Sunday, April 24, 2011

Immigration mandates, resources and capabilities

Smart op-ed in today's WSJ from James Ziglar, senior fellow at the Migration Policy Institute, and Edward Alden, INS commissioner under President Bush:
What is needed now is a more serious examination of priorities and trade-offs. The number of illegal crossings on the Mexican border is down at least 70% from its peak in 2000. Is this enough security? If not, how much more is needed, and what is Congress willing to pay for it? In terms of discouraging illegal immigration, how does a dollar in additional Border Patrol spending compare with an extra dollar on workplace enforcement? There has been little good research that would help members of Congress answer that question.

What's needed is to reform our immigration system so that it doesn't encourage illegal immigration. This requires reforming the laws on legal immigration rather than just the enforcement components. A realistic, flexible visa program that matched available workers to open jobs in both boom times and bust would reduce much of the pressure on limited enforcement resources at the border and in the workplace.
The idea that the US Congress should provide resources to match their requirements and should consider the consequences and effectiveness of various policies is common sense. But common sense can be controversial and revolutionary when it comes to immigration policy debates in the US Congress.

Source: http://www.bloggingsbyboz.com/2011/04/immigration-mandates-resources-and.html

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