The flow of intensive affordable labor will become an
increasingly and critical need to sustain our American service,
construction and agricultural sectors. To overly counter this needed flow
of labor from Mexico is the equivalent of 'cutting our nose to spite our
face'. Once more: the law of unintended consequences due to lack of vision
and over-reaction to a problem.
It is almost universally agreed that as a sovereign
nation we have the right and the obligation to protect our borders and
regulate our immigration. It is almost universally agreed that in practice
we have a broken system that desperately needs mending. And it is also
agreed that we are incapable of adopting an equitable and workable
solution, primarily due to incompetent leadership and political paranoia
from right wing anti-immigrant, anti mestizo, 'Lou Dobbs' type pundits.
Accordingly, I recommend that the Mexican Government
takes the initiative. After all, labor is a precious and vital commodity
that needs to be regulated and judiciously exported by the source country.
If Mexico does not restrict the flow of labor into the US it will find
itself lacking this precious commodity for its own development and
economic well being. In the past Mexico added 1 million new workers each
year to its population for whom it needed to provide jobs. Lacking the
growth to employ this labor force, one half of the workers immigrated
north to find the employment not found in their home country.
However, the dynamics are changing and changing
rapidly. According to the Mexican census and validated by the Organization
for Economic Cooperation and Development, Mexican families are now
averaging 2.2 births as opposed to the 5+ births of yesterday. As a
consequence, based on its current rate of economic growth, Mexico will be
able to employ the new workforce of 500,000 per year in the near future.
This demographic transition spells economic doom for our country. Without
the supply of labor from Mexico our three industries - construction,
services and agriculture - will be economically handicapped. Additionally
the US consumer will face unreasonable price increases which will
significantly add to our consumer price index, fueling inflation and
retarding our economic growth.
Maybe Mexico has not come to the realization that it,
and not the US, is in control. The tables are turning. We will need their
labor more than what they can supply for our critical needs. Our demand
for their labor, in fact, will increase in the immediate future as a
result of our shrinking labor pool due to the aging of our 'baby boom'
generation.
Now is the time for Mexico to take the initiative.
Formulate a guest worker program on its own terms with adequate protection
for the most affected of the interested parties: The worker. If Mexico
were to enroll and process 250,000 workers per year to fill pre-screened
US employment opportunities, which immigrants would be accorded multiple
entry US visas allowing them to return home for vacations and to visit
their families, at least two times per year, based on agreed to terms of
employment and the oversight of a US-Mexico joint agency, the problem of
undocumented, unregulated immigration would come to a screeching halt.
The above would not have to be tied to a path to US
citizenship. Mexico will need the return of their workforce. Also, by not
sealing our borders and allowing a reasonable entry-exit visas that would
allow the Mexican worker to visit his family, he would not find the human
need to start a family in the US. After all, the undocumented worker
settles and starts a family in our country because effectively he cannot
return to his homeland once he is here
Although only a partial solution to our needs which
require a greater magnitude of guest workers - over 500,000 new jobs per
year have been filled by undocumented workers for the past 10 years
according to the Pew Hispanic Center - the reduced labor import will fend
off catastrophic economic consequences to our affected industries. Also,
we will be in a position to implement similar programs, should the need
prove to be critical, with Central American countries.
Hispanic Vista addresses herein a petition to
President Felipe Calderon of Mexico: For the sake of US-Mexico economic
reciprocity and good neighbor diplomacy, take the initiative, after all,
Mexico controls the source.
- __________________________________________
- Sal Osio, JD is the publisher of HispanicVista.com (www.hispanicvista.com).
Contact at:
SPosio@aol.com