More than half of the nation's immigrants receive some kind of government welfare, a figure that's far higher than the native-born population's, according to a report to be released Wednesday.
About 51% of
immigrant-led households receive at least one kind of welfare benefit,
including Medicaid, food stamps, school lunches and housing assistance, compared
to 30% for native-led households, according to the report from the Center for Immigration
Studies, a group that advocates for lower levels of immigration.
Those numbers increase
for households with children, with 76% of immigrant-led households receiving
welfare, compared to 52% for the native-born.
The findings
are sure to fuel debate on the presidential campaign trail as Republican
candidates focus on changing the nation's immigration laws,
from calls for mass deportations to ending birthright citizenship.
Steven
Camarota, director of research at the center and author of the report, said
that's a much-needed conversation to make the country's immigration system more
"selective."
"This
should not be understood as some kind of defect or moral failing on the part of
immigrants," Camarota said about the findings. "Rather, what it
represents is a system that allows a lot of less-educated immigrants to settle
in the country, who then earn modest wages and are eligible for a very generous
welfare system."
Linda
Chavez agrees with Camarota that the country's welfare system is too large
and too costly. But Chavez, a self-professed conservative who worked in
President Reagan's administration, said it's irresponsible to say immigrants
are taking advantage of the country's welfare system any more than native-born
Americans.
Chavez said
today's immigrants, like all other immigrant waves in the country's history,
start off poorer and have lower levels of education, making it unfair to
compare their welfare use to the long-established native-born population. She
said immigrants have larger households, making it more likely that one person
in that household will receive some kind of welfare benefit. And she said many
benefits counted in the study are going to U.S.-born children of immigrants,
skewing the findings even more.
"When you
take all of those issues into account, (the report) is less worrisome,"
she said.
Chavez, president of the Becoming
American Institute, a conservative group that advocates for higher levels of
legal immigration to reduce illegal immigration, said politicians should be
careful about using the data. Rather than focus on the fact that immigrants are
initially more dependent on welfare than the U.S.-born, she said they should
focus on studies that show what happens to the children of those
immigrants.
"These kids who get subsidized
school lunches today will go on to graduate high school ... will go on to
college and move up to the middle class of America," Chavez said.
"Every time we have a nativist backlash in our history, we forget that we
see immigrants change very rapidly in the second generation."
The center's
report is based on 2012 data from the Census Bureau's Survey of Income and
Program Participation. It includes immigrants who have become naturalized
citizens, legal permanent residents, those on short-term visas and undocumented
immigrants.
Camarota said
one of the most shocking findings from the report was the high number of
native-born Americans also on welfare. About 76% of immigrant households with
children are on welfare, but so are 52% of native-born households with
children.
"Most
people have a sense that if you were to work for $10 an hour, 40 hours a week,
you couldn't be receiving welfare, could you? You couldn't be living in public
housing, could you?" he said. "The answer is yes, you can. That's one
of the most surprising things about this study."
Other findings
in the report:
- Immigrants are more likely to be working than their native-born neighbors. The report found that 87% of immigrant households had at least one worker, compared to 76% for native households.
- The majority of immigrants using welfare come from Central America, Mexico and the Caribbean. The use of welfare is lower for immigrants from East Asia (32%), Europe (26%) and South Asia (17%).
- Immigrants who have been in the U.S. more than 20 years use welfare less often, but their rates remain higher than native-born households.Immigrants: 51% are on some form of welfare, 42% are on Medicaid, 40% are on food stamps, 12% are on cash assistance, 6% have housing assistance.US Citizens: 30% are on some form of welfare, 23% are on Medicaid, 22% are on food stamps, 10% are on cash assistance, 6% have housing assistance.Source: Center for Immigration Studieshttp://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2015/09/01/immigrant-welfare-use-report/71517072/
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