Archive for May, 2017

Why Trump’s Plan To Copy Canada’s Immigration System Would Backfire – Huffington Post

Its been several months now since President Donald Trump announced his intention to reform the U.S.immigration system. In a speech addressed to Congress on Feb. 28, he reiterated his desire to draw inspiration from Canada, which is more selective in its choice of immigrants. In the U.S., about two-thirds of permanent residents are admitted to reunite with family members. Less than 20 percent are admitted because of their professional skills. In Canada, by contrast, its almost the opposite: more than 60 percent of permanent residents are admitted via the economy class, and only a quarter are admitted because of family reunification.

Famously, the Canadian immigration system is based on a point system: applicants for immigration are assessed on the basis of a number of factors, including level of education, language proficiency, age and professional expertise. The introduction of the Express Entry system in 2015 reinforced the selective nature of the process: potential immigrants who obtain the most points in the tests (and who are therefore expected to better integrate into the labor market) have accelerated access to permanent residence often in less than six months.

It is difficult to know exactly what will constitute Trumps merit-based system. In any case, there are many reasons why the Canadian system is difficult to transfer to the U.S.

John Moore via Getty Images

For geographical reasons, Canada, which does not have a border with Mexico, is not confronted with the same scale of undocumented workers. The number of undocumented migrants in the U.S. is estimated at more than 11 million. The figure is between 20,000 and 200,000 for Canada.

Trump has promised to deport undocumented immigrants, whom he accuses of pulling down wages for American workers. However, many of these immigrants work in low-skilled jobs in the manufacturing sector, in construction or in agriculture. The latter industry, for example, relies heavily on these undocumented immigrants: according to the American Farm Bureau Federation, they represent between 50 percent and 70 percent of the labor force in agriculture.

Beyond logistical and cost problems, massive deportation would create a labor shortage in key sectors, resulting in serious economic consequences. States like California or Texas, which employ a high number of undocumented workers, would be particularly affected by massive deportation. Even if, for the sake of argument, one supposes that deporting undocumented immigrants would increase wages for low-skilled employees, its dubious that it would be beneficial to the U.S. economy as a whole.

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More generally, the idea that the U.S. has to switch to a Canadian-style selective immigration policy is also misleading because it does not take into account the economic structure of the large American labor market. Insisting on the need for high-skilled workers Indian engineers in Silicon Valley, for example avoids the fact that the economy has a structural need for low-skilled labor. Hotels, food service, cleaning, elder-care, wholesale and hospitality employ a high number of unskilled foreign workers. Even in a high-skilled knowledge economy, workers are needed for food preparation, construction, children and elder-care.

If measures to limit low-skilled immigration were introduced, even if it had a positive impact on the wages of native workers as the Trump administration hopes, they could lead to a shortage of labor in several key sectors that deliver daily services to the Americans. The native population is unable to meet the demand. California field laborer wages have reportedly risen by nearly 50 percent from 1996 to 2015. However, this raise has not attracted more native-born American workers. Farmer employers argue that this is due to the harsh working conditions of agricultural jobs.

Another explanation could lie in what British classical economist David Ricardo called comparative advantage: the low-skilled native population tend to focus on jobs that require the ability to speak English, whereas immigrants concentrate in manual jobs that do not need English proficiency but that generally imply a more precarious working environment. The economic structure of the post-Fordist job market is stratified according to countries of origin and immigrant status in the U.S.

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In order to develop a sustainable immigration system along the lines of Canadas, the U.S. would have to undertake comprehensive reforms that overhaul the different components of immigration law: low-skilled labor, high-skilled labor, border security, undocumented immigrants and the enforcement of domestic laws. These different elements are related and must be considered at the same time. But, for institutional reasons, it is difficult to implement such a reform.

In the U.S., immigration is a highly divisive topic; it is very easy to block immigration reforms even minor ones. Even a small modification, such as increasing the quota of the H1B visas that are often issued to skilled workers, must be validated by Congress. Thus, any reform project tends to be dragged into political maneuvering and ideological rivalries in Washington.

In the recent past, former Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama both tried and failed to institute a comprehensive immigration reform. The most recent example is Bill 744, introduced in the Senate in 2013, which sought to modernize the U.S. immigration system in several respects, including border control and access to citizenship. This bill was passed by the Senate by a large majority (68 to 32). But the House of Representatives refused to consider it, so most of the proposals were never put in place.

Any substantial reform is likely to end with a legislative stalemate. U.S. presidents can still issue executive orders, but the effect of these is, by definition, more temporary and does not involve rethinking the architecture of immigration policies.

