by Penn Wharton, University of Pennsylvania
Key Points
- The RAISE Act, a bill recently introduced by Senators Tom Cotton and David Perdue and endorsed by President Trump on Aug 2, 2017, would reduce legal immigration while increasing the portion of new legal immigrants that are highly skilled.
- By 2027, our analysis projects that RAISE will reduce GDP by 0.7 percent relative to current law, and reduce jobs by 1.3 million. By 2040, GDP will be about 2 percent lower and jobs will fall by 4.6 million.
- Despite changes to population size, jobs and GDP, there is very little change to per capita GDP, increasing slightly in the short run and then eventually falling.
The RAISE Act: Effect on Economic Growth and Jobs
Introduction
Currently, net legal immigration to the U.S. is about 800,000 people each year, with about 45 percent of new legal adult immigrants having a college degree or higher. On August 2, 2017, President Trump endorsed the Reforming American Immigration for a Strong Economy (RAISE) Act, introduced by Senators Tom Cotton and David Purdue. The RAISE Act will lower the total number of legal immigrants while increasing the portion of highly skilled and educated legal immigrants.
This brief uses the PWBM’s immigration policy model to project the impact of the RAISE Act on the economy. PWBM accounts for the provisions in the RAISE Act by modeling the economic impact of reducing legal immigration by 50 percent while increasing the portion of immigrants with at least a college degree to 75 percent.
The RAISE Act
People can immigrate to the U.S. via many channels including immigrant visas for immediate family, extended family, employment and various other special types. In addition, people can arrive as refugees, with temporary work visas and via other channels.
In 2016, 617,752 immigrant visas were awarded. More than half of those went to immediate family members. Immediate family members are spouses, children and parents of U.S. citizens. More than 200,000 immigrant visas were awarded to extended family members, while 25,056 people immigrated to the U.S. with employment preference immigrant visas. Another 45,664 came to the U.S. with a diversity lottery visa. The remainder of immigrant visas were awarded via special programs. In addition to those awarded immigrant visas, in 2016, nearly 85,000 came to the U.S. as refugees. Finally, in 2016, many people came to the U.S. with temporary work visas, including 180,057 people with new H-1B visas.
Table 1 shows provisions included in the RAISE Act. Immigrant visas with employment preference would be awarded using a skills-based points system. Specifically, immigrant visa applicants would receive points based on education, English language skills, job offers, age, extraordinary achievements, and entrepreneurship. Family preferences for immigrant visas would be limited to spouses and minor children and the diversity lottery immigrant visa program would be eliminated. In addition, the number of refugees would be limited to 50,000 annually.
Table 1: Policy changes in the RAISE Act
Selected Visa Types | Number in 2016 | RAISE Act |
---|---|---|
Extended family preference | 215,498 | Eliminated |
Employment preference | 25,056 | Awarded with a skills-based points system |
Diversity lottery | 45,664 | Eliminated |
Refugee | 85,000 | 50,000 cap |
Sponsors of the RAISE Act expect it to reduce legal immigration by about 40 percent in the first year, with reductions rising to 50 percent by year 10. In addition, the sponsors expect the bill to increase the portion of legal immigrants with college degrees. Based on the parameters of the law, we estimate that 75 percent is likely the upper bound on the portion of highly skilled legal immigrants. Finally, the sponsors expect to achieve higher wages for working Americans. More information about the RAISE Act can be found in the full text of the bill, from Senator Cotton, and from the White House.
Gross Domestic Product
As shown in Figure 1, the Penn Wharton Budget Model projects that contracting net legal immigration will decrease GDP relative to current law, despite changing the skill mix toward more educated immigrants. If immigration is decreased by 50 percent, the economy will be two percent smaller in 2040, even though 75 percent of those immigrants will now have at least a college degree. Between now and 2040, the economy will grow at about 1.6 percent per year on average rather than about 1.7 percent.
However, we project that the RAISE Act will increase per capita GDP by 0.02 percent by 2027, because the capital stock will be similar to before the reform while the pool of workers will be smaller. Nonetheless, over the long run, immigrants work and contribute to savings. By 2040, per capita GDP will be 0.30 percent lower than under current policy.
Figure 1: Gross Domestic Product with 50 percent decrease to net legal immigration and increase skilled/educated immigrants to 75 percent
Jobs
The RAISE Act also reduces employment because the domestic worker participation rate won’t increase enough to fill the jobs that would have been held by immigrants who are no longer allowed in the country. Figure 2 shows employment under current policy and under the RAISE Act in key years. In its first year, under the RAISE Act, we project 92,538 fewer jobs. After 10 years, job losses increase to 1.3 million relative to current law. By 2040, 4.6 million jobs are lost.
Figure 2: Employment with 50 percent decrease to net legal immigration and increase skilled/educated immigrants to 75 percent
Conclusion
The RAISE Act would reduce the number immigrants per year while increasing the portion of new immigrants that are highly skilled. We project that the RAISE Act will lead to less economic growth and fewer jobs than otherwise. Job losses emerge because domestic workers will not fill all the jobs that immigrant workers would have filled. While in the short run the RAISE Act leads to a small boost to per capita GDP, in the long run per capita GDP dips slightly.