Study:
Refugee Resettlement Costs U.S. Taxpayers More Than $8B in Five Years by
John Binders 2/18
Over a five year period, American taxpayers are billed more than $8 billion for the resettlement of thousands of foreign refugees every year, a new study finds.
In research conducted by the Federation for
American Immigration Reform (FAIR), analysts concluded that annual refugee
resettlement costs American taxpayers about $1.8 billion a year, and over five
years, about $8.8 billion.
FAIR’s research found
that of the $1.8 billion annual cost of resettling refugees in the U.S.,
about $867 million was spent on welfare.
The findings include:
The cost per refugee to
American taxpayers just under $79,600 every year for the first 5 years after
the refugee has resettled in the US.
In 2016, the State
Department spent nearly $545 million to process and resettle refugees including
over $140 million for transportation costs.
Of the $1.8 billion in
resettlement costs, $867 billion was spent on welfare alone.
In their first five
years, approximately 54% of all refugees will hold jobs that pay less than $11
per hour.
$71 million will be
spent to educate refutes and asylum seekers the majority of which will be paid
by state and local governments.
Over 5 years, an
estimated 15.7% will need housing assistance which is roughly $7600 per
household in 2014 dollars.
Since 1980, the U.S. has
admitted more than 3.5 million foreign refugees, with nearly 100,000 refugees
arriving in 2016 under former President Obama.
President Trump, a
critic of mass resettling foreign refugees throughout the U.S., lowered the
number of refugees admitted to the country, reducing the annual flow of
refugees by 70 percent in his first year in office, as Breitbart News reported.
In his first 11 months,
Trump admitted 28,875 foreign refugees to the U.S., a vast difference from the
whopping 93,668 foreign refugees admitted in the same time period under
Obama. Likewise, for Fiscal Year 2018, Trump has lowered the number of
refugees who can enter the U.S. to 45,000, the lowest refugee cap since 1980.
John
Binder is a reporter for Breitbart News. Follow
him on Twitter at @JxhnBinder.
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