Opinion POINT/ COUNTERPOINT Immigration Boosts U.S. New York/JTA T he U.S. government raid on the kosher meatpacking plant in Postville, Iowa, galvanized the Jewish community and Jewish immigra- tion activists. For most of us activists, the May 12 raid — which netted 389 undocu- mented workers — re-confirmed that compassionate, just immigration reform is long overdue. For a tiny minority, however, appar- ently it presented renewed opportunities to reintroduce a host of red herrings that prey on Americans' fears of economic ruination in the wake of allegedly unbri- dled immigration. The current role of immigrants in our economy, as it was when many of our grandparents and great-grandparents escaped European pogroms, is positive. This is as true in the entrepreneurial world, where recent immigrants to the United States have founded Google, eBay and Intel, as it is within the less-skilled labor force. The United States continues to see real economic benefits from immigration. A recent study by the University of California demonstrated that overall annual growth in Gross Domestic Product is approxi- mately 0.1 percentage point higher as a result of immigra- tion. This may not seem like much, but it represents billions of dollars in economic output and when compounded across a generation, a significant improvement in the standard of living for our children and grandchildren. Nor is the oft-repeated accusation true that immigrants erode the wages of native-born citizens and even rob them of their ability to make a living. The same University of California study reveals that between 1990 and 2004, native-born wages increased an average of 1.8 percent as a consequence of immigration. The assumption that foreign- and native-born workers with the same level of education and experience are interchangeable in the U.S. market is another red herring, as differences in cultural backgrounds and language skills prevent most immigrants from competing with native-born workers for jobs. As our country continues to grow and age, we need more people for our economy to run smoothly. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has stated that we need to raise immigration levels to 3.5 mil- lion people annually to overcome the effects of baby boomers aging out of the workforce. In fact, many employers need more immigrant laborers than the 5,000 currently provided by government quotas for unskilled workers but have no legal avenues to recruit them. Yet responsible immigration advocates do not support unregulated, undocu- mented immigration. When we argue for a generous immigration policy, "generous" does not equal "open!' The exact numbers and criteria should be developed through a rational debate in American society and subsequent action in Congress. Polls consistently show that the major- ity of Americans wants comprehensive immigration reform that includes a real- istic path to citizenship for those already here as well as smart and effective security measures to keep out those who want to do us harm. We do indeed believe that the 12 mil- lion people living in the United States with undocumented status should be allowed to legalize. This policy is not equivalent to supporting undocumented immigration. It simply acknowledges that attempting to deport 12 million individuals, many with children and spouses who are U.S. citizens, is impractical, costly and inhumane. Legalization would be a long process, with appropriate penalties for violating At Issue: What is your take on current U.S. immigration laws and practices? Stop Illegal Immigration Washington/JTA T he immigration raid on the Agriprocessors meatpacking plant in Postville, Iowa, the larg- est kosher plant in the country, caught most American Jews completely off-guard. Since the raid in May, which resulted in the arrest of nearly 400 illegal work- ers, additional serious allegations have emerged against the plant owned by the Brooklyn-based Rubashkin family, including inhumane working conditions, egregious violations of child-labor laws, sexual harassment of female workers and multiple workplace safety infractions. Lost in the controversy over Agriprocessors is a discussion in the Jewish community of sensible immigration policies. Avoiding that discourse is tantamount to complicity in what transpired there, and ignoring the problem of illegal immigration virtually guarantees that Agriprocessors' despicable practices will be repeated elsewhere. Most Jews have responded admirably to the Agriprocessors news by condemn- ing worker exploitation and advocating A34 September 11 • 2008 ethical kashrut practices. But We don't have a plethora of conspicuous by its absence is manufacturing jobs anymore; outrage over violations of U.S. we don't suffer from under-pop- law and sovereignty by illegal ulation and we no longer need aliens — the precipitating fac- unskilled immigrants. We have tor in the ensuing events. 73 million adult Americans with Rendered myopic by political only a high school education, correctness and uninformed and that's more than enough sentimentality about immi- unskilled labor. With cheap gration, many in the Jewish immigrant labor flooding the Step hen community have failed to rec- market, millions of Americans Stein light ognize that the Agriprocessors are unemployed and many have Counte rpoint nightmare is an inevitable con- despaired about finding work. sequence of massive immigra- Massive immigration has tion by the unskilled and uneducated poor disastrous consequences for America's — legal and illegal — into a knowledge- most vulnerable: the unemployed, par- based, post-industrial society. tially employed, working poor, recent When many of our parents and grand- legal immigrants, African Americans and parents came to these shores during the elderly working populations. Legalization great waves of European immigration, will sanction and perpetuate this assault the American industrial colossus needed on struggling Americans by flooding the semi-skilled and unskilled workers to workforce with more cheap labor. fill millions of manufacturing jobs with The immigration policy embraced by the opportunities for upward social mobility. Jewish community establishment is disas- Millions of small farmers were needed to trous for America. It condones illegal immi- feed this country's soaring population, and gration, and that doesn't improve working there was an empty continent to fill. conditions for immigrants but has brutal But all that is history. consequences for struggling Americans. By supporting legalization of illegal immi- grants, the Jewish establishment endorses the Bush administration's immigration policy, which seeks to create a huge, perma- nent legal underclass of impoverished immi- grants that will drive down wages and wors- en working conditions for all Americans. Jewish establishment agencies once distin- guished between supporting generous legal immigration as opposed to illegal immigra- tion. But when the leading lobby for increas- ing immigration, the National Immigration Forum, erased that line, Jewish member organizations abjectly surrendered. The Jewish establishment's hypocriti- cal approach undermines the rule of law. Advocates of legalization argue that illegal immigrants are easily exploited and that unscrupulous employers prefer them for that reason. Legalization is not the cure, however. The mantra about "bringing them out of the shadows" will not solve the problem because, once they are legalized, they have to be paid the prevailing wage, making them far less desirable hires. Illegal aliens are poor not because of their legal status but because of their lack