An interesting take on the immigration situation

The NYT has printed which suggests something which makes sense to me, but has not really entered the discourse on illegal immigration much — raise the minimum wage.

Millions of illegal immigrants work for minimum and even sub-minimum wages in workplaces that don’t come close to meeting health and safety standards. It is nonsense to say, as President Bush did recently, that these jobs are filled by illegal immigrants because Americans won’t do them. Before we had mass illegal immigration in this country, hotel beds were made, office floors were cleaned, restaurant dishes were washed and crops were picked — by Americans.

Americans will work at jobs that are risky, dirty or unpleasant so long as they provide decent wages and working conditions, especially if employers also provide health insurance. Plenty of Americans now work in such jobs, from mining coal to picking up garbage. The difference is they are paid a decent wage and provided benefits for their labor.

However, Americans won’t work for peanuts, and these days the national minimum wage is less than peanuts. For full-time work, it doesn’t even come close to the poverty line for an individual, let alone provide a family with a living wage. It hasn’t been raised since 1997 and isn’t enforced even at its currently ridiculous level.

Amen to that.  Do the math to see the truth of their point.  Forty hours at $5.15, minus taxes —  people can't eat on that let alone pay rent, utilities and clothe themselves.

I like this idea because it would be so much simpler and cost effective than building our own version of the Berlin Wall across the southwest.

The logic of the writers works for me:

If we want to reduce illegal immigration, it makes sense to reduce the abundance of extremely low-paying jobs that fuels it. If we raise the minimum wage, it’s possible some low-end jobs may be lost; but more Americans would also be willing to work in such jobs, thereby denying them to people who aren’t supposed to be here in the first place. And tough enforcement of wage rules would curtail the growth of an underground economy in which both illegal immigration and employer abuses thrive.

The idea deserves some serious consideration.

By the way, one of the authors of this piece is Michael Dukakis.

The link:  http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/25/opinion/25Duk.html?ex=1154491200&en=2260989737af30a4&ei=5065&partner=MYWAY

 

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