Houston Chronicle

FOREIGN EXCHANGE

- By Noah Smith Smith is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist. He was an assistant professor of finance at Stony Brook University, and he blogs at Noahpinion.

Einstein was a refugee. We need more skilled immigrants like him now.

The U.S. is about to start running out of one of its most valuable resources: skilled immigrants. But it can alleviate that shortage by letting in lots of talented refugees, just as it did in the 1930s and after World War II.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has given President Donald Trump the cover he needed to bar many green-card holders and applicants, H-1B workers, other skilled workers and foreign students from the country. Even before the pandemic, Trump’s policies and rhetoric had sharply curtailed the net inflow of immigrants.

A new report by the National Foundation for American Policy, a think tank, estimates that legal immigratio­n to the U.S. (most of which is of the skilled variety) will be 49 percent lower in 2021 than in 2016. Even that estimate is probably too optimistic because it assumes that employersp­onsored and immediate-family immigratio­n will rise.

This is a tragedy and a disaster for the U.S. Trump’s supporters might not realize it, but the country is highly dependent on the talents and effort of foreign workers. For example, U.S. technologi­cal and industrial leadership is dependent on university research, which is mostly carried out by graduate students. In many critical fields, these students are mostly from overseas:

Foreign-born professors are also indispensa­ble. In life sciences and medicine, which are critically important in emergencie­s like the current pandemic, the NFAP report notes that 56.6 percent of researcher­s are foreign-born. This includes many of the people now racing to find a coronaviru­s vaccine.

More generally, the medical system is also critically dependent on foreign-born workers:

Curtailing the flow of skilled immigrants into the U.S. will also reduce tax revenues and make it more difficult to support an aging population.

Immigratio­n restrictio­nists will argue that the loss of foreignbor­n talent is a good thing — that more research and profession­al jobs will now go to native-born Americans, and that the U.S. will invest more in educating its own young people.

Both of these claims are almost certainly false. Foreign students pay high tuition that allows universiti­es to more cheaply educate native-born Americans; kicking them out will wound an already imperiled U.S. university system.

As for jobs, the presence of skilled immigrants actually helps native-born workers. Having more H-1B workers in a city, for example, increases wages for Americans of all education levels. This is because having more skilled workers in an area makes companies more likely to locate their offices there. Drain U.S. cities of talented immigrants, and companies won’t simply hire unqualifie­d native-born people to fill the lost spots; they’ll pack up and move overseas to find talent. Economist Britta Glennon studied the effect of a restrictio­n on H-1B visas in 2004, and found that it increased hiring at U.S. companies’foreign affiliates.

So keeping up skilled immigratio­n is crucial for the health of the U.S. economy.

Where, then, will the U.S. get its skilled immigrants? It will have to resort to opportunis­m, scrounging for them anywhere it can. With traditiona­l channels to attract talented workers out of favor, it will have to find people for whom staying in their home countries is too dangerous, and offer them refuge.

These could include political dissidents, who tend to be educated. It could also include ethnic and religious minorities fleeing persecutio­n. For example, the U.S. could let in large numbers of people from Hong Kong, where the Chinese government is carrying out an intensifyi­ng crackdown. It could also give asylum to Uighurs, Hui Muslims and other persecuted groups in China, as well as to Chinese Christians who are denied freedom of worship. Muslims in India, Christians in Nigeria and LGBT people from Russia are just three more of many examples.

The U.S. used exactly such a strategy to get some of its most high-profile skilled immigrants during the 1930s, 1940s and 1950s. A 2014 paper by economists Petra Moser, Alessandra Voena and Fabian Waldinger found a substantia­l increase in U.S. innovation in fields that received large numbers of Jewish scientists after 1933. The Manhattan Project itself might not have succeeded without substantia­l input from these researcher­s.

In a world that is often authoritar­ian and brutal, the U.S. has many opportunit­ies to repeat this trick. By letting in persecuted individual­s and groups, it can do a good deed, enhance its battered internatio­nal standing and help sustain its technologi­cal and industrial strength.

 ?? File photo ?? Despite strict immigratio­n restrictio­ns during the 1930s, ’40s and ’50s, the U.S. was able to bring in many Jewish scientists fleeing Nazi persecutio­n — most prominentl­y Albert Einstein.
File photo Despite strict immigratio­n restrictio­ns during the 1930s, ’40s and ’50s, the U.S. was able to bring in many Jewish scientists fleeing Nazi persecutio­n — most prominentl­y Albert Einstein.

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