Conversely, Canadas immigration system has undergone several changes over the last two decades, notably in order to match immigration with the changing economic needs of the country. The minister of immigration has substantial room to maneuver and powerful legal tools to support changes. If adjustments have to be made in immigration policy (e.g., modifying the weight of certain factors in the point system), this can be done through the minister of immigration and does not need parliamentary approval.Overhauling the U.S. immigration system in order to make it more like the Canadian model would therefore be a near-impossible task because of the different legislative architectures of both countries and because the issue of immigration is much more divisive in the U.S.

Trump is not the only one inspired by the Canadian immigration model. Several European governments have also looked at Canada in order to better compete in the global race for talented immigrants. Canada is known as a tolerant society, based on its reception of large numbers of immigrants while being selective and keeping strict control of those entering its territory. Of course, it is politically profitable to claim to want to be inspired by a country with a good reputation. Beyond political slogans, however, it should be recognized that the Canadian model is not readily transferable for economic, geopolitical and institutional reasons.

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Why Trump's Plan To Copy Canada's Immigration System Would Backfire - Huffington Post

May Day rallies converge to send one message: Immigration reform – Stockton Record

Almendra Carpizo Record Staff Writer @AlmendraCarpizo

STOCKTON Martha Serbin stood in front of dozens of people on Monday to deliver a speech that several weeks ago wouldnt have happened.

The 35-year-old had been feeling desperate and plagued by fear following the election of President Donald Trump. Serbin was scared to be in public because she is undocumented and had been hearing all the news of immigration raids and stricter enforcement of immigration laws.

I would ask God, Please let me return home so my kids can find me, she said.

By Monday, there was no indication Serbin was scared. Instead, the mother of four delivered an impassioned speech that drew loud cheers from May Day demonstrators gathered for a rally at the Weber Point Events Center.

We all have a reason why were here, she said, her voice booming. You know what that is? Necessity we came here to work. We came to do the jobs Americans didnt want to do.

Serbin was among the dozens of people in Stockton who missed work, skipped school or shut their businesses for the day to participate in the national May Day March to advocate for comprehensive immigration reform and to challenge President Donald Trumps immigration policies. Across the country, thousands of people filled the streets as they gathered for protests and rallies.

On Monday, demonstrators arrived at Dean De Carli Plaza about 9 a.m. They held signs and flags while chanting Un pueblo callado jams ser escuchado (A quiet town will never be heard) and ICE, escucha, estamos en la lucha. (ICE, listen, were in the fight). The cheering and chants from the group often were reciprocated with honks from passing motorists as the marchers walked from the plaza to the Stockton Police Department headquarters then up to West Poplar Street before heading south on Center Street and returning to the downtown waterfront plaza.

Luis Magaa, who is on the committee that helped coordinate the May Day March, said the demonstration was about unity and the importance of people letting their voices be heard to demand justice and dignity. The Trump Administration threatens to break up families and his rhetoric has led to an increase in racial divide and hate crimes, he said.

Were asking for everyone to unite and to lift their voice into one, Magaa said.

Serbin, who has been working with an attorney to fix her status, said this is the first time she has participated in a march but felt compelled to do it because there are immigrants who are living in fear and children who are crying because their parents were deported. People risked their lives to find peace in this country, she said, but they are living in a prison inside their own homes because of fear.

We left everything in one country to come and build a country thats not ours, said Serbin, who works at a packing plant. We could have stayed (in our home countries), but the crime and economy dont allow us to have a good life there.

The event was peaceful, and those marching remained on sidewalks and used crosswalks. One demonstrator and a woman were in a brief altercation during the march when the woman walked through the group yelling, Go back to Mexico and, You have no rights here.

At 11:30 a.m., a second march organized by Fathers and Families of San Joaquin and the Coalition of Mexican American Organizations began at Gleason Park off California Street. The group chanted while walking to Dean De Carli Plaza, where all demonstrators converged and headed to Weber Point Events Center for the rally. Stockton councilman Jesus Andrade, The Owl Movement founder Tashante McCoy Ham and San Joaquin County Pride Center Director Nicholas Hatten were guest speakers during the event.

Seidy Gastelum, president of COMA, said Friday having the different groups come together is symbolic of unifying as a community.

We all come from different places, she said. But we will rally and stand up together for the community under attack.

Having once marched with labor leader and civil rights activist Cesar Chavez, 65-year-old Maricela Martinez knows the importance of coming together, she said.

Martinez, who once was undocumented but now is a U.S. citizen, said she wants to support immigrants because she was once where many people find themselves now and is calling for President Trump to create a path to citizenship.

Not all (immigrants) are criminals, she said. We came from a young age to work in fields, factories, and the canneries."

