “Businesses and communities are finding that immigrants, rather than a source of weakness, are helping to stave off the chill of economic hard times” said Joel Kotkin.
Immigrants are engineers, scientists, and innovators. According to the Census Bureau, even though immigrants present 16 percent of the resident population, but they hold a bachelor’s degree or higher. More specific, they present 33 percent of engineers, 27 percent of mathematicians, statisticians, and computer scientist, and 24 percent of physical scientists (Furman and Gray). Immigrants are also prominent in advanced scientific research. Over one-third of U.S. Nobel Prize winners in physiology or medicine between 1901 and 2012 were foreign-born. If it were easier for foreign-born students and workers to obtain provisional visas to stay and work in America, visas that could transition into green cards later, America would have faster GDP growth and job creation (Furchtgott-Roth). U.S. businesses founded by immigrants employed approximately 560,000 workers and generated $63 billion in sales during 2012, according to an October 2012 Kauffman Foundation study. Immigrants have a higher propensity to start businesses than native-born Americans. For example, 44 percent of high-tech Silicon Valley businesses had at least one immigrant founder (Furchtgott-Roth).
              Immigrants are mainly essentially labor forces of American society. In between 1850s to 1880s, there were approximately 200,000 Chinese immigrants came to America to help build the nation’s first transcontinental railroad, so did the Irish immigrants. For decades, immigrants and their families have played a vital role in the U.S. labor force and economy at large, Foreign-born workers comprise about 16 percent of the workforce, and immigrants account for nearly one-half of U.S. labor force growth since the mid-1990s, and their contribution of economy toward the society is about 45 percent of total (Zavodnv). Since 1999, the difference between the labor force participation rates of the two groups have been steadily increasing. In 2012, 67.5 percent of immigrants participated in the labor force, compared to 63.2 percent of native-born Americans. As Steven Jobs pointed out “You can't find that many in America to hire... If you could educate these engineers, we could move more manufacturing plants here.” And someone may consider offering visas to foreign engineers denies opportunities to Native American engineers, however Jobs thought that “there are not enough Americans with engineering degrees to satisfy the economy's demand for engineers.”
              Immigrants fill the jobs Native American will not do. Immigrants usually fill jobs that American cannot fill, and mostly at the high and low ends of the skill spectrum. Immigrants are presented not only in high-skilled field fields such as medicine, physics and computer science, but also in lower-skilled sectors such as hotels and restaurants, domestic service, construction and light manufacturing (Griswold). Hispanic and Latino immigrants comprised 42 percent of the American unskilled labor force (defined as those without a high school diploma). [9] Low-skilled immigrants are disproportionately represented in the service, construction, and agricultural sectors, with occupations such as janitors, landscapers, tailors, plasterers, stucco masons, and farmworkers. Government, education, health, and social services, are sectors that employ few immigrants. Immigrants choose different jobs from native-born Americans. Low-skill immigrants come to be fruit pickers, as well as janitors and housekeepers, jobs native-born Americans typically do not choose as careers. However, immigrants are not found as crossing guards and funeral service workers, low-skill jobs preferred by Americans. Similarly, high-skilled immigrants prefer occupations such as research scientists, dentists, and computer hardware and software engineers. They generally do not choose to be lawyers, judges, or education administrators. Table 1 shows the percent distributions of foreign-born and native-born American workers by occupation (Furchtgott-Roth).
              Immigrants increase neither the competition of job for Native Americans nor push them out of work. First, immigrants generally do not have a direct negative impact on the earnings of native-born workers, as native-born workers and immigrant workers generally complement each other rather than compete for the same job. Native-born workers and immigrants tend to have different skill sets and therefore seek different types of jobs. Thus, immigrants are not increasing the labor market competition for native-born workers and therefore do not negatively affect American workers’ earnings. Between 1995 and 2004, the number of family households living below the poverty level fell by half a million, from 8.1 million to 7.6 million. The number of immigrant households in poverty did indeed rise-by 194,000-but that increase was more than offset by a drop of 675,000 in native-born households living in poverty. In other words, for every poor immigrant family we “imported” during that time, more than three native-born families were “exported” from poverty (Griswold).
              Immigrants contribute the innovation to economy to raise productivity. Sustained increases in productivity lead to faster economic growth and rising living standards. Recent research provides compelling evidence that high-skilled immigrants play an important role in innovation.  Highly educated immigrants earn patents at more than twice the rate of highly educated natives. The difference has been linked to immigrants’ overrepresentation in STEM fields and to the growing number of immigrants entering on work-related and student visas. There is also evidence of positive spillovers on natives, meaning that immigrants not only raise innovation directly but also boost overall patent activity, perhaps by attracting additional resources and boosting specialization. Immigrants’ innovative activities benefit all Americans, natives and immigrants alike.
              Low-skilled immigrants also contribute a helping hand to economy. Low-skilled immigrants’ economic contributions are less obvious than those of high-skilled immigrants, but low-skilled immigrants contribute to the economy in several key ways. They fill dirty, dangerous, and dull jobs that many U.S.-born workers are reluctant to take. Low-skilled immigration reduces the prices of the goods and services these workers produce, which benefits all Americans as consumers. In addition, the availability of low-skilled immigrant workers as child care providers, housecleaners, and gardeners has enabled American women to work more and allowed them to pursue careers while having children. These benefits have accrued primarily to highly educated women who are in a position to pay for household help (Zavodny).
              Immigrants are a drain on government finances. It is true that low-skilled immigrants and refugees tend to use welfare more than the typical “native “ household, but the 1996’s Welfare Reform Act made it much more difficult for newcomers to collect welfare. As a result, immigrants’ use of welfare has declined in recent years along with overall welfare rolls (Griswold).
              Immigrants boost tax revenue, enlarge the taxpayer base, and help to keep down the price of goods. The NAS study found that the typical immigrant and his or her offspring will pay a net $80,000 more in taxes during their lifetimes than they collect in government services. For immigrants with college degrees, the net fiscal return is $198,000 (Griwold).
              Immigrants also raise demand for goods as well as the supply. During the long boom of the 1990s, and especially in the second half of the decade, the national unemployment rate fell below 4 percent and real wages rose up and down the income scale during a time of relatively high immigration (Griswold). The Immigration Policy Center estimates that the purchasing power of Latinos and Asians, many of whom are immigrants, alone will reach $1.5 trillion and $775 billion, respectively by 2015 (Furman and Gray)
       In conclusion, immigrants play an important role in making great contributions to American economy as workers, as consumers, and as taxpayers. A growing economy attracts immigrants, and immigrants make the economy grow in turn.

                           






Working bibliography
Daniel Griswold. As immigrants move in, Americans move up. July 21 2009 cato institute.

Daniel Griswold. Immigrants have enriched American culture and enhanced our influence in the world. This article appeared in Insighton, February 18, 2002.

Madeline Zavodny. Immigration and its contribution to our economic strength. Economic Committee, May 08 2013

Jason Furman, Danielle Gray. Ten Ways Immigrants Help Build and Strengthen Our Economy. The White House Blog, July 12 2012.

Mary E. Williams. Immigration opposing viewpoints. Greenhaven Press, 2004.

Executive Office of the President. The economic benefits of fixing our broken immigration system. July 2013


Will Somerville and Madeleine Sumption. Immigration and the labour market. Migration Policy Institute

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