Report To Congressional Requesters: United States General Accounting Office
Report To Congressional Requesters: United States General Accounting Office
Report To Congressional Requesters: United States General Accounting Office
July 1995
ILLEGAL ALIENS
National Net Cost
Estimates Vary Widely
GAO/HEHS-95-133
United States
GAO General Accounting Office
Washington, D.C. 20548
B-252730
In recent years, growing public concern about illegal aliens in the United
States has focused on their use of public benefits and their overall costs to
society.1 Some 3-1/2 to 4 million illegal aliens resided in the United States
in 1994, according to government estimates. States’ concerns about the
strain on their budgets from providing public benefits and services to
illegal aliens have prompted six states to file suit against the federal
government for reimbursement of some of these costs.2 In one state,
California, voters recently passed a measure that would deny state-funded
public benefits to illegal aliens, including education, nonemergency health
services, and other social services.3
1
An illegal alien is a person who is in the United States in violation of U.S. immigration laws. Such a
person may have entered (1) illegally; that is without the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS)
inspection (undocumented), or by using fraudulent documentation or (2) legally, under a
nonimmigrant visa or other temporary condition but subsequently violated the terms of the visa or
other terms of entry.
2
Florida, California, Arizona, Texas, New Jersey, and New York.
3
California voters approved Proposition 187 on November 8, 1994. Many of the restrictions on
eligibility for public services have not taken effect because lawsuits blocked implementation of the
measure.
the extent, if any, to which illegal aliens impose a fiscal burden on U.S.
taxpayers provides one indication of the magnitude of the effects of illegal
aliens. The current debate about how to address the problems of illegal
immigration has generated a renewed interest in the findings of studies
that have attempted to estimate the public fiscal impact of illegal aliens.
All three national studies concluded that illegal aliens in the United States
Results in Brief generate more in costs than revenues to federal, state, and local
4
Benefits for Illegal Aliens: Some Program Costs Increasing, But Total Costs Unknown
(GAO/T-HRD-93-33, Sept. 29, 1993). This testimony included estimates of costs for illegal aliens in
California, New York, Texas, Florida, and Illinois.
5
Donald Huddle is a professor emeritus of economics at Rice University.
6
The methodology of the revenue estimates in this study is set out in greater detail in a study by Jeffrey
Passel, Immigrants and Taxes: A Reappraisal of Huddle’s “The Cost of Immigrants” (Washington, D.C.:
The Urban Institute, 1994).
7
Huddle’s updated study was issued with an accompanying paper that discusses some of the major
areas of difference in the national net cost estimates. See A Critique of the Urban Institute’s Claims of
Cost Free Immigration: Huddle Findings Confirmed (Washington, D.C.: Carrying Capacity Network,
1994).
We did find that a relatively small number of costs and revenues account
for much of the variation in the estimates of the national net cost of illegal
aliens. For example, one study included costs of $3.9 billion for certain
benefits, such as education, provided to U.S. citizen children of illegal
aliens and the other two studies did not include these costs. In addition,
the two studies that included estimates of Social Security
costs—$3.3 billion versus $0—differed in their approaches to this item and
appear to have estimated different costs. In these and other instances, the
estimates were difficult to assess because the studies did not always
clearly explain the criteria used to determine which items were
appropriate to include.
immigration laws but for various other reasons. For example, state and
local governments are especially concerned about the effect on their
budgets of providing benefits and services to illegal aliens. In addition,
there are concerns about whether the presence of illegal alien workers has
negative effects on the employment of U.S. workers.
Size of the Population Public concern about the number of illegal aliens residing in the United
States led to the passage of major immigration legislation in the 1980s. In
an effort to reduce the size of the nation’s illegal alien population,
estimated at 3 to 5 million in 1986, the Congress enacted the Immigration
Reform and Control Act of 1986 (IRCA). IRCA attempted to deter the inflow
of illegal aliens by prohibiting employers from hiring anyone not
authorized to work. IRCA also provided that under certain circumstances,
an illegal alien’s status could be adjusted to lawful permanent resident.8
Almost 3 million illegal aliens acquired lawful permanent residence as a
result of IRCA.
Eligibility for Federal Illegal aliens are not eligible for most federal benefit programs, including
Benefits Supplemental Security Income, Aid to Families With Dependent Children
(AFDC), Food Stamps, unemployment compensation, financial assistance
8
Aliens who either entered the United States before January 1, 1982, and had been living illegally in the
country continuously since that time or who worked in agriculture were eligible to seek adjustment of
their status.
9
Robert Warren, “Estimates of the Unauthorized Immigrant Population Residing in the United States,
by Country of Origin and State of Residence: October 1992,” unpublished report, U.S. Immigration and
Naturalization Service (Washington, D.C.: 1994). We updated the estimate to 1994 by using the report’s
estimate of a 300,000 annual increase in the size of the national illegal alien population.
