The Uselessness of Economists on Immigration:
Economic View
Cost  of Illegal Immigration May Be Less Than Meets the Eye
By Eduardo Porter
CALIFORNIA may seem the best place to study the impact of illegal immigration on  the prospects of American workers. Hordes of immigrants rushed into the state in  the last 25 years, competing for jobs with the least educated among the native  population. The wages of high school dropouts in California fell 17 percent from  1980 to 2004.
But before concluding that immigrants are undercutting the wages of the least  fortunate Americans, perhaps one should consider Ohio. Unlike California, Ohio  remains mostly free of illegal immigrants. And what happened to the wages of  Ohio's high school dropouts from 1980 to 2004? They fell 31 percent.
As Congress debates an overhaul of the nation's immigration laws, several  economists and news media pundits have sounded the alarm, contending that  illegal immigrants are causing harm to Americans in the competition for jobs.
Yet a more careful examination of the economic data suggests that the argument  is, at the very least, overstated. There is scant evidence that illegal  immigrants have caused any significant damage to the wages of American workers.
An accompanying  graphic shows that a high school dropout in California, where supposedly  6.9% of the population are illegal immigrants, averages $8.71 per hour in wages  versus merely $8.37 in Ohio, where only 1.0% are illegal immigrants.
Case closed!
Well, no, not exactly. What about the cost of living difference between  California and Ohio? Don't they tell you in Econ 101 and in Journalism 101 to  always adjust for the cost of living?
According to the data gathered by the nonprofit organization ACCRA,  which measures cost  of living so corporations can fairly adjust the salaries of employees they  relocate, California has the highest cost of living in the country with an  index of 150.8 (where 100 is the national norm). Ohio is below average at 95.4.  So, relative to the national average cost of living, high school dropouts in  Ohio average $8.77 versus $5.78 for the equivalent in California. That means  they are 52% better off in Ohio.
So, the Law of Supply and Demand hasn't been repealed after all...
One obvious cause of this huge difference in the cost of living is that during  the same 1980 to 2004 period, housing inflation in California was 315% versus  155% in Ohio, according to the Laboratory  of the States.
Even failing to adjust for the striking disparities in the inflation rate  between Ohio and California, one obvious differences is that high school  dropouts used to be paid a lot more in Ohio, probably due to greater  unionization. In contrast, Southern California was traditionally anti-union. The  1980 wage in Ohio was $12.13 versus $10.49 in California. Obviously, the decline  in unionized heavy industry jobs hit rust belt Ohio harder than growing  California, which had fewer unionized heavy industry jobs to lose.
Here's the data from the NYT's graphic, in which 9 states were cherry-picked to make it look like the higher the percentage of illegal immigrants in a state's population, the better off high school dropouts are. I've added the two right hand columns to adjust for the big cost of living differences. We then find a negative correlation of r = -0.46 between the percentage of illegal immigrants and the cost-of-living-adjusted median wage for high school dropouts:
| Illegal Immigrants | Dropout's Wage | Cost of Living Index | Adjusted Wage | |
| Nevada | 7.5% | $ 10.05 | 111.8 | $ 8.99 | 
| California | 6.9% | $ 8.71 | 150.8 | $ 5.78 | 
| Florida | 5.2% | $ 8.99 | 100.3 | $ 8.96 | 
| Maryland | 4.5% | $ 9.84 | 125.8 | $ 7.82 | 
| New Jersey | 4.1% | $ 9.03 | 134.2 | $ 6.73 | 
| New York | 3.3% | $ 9.02 | 123.5 | $ 7.30 | 
| Nebraska | 2.3% | $ 9.08 | 93.3 | $ 9.73 | 
| Ohio | 1.0% | $ 8.37 | 95.4 | $ 8.77 | 
| Kentucky | 0.9% | $ 8.73 | 91.2 | $ 9.57 | 
The point that is  constantly overlooked is that American citizens ought to be compensated  with higher wages for moving from their native state to fast growing states to  meet the demand for labor. But, instead, illegal immigrants are beating them to  the boomtowns, driving down wages.
You might expect that economists will write in to the New York Times en masse to  protest this fiasco of an "Economic View" article. But you would be  wrong, because professional standards mean nothing when the topic is  immigration.
Interpreting these numbers sensibly doesn't require a mastery of quantum  mechanics. It's all just Econ 101, but the American upper middle class so  despises the American working class today that self-evidently shoddy thinking  deleterious to the welfare of the American working man is routinely trumpeted in  both conservative newspapers like the Wall Street Journal and liberal  newspapers like the New York Times.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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