Study Finds Just How Much Illegal Immigrants Cost Americans!
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Here’s an argument I’ve heard from my liberal friends before: illegal aliens don’t cost taxpayers anything, because non-citizens can’t receive welfare.
It’s not a new argument – even the late libertarian economics Nobel Laureate Milton Friedman once argued that illegal immigration was preferable to legal immigration for the reason that legal immigrants would draw resources from the welfare state.
But here’s the thing: anyone born in America automatically becomes an American citizen, meaning that any children illegals have will allow families to benefit from certain government handouts.
- In 1970 no states had an immigrant population over 15 percent.
- In 1970 the US debt was $370 billion.
- In 2016 the US debt is $18.8 trillion.
- In September 2015, the Center for Immigration Studies published a landmark study of immigration and welfare use, showing that 51 percent of immigrant-headed households used at least one federal welfare program — cash, food, housing, or medical care — compared to 30 percent of native households. Following similar methodology, this new study examines the dollar cost of that welfare use.
- The average household headed by an immigrant (legal or illegal) costs taxpayers $6,234 in federal welfare benefits, which is 41 percent higher than the $4,431 received by the average native household.
- The average immigrant household consumes 33 percent more cash welfare, 57 percent more food assistance, and 44 percent more Medicaid dollars than the average native household. Housing costs are about the same for both groups.
- At $8,251, households headed by immigrants from Central America and Mexico have the highest welfare costs of any sending region — 86 percent higher than the costs of native households.
- Illegal immigrant households cost an average of $5,692 (driven largely by the presence of U.S.-born children), while legal immigrant households cost $6,378.
- The greater consumption of welfare dollars by immigrants can be explained in large part by their lower level of education and larger number of children compared to natives. Over 24 percent of immigrant households are headed by a high school dropout, compared to just 8 percent of native households. In addition, 13 percent of immigrant households have three or more children, vs. just 6 percent of native households.