10
Edward W. Fernandez and J. Gregory Robinson, “Illustrative Ranges of the Distribution of
Undocumented Immigrants by State,” U.S. Bureau of the Census, Population Division, technical
working paper no. 8 (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Department of Commerce, 1994).
for higher education, and the Job Training Partnership Act (JTPA).11
However, they may participate in certain benefit programs that do not
require legal immigration status as a condition of eligibility, such as Head
Start, the Special Supplemental Food Program for Women, Infants, and
Children (WIC), and the school lunch program.12 In addition, they are
eligible for emergency medical services, including childbirth services,
under Medicaid if they meet the program’s conditions of eligibility. Illegal
aliens may apply for AFDC and food stamps on behalf of their U.S. citizen
children. Although it is the child and not the parent in such cases who
qualifies for the programs, benefits help support the child’s family.
Illegal aliens may not work in the United States or legally obtain Social
Security numbers for work purposes. However, many illegal aliens do
work and have Social Security taxes withheld from their wages based on
falsely obtained numbers.13 Illegal aliens are not explicitly barred from
receiving Social Security benefits; nonetheless, some illegal aliens may not
be able to collect benefits because an individual generally must have
obtained a valid Social Security number to receive credit for work
performed.
Types of Revenues Illegal aliens generate revenues as well as costs; these revenues offset
Generated some of the costs that governments incur. Research studies indicate that
many illegal aliens pay taxes, including federal and state income taxes;
Social Security tax; and sales, gasoline, and property taxes. However,
researchers disagree on the amount of revenues illegal aliens generate and
the extent to which these revenues offset government costs for benefits
and services.
State Efforts to Estimate Over the past few years, the states with the largest illegal alien populations
Fiscal Impact of Illegal have developed estimates of the costs they incur in providing benefits and
Aliens services to illegal aliens. These estimates vary considerably in the range of
11
While illegal aliens are ineligible by law for housing assistance, the Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) allowed them to receive assistance until final regulations implementing eligibility
restrictions were issued. HUD issued that final rule on eligibility of aliens for housing assistance on
March 20, 1995 (60 Fed. Reg. 14816, 1995); the rule became effective June 19, 1995.
12
Certain welfare reform proposals being considered by the Congress would further restrict the
eligibility of illegal aliens for federal benefits. For example, the Personal Responsibility Act of 1995
(H.R. 4) would make illegal aliens ineligible for federal means-tested public benefit programs, except
for certain emergency assistance.
13
This can occur in various ways. For example, an illegal alien might provide an employer with (1) a
Social Security number that had been assigned to another person, (2) a counterfeit Social Security
card, or (3) a genuine Social Security card that was obtained by furnishing fraudulent documents to
the Social Security Administration.
costs included and methodologies used. Two states, California and Texas,
also have estimated the public revenues that illegal aliens generate.
Most Studies Conclude The literature on the public fiscal impact of illegal aliens reflects
Illegal Aliens Generate considerable agreement among researchers that illegal aliens are a net
More in Costs Than in cost, though the magnitude of the cost is a subject of continued debate.
We identified 13 studies issued between 1984 and 1994 that developed
Revenues estimates of the net costs of illegal aliens. Many of the studies focused on
the illegal alien population in specific states, such as California or Texas,
or specific areas, such as San Diego County or Los Angeles County. In
addition, the range of costs and revenues included in the studies varied
depending on the level of government examined: local, state, federal, or
some combination of these. All but one study concluded that illegal aliens
generated more in public costs than they contributed in revenues to
government. (See app. I for a list of the studies.) Only 3 of the 13 studies
estimated the fiscal impact of all illegal aliens in the United States on all
levels of government.
The three studies that have estimated the national net cost of illegal aliens
National Net Cost of have generated considerable media attention and public discussion. Each
Illegal Aliens concluded that illegal aliens generate more in costs than revenues at the
Uncertain national level, but their estimates of the magnitude of the net cost varied
considerably. The studies faced the difficult task of developing estimates
of the public fiscal impact of a population on which little data are
available. They generally relied on indirect approaches; as a result, the
reasonableness of many of their assumptions are unknown. In addition,
the studies differed considerably in the range of costs and revenues they
included and their treatment of certain items, which makes them difficult
14
Illegal Aliens: Assessing Estimates of Financial Burden on California (GAO/HEHS-95-22, Nov. 28,
1994).
Studies’ Estimates of Net Donald Huddle estimated that the national net cost of illegal aliens to
Costs Vary Considerably federal, state, and local governments was $11.9 billion in 1992.15 This
estimate was followed by an Urban Institute review of Huddle’s work,
which adjusted some of Huddle’s cost and revenue estimates and
estimated a much lower net cost for 1992—$1.9 billion.16 Responding to
the Urban Institute’s criticisms, Huddle subsequently produced an updated
estimate for 1993 that was higher than his initial estimate—$19.3 billion.17
(See app. II for a list of the costs and revenues included in each of the
estimates.)
