Tag Archives: us immigration

US Immigration Reform: October 2013 – Dead or Alive?

In the first half of the year we did an extensive series of coverage on US Immigration Reform including pieces our in depth look at the winners and losers of the proposed US Immigration Reform 2013 which eventually passed the US Senate on June 27.

The interesting thing that has tangibly happened with Immigration so far this year has been the equal recognition of same sex couples for the purposes of marriage based sponsorship for permanent residency. Already since the Supreme Court case which was about equal benefits for same-sex couples like financial, medical, death, etc. and wasn’t related to Immigration at all, many foreign immigrants legally married to Americans in states around the country which recognize gay marriage have now got their Green Cards.

However the Government Shutdown as a result of ongoing fights over Obamacare, the Debt Ceiling and the Budget have dominate headlines and Congressional debate and importantly media airtime, has meant Immigration debate in the House has been relegated to an after thought. Furthermore House Speaker, John Boehner has indicated the Senate passed Immigration reform will not be able to pass the Republican majority House. The major gripe being the pathway to eventual US Citizenship clause for approximately 11 Million undocumented immigrants.

Now in the second half of October 2013 with Immigration debate barely in its infancy in House and the notorious partisanship of that chamber, the anti-Obama wing in the Republican party, the slow moving nature of getting any legislation done let alone major ones and the fact there is not many weeks between the slower Thanksgiving to Christmas period, prospects look more bleak.

The tragedy is that the reasons for US Immigration Reform still are constant and ever growing and there at least seems to be enough of a bi-partisan acknowledgment from the saner member in Washington that continuing ignorance of the problems is not an option nor is in the best interests of the United States. However this means putting our collective faith and trust in the US Congress and in its expediency which even when it comes to universally supported, non controversial and minor changes like extension of Veterans benefits, money via lobby groups, the media and general stupidity get in the way.

The reason for the major push now by President Obama by doing the media rounds, major Immigration lobby groups like Mark Zuckerberg’s FWD.us and many Hispanic focus Immigration support groups and even aspirational Republican presidential candidates in 2016 is that if this extends past 2013 into the mid-term election year of 2014 it is likely it would be at least 2015 before anything could happen.

So is Immigration Reform in 2013, dead or alive? … well in a poetic way it is on life support in serious need of major transplant. Is there a donor somewhere in American willing to sacrifice themselves for the cause?

US v Australia Immigration: Green Cards & Permanent Residency

It is no surprise to regular readers that we have harped on in recent months in light of the US Immigration Reform bill now which has passed the Senate (albeit stalled in the House of Representatives) about the ills of the Immigration system, the state of Immigration today, general statistical trends as well as comparisons to other countries and how much this is hurting the US economy at large.

Well we recently came across a great infographic comparing US and Australian immigration and the access to Permanent Residency that crystalizes simply the problem that exists today. Both countries are modern western countries with high standards of living, high level GDP per capita and huge diversity in the populace due to the founding and growth of the respective countries fueled by global immigration.

However there are a couple of major differences. While proportionally Australia has a higher foreign born and immigrant population it is only a nation of 23 million vs. 315 million in the US. Despite that the amount of Permanent Residency approvals (often called Green Cards in the US) for employment based or skilled based reasons is almost the same annually. Australia has about 129,000 vs. the US having 140,000.

US v Australia Immigration Permanent Residency

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(courtesy Tatiana GalzyFi2W is featuring stories by students in the Feet in 2 Worlds journalism course at The New School)

The major reason for this disparity is the fact Australia issues 40% of all Permanent Residents for skilled employment reasons thus having a net positive to the economy. However the US only issues 7% of all Green Cards for the same group and only 4.3% are the cream of the crop high skilled or vastly experienced professionals.

Why is this a problem?

Well to keep with the simplicity of the article, we present a last image to leave you with. If the Top 500 Immigrant founded US companies (an Immigrant Fortune 500 if you will) were an economy unto themselves, they would be the 9th largest economy in the world. And that is only from direct economic benefit not counting indirect benefit such as the flow on effect to other industries and companies as well as what their combined 3.6 million employees further do with their salaries. To put that into perspective that is bigger than the economies of Russia or Canada as a whole at 1.7 Trillion USD.

Infographic-immigrants-in-500s-v3

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(courtesy Tatiana Galzy)

So the next time someone has an argument with you about US Immigration policy and wanting it to be more conservative and your reasoned verbal and written arguments don’t work, it may be these 2 simple charts that paint the best and clearest picture.

Cj