Surely, it’s not good news. America has a child poverty
problem. It’s not just that we have a larger percentage of poor children than
Norway or the Netherlands. We have more child poverty than Russia.
Kay Hymowitz presents the case in the City Journal:
Articles
about America’s high levels of child poverty are a media evergreen. Here’s a
typical entry, courtesy of the New
York Times’s Eduardo Porter: “The percentage of children who are poor is
more than three times as high in the United States as it is in Norway or the
Netherlands. America has a larger proportion of poor children than Russia.”
That’s right: Russia.
What has caused the increase in child poverty? You guessed
it: immigration. Not immigration of educated Asians, but increased immigration
from Latin America.
Hymowitz continues:
The
lousy child-poverty numbers should come with another qualifying asterisk,
pointing to a very American reality. Before Europe’s recent migration crisis,
the United States was the only developed country consistently to import
millions of very poor, low-skilled families, from some of the most destitute
places on earth—especially from undeveloped areas of Latin America—into its
communities, schools, and hospitals. Let’s just say that Russia doesn’t care to
do this—and, until recently, Norway and the Netherlands didn’t, either. Both
policymakers and pundits prefer silence on the relationship between America’s
immigration system and poverty, and it’s easy to see why. The subject pushes us
headlong into the sort of wrenching trade-offs that politicians and advocates
prefer to avoid.
She continues: we have been importing child poverty:
Here’s
the problem in a nutshell: you can allow mass low-skilled immigration, which
many on the left and the right—and probably most poverty mavens—consider humane
and quintessentially American. But if you do, pursuing the equally humane goal
of substantially reducing child poverty becomes a lot harder.
More poor Hispanic children means more child poverty:
Perhaps
the most uncomfortable truth about these figures, and surely one reason they
don’t often show up in media accounts, is that a large majority of America’s
poor immigrant children—and, at this point, a large fraction of all its poor
children—are Hispanic (see chart below). The U.S. started collecting separate
poverty data on Hispanics in 1972. That year, 22.8 percent of those originally
from Spanish-language countries of Latin America were poor. The percentage
hasn’t risen that dramatically since then; it’s now at 25.6 percent. But
because the Hispanic population in America quintupled during those years, these
immigrants substantially expanded the nation’s poverty rolls. Hispanics are now
the largest U.S. immigrant group by far—and the lowest-skilled. Pew estimates
that Hispanics accounted for more than half the 22-million-person rise in the
official poverty numbers between 1972 and 2012. Robert Samuelson of the Washington Post found that,
between 1990 and 2016, Hispanics drove nearly three-quarters of the increase in
the nation’s poverty population from 33.6 million to 40.6 million.
The problem is cultural. While certain immigrant groups, the
Chinese and the Vietnamese, value education, Hispanic parents do not. They do
not talk with their children as much and do not much care about academic achievement.
In an economy where low skilled jobs are vanishing and where social mobility
depends on a higher level of education these cultural characteristics damage
children’s future prospects. Unless, of course, these children do the only jobs
that seem open to those less-educated—criminal enterprise.
Hymowitz writes:
According
to a study in the Hispanic
Journal of Behavioral Sciences, Hispanic parents don’t talk and read to
their young children as much as typical middle-class parents, who tend to
applaud their children’s attempts at self-expression, do; differences in verbal
ability show up as early as age two. Hispanic parents of low-achieving
students, most of whom also voiced high academic hopes for their kids, were
still “happy with their children’s test scores even when the children performed
poorly.” Their children tended to be similarly satisfied. Unlike many other
aspiring parents, Hispanics are more reluctant to see their children travel to
magnet schools and to college. They also become parents at younger ages. Though
Hispanic teen birthrates have fallen—as they have for all groups, apart from
American Indians—they remain the highest in the nation.
One would like to think that less educated Hispanics can
overcome their handicaps by gaining more education. And yet, after a second
generation has managed to raise itself through education, we often see that the
third generation reverts to the cultural norm.
The immigration question is not just about any old
immigrants. The Trump administration wants to admit immigrants who have a high
education level. Immigration activists seem to believe that all people are
equal and that mere exposure to American education can raise everyone and make
every immigrant child into a world beater.
Hymowitz concludes:
Outcomes
like these suggest that immigration optimists have underestimated the
difficulty of integrating the less-educated from undeveloped countries, and
their children, into advanced economies. A more honest accounting raises tough
questions. Should the United States, as the Trump administration is proposing,
and as is already the case in Canada and Australia, pursue a policy favoring
higher-skilled immigration? Or do we accept higher levels of child poverty and
lower social mobility as a cost of giving refuge and opportunity to people with
none? If we accept such costs, does it even make sense to compare our
child-poverty numbers with those of countries like Denmark or Sweden, which
have only recently begun to take in large numbers of low-skilled immigrants?
3 comments:
May be the The New Colossus on the Statue of Liberty no longer applies like it did 150 years ago "Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free..." We're no longer a largely agrarian society where subsistence farming can raise a family.
I also recall that the first effect of the NAFTA agreement was to export cheap agricultural food imports from America, leading to food prices dropping to the point that subsistence farmers of Mexico couldn't make a living, and they were forced to move their families to the cities where their income could be higher, but their cost of living increased more. And I suppose the migration to the U.S., legally and undocumented also was a search for opportunity, and low skill work means cheap labor for food harvesting that can't yet be done by machines, and still again, a land where the cost of living is higher, so people doing "needed work" still can't earn an income to raise children above poverty.
So maybe the answer is that we need to keep low-skill laborers out of the country, and then crops will go unpicked until growers are willing to pay enough that domestic workers are willing to do the necessary work.
In any case, it seems unlikely that uneducated parents who do such menial work have no aspirations for their children to find better work. The opposite seems more likely.
TW, do I get to be a Leftist? You'll have to tell my friends. I guess neo-Mathusians can be on the left and the right.
Anyway if Leftists believe primarily in family planning and the equal access to education for girls and Rightists believe primarily in borders and guns to protect ourselves from the illiterate masses, I'd put at least as much money on the first as the second. And I am glad the new Pope said people no longer need to breed like rabbits, and Latin America is largely Catholic.
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