The net cost estimates in each of the national studies are derived from
three major components: (1) the direct costs of providing public benefits
and services to illegal aliens, (2) displacement costs—the costs of
providing various types of public assistance to U.S. citizens displaced from
their jobs by illegal aliens, and (3) public revenues attributable to illegal
aliens. A comparison of Huddle’s initial study with the Urban Institute’s
study indicates that the major differences were in their estimates of
displacement costs and revenues. Their estimates of direct program costs
were relatively similar, as shown in figure 1.
15
This study and Huddle’s updated study were commissioned by the Carrying Capacity Network, a
nonpartisan, nonprofit, national organization whose stated mission is to increase understanding of the
interrelated nature of population growth, environmental degradation, resource conservation, and
quality-of-life issues in the United States.
16
The Urban Institute is a nonprofit, nonpartisan, policy research organization. The two lead analysts in
this research were Jeffrey S. Passel and Rebecca L. Clark, director and senior research associate,
respectively, in the Institute’s Program for Research on Immigration Policy.
17
Huddle recently updated his national net cost estimate to 1994. The updated estimate relies on the
same methodologies as the estimate for 1993. However, the 1994 estimate uses higher per capita costs
for various public assistance programs, a higher estimate of the income of illegal aliens, and an
updated estimate of the size of the illegal alien population. Huddle concluded that the national net cost
of illegal aliens in 1994 was between $16 billion and $21.6 billion. The lower figure is based on an
estimated illegal alien population of 4 million; the higher figure on a population of 5.4 million. See
Donald L. Huddle, The Net National Costs of Immigration into the United States: Illegal Immigration
Assessed (Washington, D.C.: Carrying Capacity Network, 1995).
28
26
24
22
20
18
16
14
12
10
0
Huddle's Urban Huddle's
Initial Institute's Updated
Estimate Estimate Estimate
a b c
(1992) (1992) (1993)
Total Costs
Net Costs
Huddle's Urban Huddle's
initial Institute's updated
Components estimate estimate estimate
a b c
of estimate (1992) (1992) (1993)
Direct program costs $10.096 $8.861 $25.008
Displacement costs 4.291 0 4.290
a
Donald Huddle, The Costs of Immigration (Washington, D.C.: 1993), exhibits 5, 6, and 12.
b
Jeffrey S. Passel and Rebecca L. Clark, How Much Do Immigrants Really Cost? A Reappraisal of
Huddle’s “The Cost of Immigrants” (Washington, D.C.: 1994), pp. 1-8, supplemented by data from
Jeffrey Passel providing a breakdown of the cost estimates for individual items; and Jeffrey S.
Passel, Immigrants and Taxes: A Reappraisal of Huddle’s “The Cost of Immigrants” (Washington,
D.C.: 1994), table 7c.
c
Donald Huddle, The Net National Costs of Immigration in 1993 (Washington, D.C.: 1994),
exhibits 5, 6, and 12.
Huddle’s update of his earlier study differs substantially from the Urban
Institute study in all three components of the net cost estimates, with the
largest difference occurring between the estimates of direct program costs
(see fig. 1). The reason for this difference is primarily because Huddle’s
updated study includes over $10 billion for direct cost items that were not
included in either his initial study or the Urban Institute study.
Studies’ Estimates Based National data on illegal aliens’ use of public services and level of tax
on Limited Data on Illegal payments generally are not available. Various national databases that
Alien Population contain extensive data on the resident population’s use of public services
and household characteristics, for example, do not have data on the
immigration status of respondents who are not U.S. citizens.19 Questions
about immigration status are not included on Census surveys because they
might provoke untruthful responses and thereby affect the quality of the
survey data, according to a Census official.
18
In other studies, the Urban Institute researchers have used significantly lower estimates of the size of
the illegal alien population. For example, in Rebecca L. Clark and others, Fiscal Impacts of
Undocumented Aliens: Selected Estimates for Seven States, the researchers used INS’ national
population estimate of 3.4 million illegal aliens as of 1992.
19
These include Census Bureau databases such as the decennial census, the Current Population
Survey, and the Survey of Income and Program Participation.
For example, for some programs, one or more of the studies assumed that
illegal aliens had the same recipiency rate and average cost as the overall
population served by the program. Huddle’s updated study made this
assumption in estimating costs for Head Start and adult education. For
other programs, the studies adjusted the national recipiency rate or
average cost upward or downward to reflect a presumed difference in the
use of the program by illegal aliens. For example, in estimating the cost of
housing assistance, Huddle’s initial and updated studies assumed that the
recipiency rate and average cost were higher for illegal aliens than for the
overall population served by this program. The Urban Institute’s study
assumed that the recipiency rate was higher but that the average cost was
the same.
