Home Mark Anthony: Commonsense, comprehensive immigration reform will boost economy
Sports

Mark Anthony: Commonsense, comprehensive immigration reform will boost economy

flag2Since last November, there has been a lot of talk about how passing immigration reform this year will be “smart politics” given the role Latino voters played in the recent election. As a small business owner, I’ll leave the political forecasting to the pundits, but I can say this: failing to pass immigration reform, whatever the politics, would be downright knuckle-headed economics.

I’ve been recording history for over 40 years as a photographer, capturing events in people’s lives – like weddings, proms, and graduations. So I know a big moment when I see one… and the moment for immigration reform is now.

Immigrants play many roles in our economy – as workers, as customers, and as business owners themselves. How big are their contributions? Here’s one reference point: if some politicians got their way and all unauthorized immigrants were deported, we would lose $551 billion in total spending and $245 billion in GDP, according to a report by the Perryman Group.

On the other hand, if we do immigration reform right – strengthening the workforce and customer base for small businesses, creating a pathway to earned citizenship, and reducing red tape for businesses and workers – that kind of immigration reform will add $1.5 trillion to our GDP over 10 years.

That’s just the kind of shot in the arm the economy needs.

Now, business owners like me might be expected to prefer what’s called a “guest worker” program – temporary visas for immigrant workers, but without the opportunity to earn a path to citizenship. But actually, I don’t.

A guest worker program might help some employers, who want to take advantage of cheap foreign labor, but it won’t help the vast majority of responsible business owners and it won’t boost our customer base the way comprehensive reform will. The economic verdict is clear: reform based on a guest worker model (with no path to citizenship) would cut the economic growth we can achieve from comprehensive immigration reform nearly in half.

Of course, an issue like immigration reform is about more than dollars and cents. It’s also about values, about who we are as a country. As a small business owner, I don’t check my values at the door when I walk into my business, and we shouldn’t check our values at the door as we enter this debate, either. Our values should guide it.

For example: as a business owner, I don’t believe we should treat anyone with second-class status – not our workers, not our customers, and not the new Americans who come here to start businesses of their own. The American promise is the promise of a land of opportunity, and the American entrepreneurial spirit is about going big, not going half way.

As a small business owner, I also believe in treating my workers like family. And I know that when an employee’s family is torn apart by our out-of-touch immigration policies, it has a direct impact on workplace morale and productivity. That’s why I support immigration reform that reunites families or avoids breaking them apart to begin with.

Even with these compelling reasons to move forward with comprehensive immigration reform, there are still loud voices calling for costly enforcement-only approaches – more raids, more border patrols, more walls. But here’s what the President of the United States had to say about this: “I want to remind people, fearful people build walls. Confident people tear them down.”

That was a powerful rallying cry from a recently-inaugurated president. But it wasn’t President Obama. It was President George W. Bush, speaking to a crowd in Ohio more than 10 years ago.

As President Bush’s words make clear, immigration reform – common sense, comprehensive immigration reform, not more walls – can and should be a bi-partisan commitment. It is also long overdue. For small businesses and our economy, there’s no time to waste. Let’s capture this big moment.

Support AFP




Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

amanda dimeo staunton
Local

Staunton: Amanda DiMeo named deputy city manager, taking on dual role

government money
Politics, U.S. & World

Trump wants to take $1.7B of our money to reward his Jan. 6 army

Donald Trump is scheming to give himself $1.7 billion of our money as a settlement in a lawsuit that he filed against the IRS, which he heads up – and is claiming, because he oversees the IRS, he can tell the agency to just give him the money.

uva softball
Etc.

UVA Softball: ‘Hoos walk off Indiana, set to face #7 Tennessee on Saturday

Indiana would strike, Virginia would strike back. Rinse, repeat. A classic opening NCAA Tournament regional game was almost a walkoff in the bottom of the seventh, before the Hoosiers got an out at the plate.

aew darby allin
Etc.

AEW ‘Dynamite’ viewers down yet again in Week 4 of Darby Allin title reign

scott v. mcdougle
Politics, Virginia

Trump Court will not hear appeal of Virginia redistricting ruling

uva football acc championship game
Football

UVA Football: ‘Hoos will host Duke in ACC Championship Game rematch on a Friday night

baseball
Baseball

Preview: Washington Nationals host Baltimore Orioles in Beltway Series