Value Of Illegal Immigrants On Texas' Education System And Economy Term Paper

PAGES
4
WORDS
1296
Cite
Related Topics:

Texas Politics: Illegal Immigration, Economy, And Education One of the contentious issues facing the economy of Texas is that of increasing cases of illegal immigration. Opponents of the undocumented immigration argue that, the immigrants act as a source of financial and social burden crippling the economy of the U.S. Statistics have shown that the immigrant population comprises about one third of the U.S. population: 12% (38 million), and 5.4% comprising of the U.S. workforce. Of the immigrant population, 76% comprise of the Latino, with a high percentage from the Mexico (59%) (LeMay and Michael 98). These rates have stimulated heated debates across the U.S. On the effects of the high percentage of immigrants on the U.S. economy and education with some arguing that, it has negative impacts while others argue that it has positive impacts to the economy and education system of Texas.

Financial analysts have argued that illegal immigrants pose high impacts on three key areas in the economy, which include health, education, and human services. These impacts extend to the Texas criminal system. Education forms act as the backbone of the Texas economy. It contributes to approximately 84% of the Texas economy. The cost of education rises in Texas is because all the immigrant children are eligible for education. This is contrary to other sectors like health where immigrants have restricted access (LeMay, Michael 102). Political analysts recognize that, undocumented immigrants contribute to the Texas economy. The taxpayers, consumers and workers, account for approximately 8% of the total Texas labor force, and at least a third of them in industries such as productivity and competitiveness of the Texas labor and industrial sectors (LeMay, Michael 2). As such Maxwell, Ernest, and Adolfo (189) recommends that the Texas immigration system should develop effective systems aiming at reducing the immigration rates to ensure economic prosperity in Texas in the coming future.

Undocumented immigrants who educated contribute immensely to the Texas economy. Educated immigrants and their descendants contribute to a significant net gain for the Texas State. Educated immigrant represents approximately $198,000 fiscal gain to the Texas economy translating their contribution to supporting the Texas education system. Texas' strength lies in its diversity (especially the cultural diversity) and fresh ideas provided by the illegal immigrants. Thus, the illegal immigrants introduce the desired culture into the Texas education system that influencing its dimension and performance of the Texas education system. In addition, having undocumented children in schools provides opportunities for the creation of jobs not only to the teachers, but also to other services related to education, such as maintenance staff, administrators, and teaching staff among other sectors. This increases the federal funding for the Texas schools, hence, an increase in the local and state revenue. The high enrollment of the illegal immigrants in Texas' schools will…

Sources Used in Documents:

Works cited

Gonzales, Manuel G. Mexicanos: A History of Mexicans in the United States. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2009. Print

LeMay, Michael C.U.S. Immigration: A Reference Handbook. Santa Barbara, Calif: ABC-Clio, 2003. Internet resource.

Maxwell, William E, Ernest Crain, and Adolfo Santos. Texas Politics Today. Boston, MA: Wadsworth Cengage Learning, 2010. Print.

So-derlind, Sylvia, and James T. Carson. American Exceptionalisms: From Winthrop to Winfrey. Albany: State University of New York Press, 2011. Internet resource


Cite this Document:

"Value Of Illegal Immigrants On Texas' Education System And Economy" (2014, March 17) Retrieved April 26, 2024, from
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/value-of-illegal-immigrants-on-texas-education-185301

"Value Of Illegal Immigrants On Texas' Education System And Economy" 17 March 2014. Web.26 April. 2024. <
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/value-of-illegal-immigrants-on-texas-education-185301>

"Value Of Illegal Immigrants On Texas' Education System And Economy", 17 March 2014, Accessed.26 April. 2024,
https://www.paperdue.com/essay/value-of-illegal-immigrants-on-texas-education-185301

Related Documents

So who is an American and what an America can or cannot do are questions which are critical to the issue of legalizing immigrants. Does being an American mean you cannot show allegiance to any other country? The images of people raising and waving Mexican flag had enraged many but it need not have. It should be accepted that people who come from different countries would forever hold in their

These immigrants, who the new rich think makes a place fresh, are usually poor chick artists, fashion designers, musicians, even street vendors. Consider New York City, where the ambience produced by the lesser-income people of SoHo established a temptation to those hips, modern, high-income types who created Silicon Alley, even though they could as well have functioned from California's Silicon Valley or Scotland's Silicon Glen. So what may perhaps

8% of U.S. households were headed by an immigrant and received 6.7% of all cash benefits; by 1990, 8.4% of households were headed by an immigrant and received 13.1% of all cash benefits (Borjas, 1995, pp. 44-46). Immigrants in different categories (both legal and illegal) have been eligible to receive certain welfare benefits. Legal immigrants are eligible after three to five years of residence, though asylum applicants and refugees are eligible

Illegal Immigration
PAGES 5 WORDS 1737

Illegal Immigration According to NewsMax.com, "Almost no issue divides Republicans as deeply" as President Bush's new proposal to offer so-called "guest worker status" to otherwise illegal immigrants. The guest worker status proposal stands as one of the only proposed legislative compromises regarding the illegal immigration issue, which has become one of the most contentious issues being debated in the United States. On the one hand, earnings in nations like Mexico are

"Both the U.S. side and the Mexican side replicate the political, economic, social, and cultural systems of their respective nation-states. At the same time, borderlanders have blended the structures, institutions, and life expressions of the two societies to create something novel and entirely theirs -- the ambiente fronterizo, or borderlands milieu. Today the area stands as a prime example of binational interdependence, providing striking evidence of the trend toward

If the foundations of the NLRA are to be supported, the illegal worker will need to be provided with the complete display of NLRA solutions. With that said, the tension still remains. Key Issues Statistics do show that illegal aliens are accounting for 21% of the foreign born populace in the U.S. In 2000 with that amount snowballing to 30% by 2005(Abraham, 2002). With numbers progressively going up each year, a