For still other programs, the studies estimated the public service use of
illegal aliens by using data on populations that included groups in addition
to illegal aliens. For example, in their estimates of the cost of primary and
secondary education, the studies used data on the school enrollment rates
of populations that included foreign-born children who were legal
residents. The studies’ estimates of the enrollment rate of school-age
illegal aliens ranged from 70 to 86 percent.21
20
Recipiency rate refers to the percentage of a population that receives benefits from a particular
program.
21
Subsequent to its national net cost study, the Urban Institute developed more detailed estimates of
the costs of providing certain education and public welfare benefits to illegal aliens. The Urban
Institute also expanded its critical analysis of the estimates for these benefits in Huddle’s initial study.
See Rebecca L. Clark, The Costs of Providing Public Assistance and Education to Immigrants
(Washington, D.C.: The Urban Institute, 1994).
federal, state, and local taxes.22 The studies calculated the per capita
payments by illegal aliens in Los Angeles County for each of these taxes.
The studies then used different methodologies to adjust these per capita
tax estimates to apply them to the national illegal alien population.23
Studies Difficult to The national net cost studies vary considerably in the range of costs and
Compare revenues they included and their treatment of certain items, making the
studies difficult to compare. The variation in the studies reflects an
absence of clear standards for determining the items that are appropriate
to include in such estimates. A consensus on standards has not yet
emerged because the three national studies represent the initial efforts of
researchers to develop estimates of the total public fiscal impact of the
illegal alien population.
A relatively small number of costs and revenues account for much of the
Why National variation in the estimates of the national net cost of illegal aliens. Some of
Estimates Vary these cost and revenue items were included in one study but not the
22
The estimates of tax payments by illegal aliens were developed in a study by the Los Angeles County
Internal Services Department titled Impact of Undocumented Persons and Other Immigrants on Costs,
Revenues and Services in Los Angeles County, prepared for the Los Angeles County Board of
Supervisors (Los Angeles: 1992).
23
For example, the Urban Institute study maintained that Huddle’s initial study inappropriately used
data on geographic differences in tax payments as a proxy for differences in tax rates.
others. In the case of other items, the studies differed considerably in the
approaches or assumptions they used to develop their estimates.
Our review focuses on differences between the Urban Institute’s study and
Huddle’s updated study. Four areas account for about 88 percent of the
difference between the studies’ estimates of total costs: (1) costs for
citizen children of illegal aliens, (2) costs for the portion of some services
provided to the general public that are used by illegal aliens, (3) Social
Security costs, and (4) costs for workers displaced from jobs by illegal
aliens. On the revenue side, about 95 percent of the difference in the
studies’ estimates is attributable to differences in their estimates of local
revenues (see table 1).24
24
Huddle’s updated study used a slightly higher estimate of the size of the illegal alien population than
his initial study and the Urban Institute’s study—5.1 million versus 4.8 million. This factor, in addition
to price inflation from 1992 (the year of the Urban Institute’s estimate) to 1993 (the year of Huddle’s
updated estimate), accounts for about $1.0 billion of the $17.5 billion difference between the net cost
estimates, based on our calculations.
Costs for Citizen Children Huddle’s initial study and the Urban Institute’s study included estimates of
of Illegal Aliens costs for U.S. citizen children of illegal aliens for only one
program—AFDC.25 These costs represent cash payments received by illegal
aliens on behalf of their citizen children. However, Huddle’s updated study
includes estimates of citizen children costs for additional programs:
primary and secondary education; school lunch; Food Stamps; and English
as a Second Language, English for Speakers of Other Languages, and
25
Huddle’s initial study estimated $820 million in AFDC costs; the Urban Institute’s study estimated
$202 million. In our 1993 testimony, we estimated that AFDC costs for fiscal year 1992 were
$479 million, based on administrative data from the Department of Health and Human Services.
Costs for General Public Huddle’s initial study and the Urban Institute’s study included estimates of
Services costs for the portion of some county government services provided to the
general public that are used by illegal aliens, such as public safety, fire
protection, recreation, roads, and flood control. Huddle’s updated study
includes over $5.3 billion in additional costs for miscellaneous public
services not included in his initial study or the Urban Institute’s study,
including federal and state highway costs and costs for a range of city
services, such as police, fire, sewerage, libraries, parks and recreation,
financial administration, and interest on debt.28
The studies’ inclusion of costs for services to the general public raises two
issues: the specific services that should be included and the appropriate
methodology for estimating the costs of the services attributable to illegal
aliens. With regard to the first issue, the national studies focused on local
services provided to the general public; the only such state or federal
service that any of them included was highway services. However, because
there are other state and federal services provided to the general public
that illegal aliens may use or benefit from, it is not clear that the studies’
26
This cost estimate is difficult to assess because Huddle’s updated study does not explain the
methodology used to estimate the number of citizen children of illegal aliens.
