“Mexican Immigration Will Solve Itself”
I found that an interesting headline, and the article is just as
interesting.
Fertility data
suggest that the international migration picture is about to change.
As the debate over illegal immigration from
Mexico
rages in Washington
and across the country, and as the administration’s reform bill hangs by a
thread, few Americans are aware that this problem is on track to
decline, and will eventually
become a vague memory.
There has been a
stunning decline in the fertility rate in Mexico, which means that, in a few years, there will not be nearly as many
teenagers in
Mexico
looking for work in the
United States
or anywhere else. If this trend in the fertility rate continues,
Mexico
will resemble
Japan
and Italy—rapidly aging populations with too few young workers to support the
economy.
According to the
World Bank’s 2007 Annual Development Indicators, in 1990 Mexico had a
total lifetime fertility rate of 3.3 children per female, but by 2005, that
number had fallen by 36 percent to 2.1, which is the “break even” point
for population stability in developed nations.
The large number of women
currently in their reproductive years means that there are still quite a few
babies, but as this group ages, the number of infants will decline sharply.
If this trend toward fewer children continues, there being no
apparent reason for it to cease, the number of young people in the Mexican
population will decline significantly just when the number of elderly is
rising.
As labor markets in
Mexico
tighten and wage rates rise, far fewer Mexican youngsters will be interested
in coming to the United States. Since our baby boomers will be
retiring at the same time, we could face a severe labor shortage.
Some politicians
fear that we are being
“Mexicanized.”
In fact the opposite may be underway.
There have been significant declines in fertility rates across Latin
America, but
Mexico’s has been unusually sharp.
In
El Salvador, another source of
U.S.
immigrants, the rate declined from 3.7 in 1990 to 2.5 by 2005. Guatemala is
now at 4.3, but that is far lower than it was in 1990. Jamaica, another
source of U.S. immigrants, has fallen from 2.9 to 2.4 over the same period.
Chile and Costa Rica, at 2.0, are actually slightly below a replacement
rate. Trinidad and Tobago, at 1.6, is well below ZPG. For
all of Latin American and the
Caribbean, a rate of 3.2 in
1990 fell to 2.4 in 2005, a
decline of 25 percent. This
means less pressure on the
United States
from illegal immigrants from the entire area, not just from Mexico.
A powerful demographic
transition is well underway, and soon many of these countries may be worried
about there being too few babies rather than too many.
We may miss this labor, and wonder how we
will replace it.
What has changed?
Better education and improved job opportunities for women mean that it has
become quite expensive for them to leave the labor force to have more
children. The improved
availability of birth control technology and liberalization of abortion
rules in some countries mean that it is easier for women to avoid that
outcome.
Another reason
for the particularly sharp decline in
Mexico
is the cultural influence of the United States. NAFTA, our mass media, the
more widespread use of English, and the large number of people going back
and forth (legally or otherwise) mean that Mexicans are increasingly
influenced by our culture, and that implies fewer babies.
The United States
also has a fertility rate of 2.1, but that is the same as it was in 1990.
Mexico
is becoming
more similar to the United States, which must frustrate their nationalists.
The main point
for the
United States
is that we have only a temporary problem with illegal immigration from Mexico. For another decade or a bit
more we must attempt to limit such entry, but then the problem will fade
like the smile on the Cheshire Cat.
Lou Dobbs, Rep. Tancredo and their
nationalistic friends can calm down and relax.
By Robert M. Dunn, Jr., professor of economics,
George
Washington
University, June 29, 2007.
If you answer the
multiple-choice questions below and e-mail to lessonanswers@mymontebello.com
with “Lesson answers” in the subject field, you will be credited toward
a “certificate of recognition in community affairs” to be awarded in
2007 by a local nonprofit organization.
1. What will be more decisive in stopping illegal
immigration?
(a) The declining fertility rate in
Latin America
.
(b) The wall being built along the Mexican border.
2. What is
contributing to the declining fertility rate?
(a) Better education and improved job opportunities for
women.
(b) Laws against having too many children.
(c) The cultural influence of the
United States
.
3. What might be a consequence of decreased immigration
into the
United States
?
(a) Increased immigration from Africa and
Asia
.
(b) A labor shortage.
January 10, 2008