Mexico is eager for the U.S. to liberalize its
immigration policy but sees no reason to change its own. With as much as
$20 billion flowing into the country from migrants working in the U.S.
this year — money that supports more than one of five Mexican households —
why should it? It is not a lack of capacity but a lack of will that
prevents Mexico from policing its border with the U.S.
So goes the conventional wisdom in Washington and in the anti-immigration
lobby, which leads to mindless Mexico-bashing — mindless because even if
the Mexican government were 100% committed to restricting the movement of
its nationals and putting Mexican people-smugglers out of business, it
would not make a discernible difference in illegal crossings.
The U.S. job market provides an irresistible magnet.
A bi-national research team under my direction interviewed more than 600
migrants who had returned to their hometowns in central Mexico last
January, and 82% said opportunities in the U.S., rather than conditions in
Mexico, caused them to go north. Among those who planned to return to the
U.S. this year, 77% expected to have a prearranged job.
The desire for family reunification also drives hundreds of thousands of
Mexicans to migrate annually. Three of five Mexicans have relatives living
in the United States. In the high-emigration towns we surveyed, 92% of
first-time migrants during the last decade had a family connection in the
U.S. Eventually, many of these bi-national families will reunify in the
U.S., regardless of what Washington and Mexico City does. By making it
more costly and risky for heads of families to visit their dependents in
Mexico, tougher U.S. border enforcement since 1993 has only strengthened
the family-reunification incentive.
Many members of Congress routinely chastise Mexican authorities for not
dismantling the people-smuggling operations that organize more than 80% of
illegal migration to the U.S. They assume that taking out a few
large-scale smuggling organizations would sharply reduce illegal
crossings.
But there is no evidence that a handful of criminal syndicates dominate
the smuggling industry. The business remains highly decentralized, with
Mom-and-Pop coyote operations serving the vast majority of aspiring
migrants. In our study in central Mexico, we found that nearly two-thirds
of migrants secured a smuggler for their most recent trip north through
relatives living in the U.S., or relatives and neighbors in their hometown
— not by searching for one in a Mexican border city. Because it's easy to
get into the business, and demand for border-crossing assistance is so
strong, eliminating reputed smuggling kingpins would have a negligible
effect on migrant flow.
Governments are better at starting international migration flows than
shutting them off. Labor recruiters dispatched to Mexico by U.S. railroads
and agribusiness sparked large-scale Mexican migration in the 1880s, and
U.S. and Mexican authorities simply looked on. Migrant traffic north
gained momentum during World Wars I and II, when the U.S. government
organized programs to recruit Mexican agricultural labor. The "bracero"
contract labor program launched in 1942 continued until 1964, when it
became too politically controversial in the U.S. The young men and women
migrating here today are mostly descendants of the workers who were
welcomed in this country three, four or five generations ago. U.S.
politicians may find it expedient to ignore the multigenerational
tradition of Mexican migration — and its origins — but it is patently
unrealistic to assume that we can turn back the clock.
In the short term, the only government intervention that might
significantly deter Mexicans from migrating north would be to clamp down
on the employers who hire them. But the political and economic costs of
turning off the jobs magnet would be extremely high, which is why this
approach is not on the table in Congress.
Legalizing a portion of the current illegal flow through some type of
guest-worker program, perhaps coupled with an increase in permanent
resident visas for Mexican nationals, is the option most likely to gain
traction.
But the number of opportunities for legal entry would have to be quite
large to slow unauthorized immigration. In 2004, the Border Patrol
apprehended 741,000 migrants illegally crossing the border, and our study
in central Mexico found that one-third of those who attempt illegal entry
are never detected.
Another option is setting up economic development programs in
migrant-sending regions that would create incentives to stay at home.
Unfortunately, neither the U.S. nor the Mexican governments has taken this
approach to immigration control seriously, largely because it would take
at least 10 to 15 years to produce results. But only when U.S.-Mexican
wage differentials are narrowed will the current calculus favoring
migration be overturned.
Hammering the Mexican government in the meantime for its failure to
control unauthorized emigration is an empty political exercise that
excites border vigilantes and anti-Mexican xenophobes. It will never lead
to a sound U.S. immigration policy.
___________________________________________________________
Wayne A. Cornelius is professor of political science and director of
the Center for Comparative Immigration Studies at UC San Diego. His most
recent book is "Controlling Immigration: A Global Perspective."
Article at:
http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/sunday/commentary/la-op-mexico29may29,0,4198164.story?coll=la-sunday-commentary
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