27
Huddle’s updated study does not include such costs or revenues.
28
Huddle’s updated study double-counts certain local costs, such as those for education and public
welfare. The study includes these costs both in the estimates of miscellaneous county and city costs,
and in the estimates for specific program items, such as elementary and secondary education, and
AFDC.
estimates included all the appropriate items.29 None of the studies clearly
addressed this issue.
Social Security Costs Social Security (the Old Age, Survivors, and Disability Insurance program)
has both a revenue side—payroll contributions from workers and
employers—and a cost side—benefits paid out. Huddle’s initial study did
not include either Social Security revenues or costs. Huddle’s updated
study, in response to the Urban Institute’s study, included both. On the
revenue side, the researchers’ estimates are fairly close: Huddle estimates
$2.4 billion in Social Security revenues, compared with the Urban
Institute’s estimate of $2.7 billion.30 However, on the cost side, the
researchers draw sharply different conclusions: Huddle estimates that
illegal aliens generated $3.3 billion in Social Security costs; the Urban
Institute estimates that no Social Security costs were generated by illegal
aliens.
29
For example, state governments provide various environmental, public safety, health, and judicial
services; they also pay interest on debt incurred to finance the broad range of services they provide.
30
The estimate in Huddle’s updated study contains an arithmetical error in the calculation of Social
Security revenue from the highest income group. Correcting this error would raise the estimate of
Social Security revenues to $2.7 billion, the same as the Urban Institute’s estimate.
that the federal government treats Social Security costs and revenues on a
current accounts basis: in calculating the annual federal budget deficit (or
surplus), Social Security taxes are treated as revenues and Social Security
benefits as expenses. However, the Social Security Administration does
not have data on the amount of Social Security benefits paid to illegal
aliens; as a result, it is unclear whether the Urban Institute’s assumption
that this amount was zero is reasonable.
Displacement Costs Although illegal aliens by law are not entitled to work in this country, they
often find employment. This raises questions about the extent to which
illegal aliens take jobs away from legal residents—U.S. citizens and aliens
residing legally in the country. Job displacement can generate costs to all
levels of government for various forms of public assistance provided to
legal residents who lose their jobs. Huddle’s initial and updated studies
31
The present value of a future benefit is the amount that would be sufficient, if invested at a given
interest rate, to fund the expected future stream of payments.
32
For example, Huddle’s estimate assumes that 75 percent of illegal aliens in the work force eventually
will collect Social Security benefits, but data are not available to determine whether this is a
reasonable assumption.
Local Revenues The national net cost studies estimated the amounts of various revenues
from illegal aliens collected by federal, state, and local governments.
These include income, sales, property, Social Security, and gasoline taxes.
(See app. II for a list of the revenues included in the studies.) Developing
reasonable estimates of these revenues requires information about various
characteristics of the illegal alien population, such as its size, age
33
For example, he maintains that researchers must ask “what is the net enhancement of consumer
spending if one consumer population displaces another, or if added consumption must be financed by
higher public sector outlays.” See A Critique of the Urban Institute’s Claims of Cost Free Immigration:
Huddle Findings Confirmed, Carrying Capacity Network (Washington, D.C.: 1994).
Huddle’s initial estimate of the total revenues from illegal aliens was
$2.5 billion. The Urban Institute’s study criticized Huddle’s estimate for
omitting several revenues—the largest being Social Security tax—and
estimated $7 billion in total revenues. Huddle’s updated study, which
estimated total revenues at $10 billion, added several revenues that were
not included in his initial study, such as Social Security tax, federal and
state gasoline taxes, and city taxes. As shown in table 2, the major area of
difference between the revenue estimates in the Urban Institute’s study
and Huddle’s updated study was in their estimates of local revenues.
34
The source used by Huddle’s updated study to estimate county revenues does not break out the
amounts of property taxes collected from individuals versus businesses. The Urban Institute’s study
included only the portion of county property taxes paid by individuals.
Institute for the same general time period can be used to obtain an income
figure closer to Huddle’s—about $7,739.35 If this higher figure was
substituted in the Urban Institute’s study, the estimate of total revenues
from illegal aliens would increase to $10.5 billion, placing it closer to the
$10 billion figure in Huddle’s updated study.
Our review of the national net cost studies highlighted two key issues: the
Estimates of National limited data on the illegal alien population and the considerable variation
Net Costs Could Be in both the items that the studies included and their treatment of some of
Improved the same items. These issues led us to conclude that considerable
uncertainty remains about the national fiscal impact of illegal aliens.
Obtaining better data on the illegal alien population and providing clearer
explanations of which costs and revenues are appropriate to include
would help improve the usefulness of the national estimates.