Hilda Vielma, 40, said she left her home in Jalisco, Mexico, looking for a safer community for her family. Shes now going through the process to earn permanent residency but said many immigrants dont have the means or ability to do it.

Were all looking for the opportunity to be legal in this country, she said. We came to fight and to find a better life for our families.

Were looking to be free in this country.

Contact reporter Almendra Carpizo at (209) 546-8264 or acarpizo@recordnet.com. Follow her on Twitter @AlmendraCarpizo.

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May Day rallies converge to send one message: Immigration reform - Stockton Record

Hundreds march for immigration reform in Stockton – KCRA Sacramento

Hundreds march for immigration reform in Stockton

Updated: 7:47 PM PDT May 1, 2017

Hundreds of people marched in support of immigration reform on May Day in Stockton.

Protesters said they are here to work, not break laws.

WEBVTT MORE IMPORTANT THAN EVER.MELINDA: HUNDREDS OF PEOPLEMARCHING AND CHANTING ABOUTEQUALITY AND IMMIGRATION.>> FOR EVERYBODY, WE DO NOT COMETO STILL ANYTHING, WE COME TOWORK YOUR IN MELINDA: YOUNG ANDOLD, FAMILIES AND FRIENDS OFIMIGRANTS JOINED IN THE MARCH.>> NO MORE DEPORTATION FROMUNITED STATES WE DONT COME TO DONOTHING BAD TO UNITED STATES.MELINDA: THE GROUP FRIENDS OFFARMWORKERS HAS MARCHED INSTOCKTON FOR THE PAST 11 YEARSON MAY DAY BUT LEADERS SAY THISYEAR IT'S MORE IMPORTANT THANEVER.>> WE HAVE A NEW ADMINISTRATIONIN WASHINGTON DC AND NFRIENDLY TOWARDS IMMIGRANTS WHNEED TO GET OUR VOICE ON THESTREET AND LET THEM KNOW WE AREWORKING NOT CRIMINALS WANT TOWORK AND MAKE CONTRIBUTION TOTHIS COUNTRYMELINDA: MUCH OF THE DISCUSSIONWAS ABOUT IMMIGRATION AND FEAR.SOME OF THE LEADERS SAY FARMERSARE CONCERNED THERE MAY NOT BEENOUGH LABORERS AT A FEAR OFDEPORTATION.>> EDUCATION NOT DEPORTATION.IT IS A STIGMA OF NEGATIVITY.MELINDA: THE SAN JOAQUIN FARMBUREAU SAYS HE HOPESRESTRICTIONS HURT THEAGRICULTURE INDUSTRY.>> WE WILL SEE A LOSS OFWORKFORCE.PEOPLE WILL BE SENT HOME OR SENTTO THEIR HOME COUNTRY.IT WILL BE FRIGHTENING FORGROWING PRODUCE AND THE CROPS WEDO HERE IN SAN JOAQUIN COUNTY.>> THESE ARE JOBS NOBODY ELSE

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Hundreds march for immigration reform in Stockton - KCRA Sacramento

Immigration, economy will be focus of St. Rose panel – Albany Times Union

Immigration, economy will be focus of St. Rose panel

Albany

Decades ago Hugh Johnson gave a Union College speech about the importance of immigrants to economic growth.

He's still making that argument today.

"This is a big issue," Johnson, an Albany-based money manager who is often quoted in national business media publications, said Tuesday. "I'm blue in the face" from talking about it.

On Friday, Johnson will participate in a panel at The College of Saint Rose about the effects of immigration reform on the national economy. The discussion, free and open to the public, begins at 7:30 a.m. at the Thelma P. Lally School of Education on campus.

Immigration reform isn't likely a topic that'll soon go away, with President Donald Trump making immigration a key part of the economic populism platform that he rode to the White House.

The Trump administration has repeatedly said it would raise America's growth rate, which has slogged since 2009, to 3 percent - a rate not seen since 2005.

But Johnson, and many others, have said that would be impossible without broadening the U.S. immigration system.

"The reason we have slow growth in the U.S. economy is because we have slow growth in the labor force," he said. "And the reason we have slow growth in the labor force is because immigration has slowed. ... It's simple arithmetic."

It's not a new idea: Economists have for years said the United States needs to open its economy to more, not fewer, foreign-born workers as a way to balance the loss of more and more baby boomers to retirement. Without doing so, significant economic growth will be all but impossible, most agree.

That could, in turn, imperil some of the tax reforms being sought by Trump with the backing of many businesses. Large cuts to the corporate tax code, as well as a rollback on so-called "pass through" entities, were widely applauded by the business sector when they were unveiled last week. It's unclear what effect those reforms would have on the federal deficit, but the right-leaning Tax Foundation estimates the corporate tax cuts alone would lower government revenue by $2 trillion over 10 years.

