CONTACT US   SUBSCRIBE   PREMIUM   ADVERTISING

81F Hi 94F
Lo 76F

Recent Blog Posts

Immigration Overhaul

By HERMAN BADILLO | July 18, 2007

It is a shame that the immigration bill was effectively killed in the Senate.

The bill would have provided recognition of the millions of illegal immigrants here in America. But even if the bill had passed, it would not have been effective. That is because it overlooked a problem that nobody seems to want to confront: The people who are coming here from Mexico, Central and South America, and the Caribbean are escaping economic disasters. Their migration stems from the inescapable knowledge that they are unable to feed themselves or their families in their native lands and that there is no economic program whatsoever in place to improve their standard of living. They are fleeing economic deprivation.

The only way to stop the current wave of migration propelled by economic necessity is by taking steps to improve the economies of the countries from which the immigrants are coming. Five centuries after the discovery of the New World, Latin America remains mired in underdevelopment and political instability whereas America has grown into the most powerful and prosperous nation on Earth.

Mexico, the source of half of our nation's illegal immigrants, is a prime example. Americans simply do not understand the level of economic hardship that exists in Mexico, where half of the population subsists on less than $4 per family member, per day. Even the so-called middle class earns just a few hundred dollars a month. Just think, if you could cross over to America and land a job that pays you 10 times what you are currently earning, would you consider it? Of course you would.

Instead of developing a meaningful strategy to improve conditions in Mexico, the Mexican government has become dependent on the money that illegal aliens send back to Mexico because it constitutes the second largest amount of foreign revenue that Mex ico receives.

What the government is doing is exporting the poor to America instead of improving conditions so that its people can stay in their own country, which they would prefer to do.

What Mexico and most of Latin America need is an economic overhaul. America should be willing to provide appropriate and targeted assistance. Ample use should be made of existing international agencies such as the Inter-A merican Development Bank. There must be institutional reforms including steps to remove the systemic corruption that exists. Most of all, a first class educational system must be established.

Reform is a goal within reach in America, but the first step is to help make serious improvements in the lives of average citizens in Latin America. It's the only way to avoid the difficulties of continued illegal immigration. Any new immigration bills can and must include provisions to deal with this reality.

Mr. Badillo, the former Bronx borough president, is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute.


Reader comments on this article

Comment By Date

Economic conditions are bad over most of Latin America. A case can be made for a plan like the "Marshall... [MORE]

Robert G Greaves 

Sep 5, 2007 13:42

I forget how many years ago the US bailed out the Peso by forgiving $millions [billions?] in Mexican debt. Mexico... [MORE]

Barbara V. 

Jul 18, 2007 19:39

Herman, wake up.

I for one am tired of taking care of the rest of the world while our own senior... [MORE]

Thomas Ziegler 

Jul 18, 2007 16:02

Dog Days of Summer
A New York Sun Advertorial Section

NEW YORK ›

Tax Rates For New Yorkers Would Top 50% Under Obama

Merrill Lynch Move Could Spark Silverstein-Port Authority Battle

Obama Is Right About Something

Donor Sought for Visitor Center To Be Built at Lincoln Center

Columbia Wins Expansion Round Amid Opposition

Giant Rig Carves New Tunnel Beneath NYC's Streets

NATIONAL ›

Obama Visits U.S. Forces in Kuwait, Afghanistan

US, Iraq Seek 'General Time Horizon' on Troop Cuts

Lawsuit Exposes Growing Rift Among King Children

Bloomberg Backs Paterson on the Amazon Tax Question

Guns Ruling Spawns Challenges by Felons

Bush Library Project Clears an Important Methodist Hurdle

ARTS+ ›

Produce & Public Art at Port Authority

Midnight Stampede to 'The Dark Knight' Sets Record

It's Our Earth, Now What Do We Do With It?

The World Inside Our Heads: 'Human' by Michael Gazzaniga

Man-Eaters: Carole Travis-Henikoff's 'Dinner With a Cannibal'

'The Human Condition' — in 10 Hours