Better Data on Illegal Alien The limited availability of data on illegal aliens is likely to remain a
Population Needed persistent problem because persons residing in the country illegally have
35
In Rebecca L. Clark and others, Fiscal Impacts of Undocumented Aliens: Selected Estimates for
Seven States, Urban Institute researchers developed estimates of the per capita income of illegal aliens
in the seven states estimated to account for about 86 percent of the illegal alien population. To obtain
the $7,739 figure, we assumed that the per capita income of illegal aliens in all other states was the
average of the seven states. We then weighted these income estimates based on the INS estimate of the
geographic distribution of illegal aliens cited in the report.
36
For instance, the average income of illegal aliens who were legalized under IRCA may have been
lower than that of illegal aliens who were not legalized because the former group included a much
higher percentage of persons born in Mexico than the latter, and Mexican-born residents have among
the lowest incomes of the foreign-born population. See Rebecca L. Clark and others, Fiscal Impacts of
Undocumented Aliens: Selected Estimates for Seven States, chapters 2 and 6. Similarly, foreign-born
residents who reside legally in the United States may have higher or lower incomes than illegal aliens
who immigrated from the same countries and in the same time period.
Given the data gaps in so many areas, any effort to collect better data
should focus on those data that would have the greatest impact in
improving the estimates of net costs. Thus, emphasis could be placed on
obtaining data on illegal aliens’ use of those public benefits associated
with the largest cost items or their payment of those taxes associated with
the largest revenue items. For example, elementary and secondary
education is estimated to be the single largest program cost; thus,
researchers could focus on obtaining data on the number of illegal alien
schoolchildren. However, researchers may confront legal barriers in
attempting to collect these data.38
Clearer Explanation Obtaining better data on the illegal alien population will not resolve all the
Needed of Items That problems associated with estimating the net costs of illegal aliens.
Should Be Included in Net Researchers will still face issues about which items are appropriate to
include in the estimates and how the items should be treated. As we have
Cost Studies seen, different decisions on these issues can generate considerable
variation in estimates of net costs. Researchers need to clearly explain
how they handled such issues in order to facilitate comparisons of their
estimates. For example, when the decision about whether an item should
37
We are in the initial process of developing an estimation methodology that may prove useful in
obtaining better data on the illegal alien population. The methodology involves surveying foreign-born
residents about their immigration status in a way that does not cause any respondent to identify
himself or herself as an illegal alien, yet would permit the development of reliable estimates regarding
the size and characteristics of the illegal alien population.
38
As we noted in our California report, many school districts in California believe that the U.S.
Supreme Court decision, Plyler v. Doe, prohibits them from asking about the immigration status of
students. See Illegal Aliens: Assessing Estimates of Financial Burden on California (GAO/HEHS-95-22,
Nov. 28, 1994).
Federal Effort to Improve Recognizing the need for better information on the effects of immigration,
Estimates of Aliens’ Fiscal a federal effort is under way to improve estimates of the fiscal impact of
Impact legal and illegal aliens. The U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform, a
bipartisan congressional commission created by the Immigration Act of
1990, is working on a final report to the Congress, due in 1997, on a wide
range of immigration issues. The Commission provided an interim report
to the Congress in September 1994.39 The Commission has convened a
panel of independent experts organized by the National Academy of
Sciences to review the methodologies and assumptions of studies of the
costs and benefits of immigration. The panel will develop
recommendations on the data sources and methodologies that hold the
greatest promise for more precise measurement of the economic and
social impacts of legal and illegal immigration.
The three national studies that we reviewed represent the initial efforts of
Conclusions researchers to develop estimates of the total public fiscal impact of the
illegal alien population. The little data available on this population make it
difficult to develop reasonable estimates on a subject so broad in scope.
Moreover, the national studies varied considerably in the range of items
they included and their treatment of certain items, making their estimates
difficult to compare. As a result, a great deal of uncertainty remains about
the national fiscal impact of illegal aliens.
Obtaining better data on the illegal alien population would help improve
the national net cost estimates. Recognizing the difficulties inherent in
collecting better data on a population with an incentive to keep its status
hidden from government officials, any effort to collect better data should
focus on those characteristics of the illegal alien population that are useful
in estimating the largest net cost items, or many of them. These
characteristics include the population’s size, geographic distribution, age
39
U.S. Immigration Policy: Restoring Credibility, U.S. Commission on Immigration Reform
(Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1994).
The Urban Institute researchers agreed with much of the report’s analysis
and its conclusions about the need for better data on the illegal alien
population and sharper definitions of the accounting framework used.