Trump administration officials have said they can balance that revenue loss through, among other things, discretionary spending cuts, ending deductions for state and local property taxes and a sustained, 3 percent growth rate.

"It's inconsistent," Johnson said. "You might be able to give tax relief to U.S. companies, and that's going to help the U.S. economy... But that alone will not get you to 3.2 percent. You better have positive immigration reform, which provides amnesty and allows for increased immigration, or you'll never get it.

"All of this really does affect local companies," he said.

Indeed, business and colleges in the Capital Region have already been shaken by some of the uncertainty emanating from Washington. New York is among the highest recipients of high-skilled foreign workers from the H-1B visa program, which Trump ordered reviews of last month.

More than 93,000 such workers, many of whom are Indians in software development, came to the Empire State last year, according to the Office of Foreign Labor, and Albany's myriad colleges and tech companies routinely employ more than 1,800 such employees.

But Johnson said he doesn't imagine a solution on the horizon due to the highly politicized debate over immigration.

"Its endless and fruitless," he said. "I would be so shocked if we got the kind of immigration reform. ... As long as there are so many votes for Democrats and Republicans in Congress, they'll never get it done."

For more information on the panel, to be held at 7:30 a.m. on Friday, visit http://www.strose.edu.

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Immigration, economy will be focus of St. Rose panel - Albany Times Union

4 Tech Companies Lobbying for H-1B – Breitbart News

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These are the four tech companies, according to analysis by Quartz, pushing for no reforms to the H-1B visa and legal immigration system, as the current process of bringing more than 85,000 foreigners to the U.S. each year.

Microsoft

In the first quarter of 2017 during Trumps presidency, Microsoft lobbied more for immigration and the H-1B visas than any other tech company. In Microsofts five out of eight lobbying reports, it referred to high-skilled immigration, which is synonymous with the H-1B visa, as well as mentioning comprehensive immigration reform.

Microsoft is generally the biggest pusher for more H-1B foreign workers and amnesty for illegal immigrant, lobbying for those issues in 340 lobbying reports since 2008, when former President Obama first took office. In 2017, Microsoft asked for more than 5,000 foreign workers through the H-1B visa.

Google

The parent company to Google, Alphabet, remains one of the largest opponents in the tech industry to Trumps America First agenda, which is why Quartz analysis showed it had the largest uptick in pro-immigration lobbying in the first quarter of 2017. In this quarter, alone, Alphabet lobbied more for immigration than ever before since 2008.

In Alphabets reports, according to Quartz analysis, executives used phrases like travel ban and travel restrictions in regard to Trumps national security executive order that would have prevented refugees from terrorist-haven nations from entering the U.S.

Back in February, Google executives publicly opposed the travel ban, writing in a letter with other tech executives that the order hinders the ability of American companies to attract great talent; increases costs imposed on business; makes it more difficult for American firms to compete in the international marketplace.

Facebook

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has been, arguably, the most pro-immigration, pro-amnesty tech leader in the Trump era and before. In two lobbying reports analyzed by Quartz in the first quarter, Facebook argued against Trumps travel ban to protect Americans from terrorism and voiced opposition to any changes in the H-1B visa program, despite widespread reported abuse and displacement to American workers.

Aside from opposing a halt in foreign refugees coming from terrorist-sanctioned nations and crackdowns on any foreign guest worker visas, Zuckerberg has his own open borders lobbying group, known as FWD.us. The organization calls for the amnesty of the 12-30 million illegal immigrants in the U.S. and demands more foreign workers through the H-1B visa. Facebook continues to profit from the use of foreign workers, requesting nearly 3,000 to fill U.S. jobs from 2014 to 2016.

Amazon

Amazon lobbied once during the first quarter of Trumps presidency, making it one of the least involved tech companies on the immigration issue, along with IBM and Apple, who did not lobby for more immigration from the administration at all last quarter.

Amazon remains a big winner from sourcing foreign labor. Between 2014 and 2016, Amazon asked for 6,395 H-1B employees.

The H-1B visa has been criticized by Trump and Attorney General Jeff Sessions as a way for giant corporations to profit off the displacement and firing of Americans.

In a more recent executive order, Trump called for a full legal review of the H-1B visa and its negative impacts on the wages, job opportunities and unemployment of American workers, Breitbart Texas reported.

John Binder is a reporter for Breitbart Texas. Follow him on Twitter at@JxhnBinder.

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4 Tech Companies Lobbying for H-1B - Breitbart News