• Study Finds 59 Percent of Green Card and Illegal Immigrant Households U

    From D. Ray@21:1/5 to " the organization on Sat Dec 23 04:38:06 2023
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.misc, alt.politics.immigration XPost: alt.politics.republicans, alt.politics.democrats

    A new study from the Center for Immigration Studies has found that 59
    percent of green card and illegal immigrant households receive
    taxpayer-funded welfare services.

    The study, published on Tuesday, additionally found that "54 percent of households headed by immigrants — naturalized citizens, legal residents,
    and illegal immigrants — used one or more major welfare program. This compares to 39 percent for U.S.-born households."
    The organization's findings are based on U.S. Census Bureau data from the
    2022 Survey of Income and Program Participation.

    "Our best estimate is that 59 percent of households headed by illegal immigrants, also called the undocumented, use at least one major program.
    We have no evidence this is due to fraud. Among legal immigrants we
    estimate the rate is 52 percent," the organization wrote in the report on
    their findings.

    Compared to households headed by the U.S.-born, immigrant-headed
    households have especially high use of food programs (36 percent vs. 25 percent for the U.S.-born), Medicaid (37 percent vs. 25 percent for the U.S.-born), and the Earned Income Tax Credit (16 percent vs. 12 percent for the U.S.-born).

    "The presence of extended family or unrelated individuals does not explain immigrants’ higher welfare use, as the vast majority of immigrant
    households are nuclear families. Further, of immigrant households comprised
    of only a nuclear family, 49 percent use the welfare system compared to 35 percent of nuclear family U.S.-born households," the report continued.
    The organization also determined that the high welfare use of immigrant households is "not explained by an unwillingness to work. In fact, 83
    percent of all immigrant households and 94 percent of illegal-headed
    households have at least one worker, compared to 73 percent of U.S.-born households."

    Instead, they believe that the significant use of welfare is partly due to
    a higher share of modest education levels and, therefore, lower incomes. Another factor they found is that there is a greater percentage of
    immigrant households with children.

    The Center for Immigration Studies explained:

    Most new legal immigrants are barred from most programs, as are illegal immigrants, but this has a modest impact primarily because: 1) Immigrants
    can receive benefits on behalf of U.S.-born children; 2) the bar does not apply to all programs, nor does it apply to non-citizen children in some cases; 3) most legal immigrants have lived here long enough to qualify
    for welfare; 4) some states provide welfare to otherwise ineligible immigrants on their own; 5) by naturalizing, immigrants gain full welfare eligibility.

    "The vast majority of these children are U.S.-born with full welfare eligibility," the report states. "Many immigrants come to America and work, have children, and then struggle to support them and turn to taxpayers and
    the welfare system for assistance. Somewhat surprisingly, we also find that immigrant higher-income, better-educated, and childless households are all
    more likely to use welfare than their U.S.-born counterparts. It is not entirely clear why this is the case. There is research showing that foreign-educated immigrants tend to be significantly less skilled as
    measured by standardized tests and typically earn less than immigrants
    educated in the United States or natives with the same education level.
    This could help explain why households headed by better educated immigrants have higher welfare use than households headed by natives with the same education level. But it would not explain why childless or higher-income immigrant households use more welfare than their U.S.-born counterparts."
    The report explained that this is significant not just because of the
    strain on public coffers but also because it shows many illegal immigrants
    are struggling in the United States.

    *For corrections please email corrections@scnr.com*

    <https://scnr.com/article/study-finds-59-percent-of-green-card-and-illegal-immigrant-households-use-taxpayer-funded-welfare-services_a9095fb99ff611ee9c930242ac1c0002>

    <https://archive.ph/M1QGj>

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  • From D. Ray@21:1/5 to D. Ray on Sun Dec 31 20:50:40 2023
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.misc, alt.politics.immigration XPost: alt.politics.republicans, alt.politics.democrats

    D. Ray <d@ray> wrote:
    A new study from the Center for Immigration Studies has found that 59
    percent of green card and illegal immigrant households receive taxpayer-funded welfare services.

    Weird. I was told those are hard working people who will pay for boomers’ social security.

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