However, they took exception with two points in our report. They
maintained that it is possible to test the reasonableness of the underlying
assumptions used in the net cost estimates by developing estimates for
reference groups40 and that their estimate of Social Security costs
attributable to illegal aliens was reasonable. Huddle disagreed with several
of the report’s findings. He maintained that the report was too negative in
40
The reference groups are citizens and groups of immigrants other than illegal aliens. Urban Institute
researchers noted that estimates of total costs for a program (or total tax payments) attributable to
illegal aliens and reference groups can be tested by comparing them with actual government program
expenditures (or revenues collected).
The comments from the Urban Institute and Huddle reinforce our
assessment of how difficult it is to develop estimates of the national fiscal
impact of illegal aliens, given the limited data available. As noted in this
report, obtaining better data on some of the key characteristics of the
illegal alien population could help narrow the gap between the
researchers’ widely varying estimates of the national net cost. Moreover,
clearer explanations of the approaches used would make the net cost
estimates more useful.
Jane L. Ross
Director, Income Security Issues
Letter 1
Appendix I 28
Review of Huddle’s
Displacement Cost
Estimate
Appendix IV 34
Experts Consulted by
GAO
Appendix V 35
Comments From
Donald Huddle
Appendix VII 56
Abbreviations
Dollars in millions
Huddle’s Urban Huddle’s
initial Institute’s updated
estimate estimate estimate
Items (1992)a (1992)b (1993)c
Direct program costs
Primary and secondary education $3,909 $3,679 $4,369
Primary and secondary education (citizen
d d
children) 2,828
d d
Federal student aid 72
Public higher education 342 257 485
School lunch 109 107 121
d d
School lunch (citizen children) 63
d d
Adult education 28
Head Start 17 9 12
English as a Second Language, English for
Speakers of Other Languages, and bilingual
education 858 771 1,074
English as a Second Language, English for
Speakers of Other Languages, and bilingual
d d
education (citizen children) 556
Compensatory education 101 101e 122
AFDC 820 202 919
Food Stampsf d
4 414
WIC 81 46 93
Elderly nutrition 1 1 1
Housing assistance 295 153 326
Low-income home energy assistance 32 16 27
e
Criminal justice (corrections) 1,031 1,031 541
d d
Unemployment compensation 856
d d
JTPA 72
d d
General assistance 92
Medicaid 479 463 509
Earned Income Tax Credit and health care tax
d d
credit 278
d d
State and federal highway costs 435
d d
Community block grants 90
County costs 2,021 2,021e 2,472
d d
City costs 4,887
d
Social Security 0 3,266
Total direct program costs $10,096 $8,861 $25,008
(continued)
Dollars in millions
Huddle’s Urban Huddle’s
initial Institute’s updated
estimate estimate estimate
Items (1992)a (1992)b (1993)c
Displacement costs 4,291 0 4,290
Total costs $14,387 $8,861 $29,298
Revenues
Federal income tax $368 $515 $890
Federal excise tax 499 181 250
d
Federal gas tax 155 166
d
Social Security tax 2,721 2,385
d d
Unemployment insurance tax 168
State revenues 1,335 2,146 2,337
Local revenues 284 1,087 3,933
Total revenues $2,486 $6,973 $9,961
Net costs (costs less revenues) $11,901 $1,888 $19,337
a
Donald Huddle, The Costs of Immigration (Washington, D.C.: 1993), exhibits 5, 6, and 12.
b
Jeffrey S. Passel and Rebecca L. Clark, How Much Do Immigrants Really Cost? A Reappraisal of
Huddle’s “The Cost of Immigrants” (Washington, D.C.: 1994), pp. 1-8, supplemented by data from
Jeffrey Passel providing a breakdown of the cost estimates for individual items; and Jeffrey S.
Passel, Immigrants and Taxes: A Reappraisal of Huddle’s “The Cost of Immigrants” (Washington,
D.C.: 1994), table 7c.
c
Donald Huddle, The Net National Costs of Immigration in 1993 (Washington, D.C.: 1994),
exhibits 5, 6, and 12.
d
The estimate does not include this item.
e
The Urban Institute’s estimate uses Huddle’s initial estimate for this item.
f
The Urban Institute’s estimate is for the costs of benefits received fraudulently by illegal aliens;
Huddle’s updated estimate is for the cost of benefits to U.S. citizen children of illegal aliens.
Huddle’s study cites his own work on job displacement to support the
Huddle’s Research on claim that the level of displacement is at least 25 percent. In several field
Displacement surveys that focused on the labor market in the Houston metropolitan
area, Huddle claimed to have found displacement rates that ranged from
23 to 53 percent in the 1980s.1 The figures that Huddle cited in his 1982-83,
1985, and 1989-90 “microstudies of job displacement” are based on the
percentages of unemployed native workers he surveyed who were still
unemployed after some period of time. However, these figures cannot be
construed as measures of displacement by illegal aliens because the
studies did not show that the unemployed natives lost their jobs to illegal
aliens or were unable to find work because of the presence of illegal aliens
in the Houston labor market.
