Quote:
Originally Posted by Hank Chinaski
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Here’s ITEP saying they pay $11.64 billion in state and local
taxes (bottom of p. 1):
https://itep.org/wp-content/uploads/immigration2016.pdf
Here’s the IRS saying they're estimated to pay $9 bil payroll taxes:
https://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-utl/20-I...20Taxation.pdf
Here’s a somewhat dated (2009) Pew analysis showing undocumented immigrant households earn far less than median income:
https://www.pewhispanic.org/2009/04/...united-states/
It’s inarguable that, on average, this demographic cannot afford to pay much for health care coverage. It’s silly to even debate that. The debate is whether, in the same way we subsidize health care for poor citizens with similar incomes, we should also for non-citizens. Given the benefits undocumented immigrants provide in terms of performance of labor people born here won’t do at reasonable cost, and the decrease in cost of goods and services this passes on to consumers, economically it’s a no brainer to subsidize care for undocumenteds. Given the fact that it’s inhumane to deny care and in most cases unlawful, the reality is, we’re already subsidizing care for these people in an inefficient manner. Doing it in an organized fashion would probably be cheaper.
But, we will never hear such clarity on this, because folks like Ty and those on the Right want to frame it as a debate about who deserves what, which makes it a wedge issue.