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April 10, 2006
New York Times
Op-Ed Contributors
How to Lose the Brain Race
By STEVEN CLEMONS and MICHAEL LIND
Washington
Is the United States importing too many immigrant physicists
and not enough immigrant farm workers? You might think so, to judge
from two provisions that Senator Dianne Feinstein, Democrat of
California, added to the comprehensive immigration reform package
that just fell
apart in the Senate. Senator Feinstein insisted that the bill call
for some fees for foreign students applying to study at American
colleges and universities to be doubled, and also demanded that
agribusiness get the right to 1.5 million low-wage foreign guest
workers over
five years. Combined, the two proposals sent a message to the rest
of the world: send us your brawn, not your brains.
Whether Senator Feinstein's amendments will resurface in any reconstituted
legislation on immigration reform remains unclear. But her priorities
reflect in many ways those of Congress as a whole. Congress seems
to believe that while the United States must be protected from an
invasion of educated, bright and ambitious foreign college students,
scientists, engineers and entrepreneurs, we can never have too many
low-wage fruit-pickers and dishwashers.
In making immigration laws, Congress caters to cheap-labor industries
like agribusiness and sweatshop manufacturing while shortchanging
the high-tech, high-wage industries on which the future of the American
economy depends. Witness the Senate bill's provision to admit 400,000
temporary workers a year, or roughly four million a decade, in addition
to the 12 million mostly low-wage illegal immigrants already here,
many of whose status would be legalized. Few if any of those guest
workers would go to universities, corporate campuses or innovation
clusters like Silicon Valley. They would head straight to restaurants,
hotels and plantation-like farms.
While the United States perversely tries to corner the market in
uneducated hotel maids and tomato harvesters, other industrial democracies
are reshaping their immigration policies to invite the skilled immigrants
that we turn away. Britain is following Australia and Canada in adopting
a points system that gives higher scores to skilled immigrants with
advanced education and proficiency in English. British, Canadian,
German and even French universities are overflowing in undergraduate
and graduate enrollment as they absorb the foreign talent that America
is repelling.
Whereas Senator Feinstein fears that foreigners are snatching places
at American universities from deserving American students, the fact
is that our universities are weakened when fewer talented international
students enter their programs.
In recent years, skilled immigration
to the United States has been accommodated chiefly by the H-1B
visa program. But like all guest-worker programs, the H-1B program
pits
American workers against foreign workers lacking full legal and
political rights. Because H-1B workers depend on employer sponsorship
to remain
in this country, unscrupulous employers can blackmail them into
working longer hours for lower pay than American workers. Skilled
workers
admitted under a points system, by contrast, would be able to quit
their employers in the United States and find new ones at will
without risk of deportation.
Will admitting more immigrants drive down the wages of American
workers? That may be true in unskilled jobs, since there is a fixed
number of bedpans to be emptied and restaurant meals to be cooked
in the United States.
But it isn't necessarily true for skilled workers,
at least not in the long run. That's because more talent means
more innovation and opportunities for all, immigrant and native alike.
The growth economist Paul Romer has spoken of the prospector theory
of human capital. The more prospectors there are, the more likely
it is that some will find gold. As the history of Silicon Valley
and other tech centers proves, brain work migrates to where the
brain
workers are. It's a kind of Field of Dreams in reverse: You will
build it, if they come.
Even if a skill-based immigration system did reduce incomes for
the elite, that would not be the end of the world. For a generation,
college-educated Americans have enjoyed a seller's market in professional
services and a buyer's market in the labor of landscapers and nannies.
If skilled immigration were increased while unskilled immigration
were reduced, the wages of janitors would go up while the salaries
and fees of professionals would fall, creating a broader middle class
and a more equal society.
The United States can always use another
Albert Einstein or Alexander Graham Bell. But with the vast pool
of poorly paid, ill-educated laborers already within our borders,
we do not need a third of a million new ones a year.
What the space race was to the cold war, the "brain race" is to
today's peaceful global economic competition. The comprehensive immigration
reform America needs is one that slashes unskilled immigration and
creates a skill-rewarding points system modeled on those of Australia,
Britain and Canada. In encouraging skilled labor, Congress for a
change might perform some of its own.
Steven Clemons is the director
of the American Strategy Program at the New America Foundation.
Michael Lind is a senior fellow there.
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/10/opinion/10Clemons.html?th=&emc=th&pagewanted=print
This file was updated on April 14, 2006
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