In his national net cost study, Huddle maintains that the 25-percent
Other Research on displacement rate is a conservative figure because an even higher
Displacement displacement rate can be derived from a study by Altonji and Card.2
However, this contradicts the conclusion that the authors draw from their
own research. Altonji and Card summarize the results of their study as
indicating that immigrants have a small and potentially zero effect on the
employment rates of natives. Furthermore, Huddle’s interpretation of
1
Donald L. Huddle, “Immigration and Jobs: The Process of Displacement,” The NPG Forum
(May 1992), pp. 1-5.
2
Joseph G. Altonji and David Card, “The Effects of Immigration on the Labor Market Outcomes of
Less-skilled Natives,” Immigration, Trade and the Labor Market, eds. John M. Abowd and Richard B.
Freeman (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1991).
The work of other researchers does not support the claim of a 25-percent
displacement rate. Our 1986 review of the literature on job displacement
concluded that illegal aliens may displace native workers. However, it
found that the available research was inconclusive because it was limited
and suffered from important methodological weaknesses.4 In addition, the
experts that we consulted during our review agreed that while there is no
consensus on what the average displacement rate might be, the literature
on displacement does not support the claim of a rate as high as 25 percent.
Recent studies using nationwide data have concluded that job
displacement by aliens is either small in magnitude or nonexistent.5 The
literature on job displacement that focuses specifically on illegal aliens has
reached the same conclusion.6
3
This is an inappropriate use of the results of multivariate regression analysis and has no statistical
meaning.
4
Examples of methodological weaknesses included the use of unreliable methods, such as hearsay, to
identify illegal alien workers and inappropriate statistical procedures to support inferences (for
example, cross-sectional or single-period data used to support cause-and-effect inferences that implied
a temporal sequence). See Illegal Aliens: Limited Research Suggests Illegal Aliens May Displace Native
Workers (GAO/PEMD-86-9BR, Apr. 1986).
5
See the studies by Altonji and Card, Enchautegui, Greenwood and Hunt, and Greenwood and
McDowell.
6
See the studies by Winegarden and Khor, and Taylor and others.
With respect to Huddle’s claim that the coefficients in table 7.7 of the
Altonji and Card study are additive, we disagree. Adding the coefficients
on the first equation, which measures the ratio of people in the labor force
to the population as a whole, and the second equation, which measures
the ratio of employed persons to the population as a whole, effectively
double-counts all employed persons, because the second ratio is a subset
of the first. In addition, no other researcher we consulted, including one of
the authors, interpreted the Altonji and Card study in the way that Huddle
did, nor did they agree with Huddle’s methodology of adding coefficients
from separate regression equations to get a measure of total labor
displacement.
Now p. 6.
Now on p. 9.
Now on p. 3.
Now on p. 10.
Now on p. 14.
Now p. 15.
Now on p. 16.
Now on p. 16.
Now on p. 18.
Now on p. 15.
Now on p. 10.
Now on p. 20.
Now on p. 7.
Now on p. 9.
Now on p. 14.
Now on p. 32.
Altonji, Joseph G., and David Card. “The Effects of Immigration on the
Labor Market Outcomes of Less-skilled Natives.” Immigration, Trade and
the Labor Market, John Abowd and Richard B. Freeman, eds. Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1991.
Huddle, Donald. The Net National Costs of Immigration Into the United
States: Illegal Immigration Assessed. Washington, D.C.: Carrying Capacity
Network, 1995.
Parker, Richard A., and Louis M. Rea. Illegal Immigration in San Diego
County: An Analysis of Costs and Revenues, report to the California State
Senate Special Committee on Border Issues. San Diego: 1993.
Passel, Jeffrey S., and Rebecca L. Clark. How Much Do Immigrants Really
Cost? A Reappraisal of Huddle’s “The Cost of Immigrants.” Washington,
D.C.: The Urban Institute, 1994.
Romero, Phillip J., and others. Shifting the Costs of a Failed Federal
Policy: The Net Fiscal Impact of Illegal Immigrants in California.
Sacramento, Calif.: California Governor’s Office of Planning and Research,
and California Department of Finance, 1994.
Taylor, Lowell J., and others. “Mexican Immigrants and the Wages and
Unemployment Experience of Native Workers,” Policy Discussion Paper
PRIP-UI-1, Program for Research on Immigration Policy. Washington, D.C.:
The Urban Institute, 1988.
U.S. General Accounting Office. Benefits for Illegal Aliens: Some Program
Costs Increasing, But Total Costs Unknown (GAO/T-HRD-93-33). Washington,
D.C.: 1993.
Benefits for Illegal Aliens: Some Program Costs Increasing, But Total
Costs Unknown (GAO/T-HRD-93-33, Sept. 29, 1993).
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