A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

A funny kind of hospitality

Matthew Yglesias has a good article on what’s wrong with the concept of “guest worker” programs:

The details of these proposals vary quite a bit and, as ever, the details are important. But all varieties of the concept share some factors in common. Unlike regular immigrants, guest workers are only allowed into their host country for a limited period of time and have no chance of ever becoming citizens. Guest workers are also typically the “guests” of some specific employer who’s agreed to sponsor their stay in the United States. This leaves them unable to bargain credibly with their employers, start small businesses of their own, or even just take risks around the workplace that stand some chance of getting them fired.

If you’re an employer, this is ideal. You have an utterly captive work force, unable to negotiate with you or even really complain. A work force that’s utterly under your thumb because you cannot only fire them but, in effect, have them deported. Needless to say, the prospects of such a work force unionizing are nil. Consequently, they have an even more negative impact on working-class wages than do regular immigrants.

[…]

Historically, migration to this country has mostly been unlimited. That era came to an end for good and bad reasons in the 1920s, but under modern conditions we almost certainly can’t return to the old ways. But the restriction era, in both its pre- and post-reformed versions has always tried to hold true to the basic vision of America as “a nation of immigrants.” The essence of this vision is the expectation that people who come to American will become Americans — applying for citizenship when eligible and starting families here whose children will be, by right, citizens of the country in which they were born. This vision is good for immigrants, of course, but importantly it’s integral to our shared identity as a nation.

Guest workers would undermine this vision of America, creating a semi-permanent underclass of hired hands who are neither citizens, nor on the path to citizenship, with no incentive to seek assimilation or for the native-born to treat them as equals. Sectors of the economy featuring large numbers of guest workers really would become jobs Americans “won’t do,” the fields in which they work stigmatized as beneath the dignity of proper Americans.

That seems right to me. Of course, it may be that there are would-be “guest workers” who don’t want to become Americans, but would like to come here, work, save some money, and then return to their home country. After all, as Camassia pointed out, it’s not as though people are generally eager to pull up roots and leave their homes. Many, if not most, would, other things being equal, probably prefer to stay in their country of origin. But a program that forecloses the possibility of becoming a citizen certainly is open to Yglesias’ objections.

7 responses to “A funny kind of hospitality”

  1. I don’t really see how the situation Yglesias describes is any different than the current situation. The only difference is that the current illegals would have some sort of legal status. And that the guest workers would only be legally precarious if they got fired as opposed to all the time. Other than that, there’s no real change.

  2. I think his worry is that we’d be giving official sanction to the existence of a class of workers who aren’t on any kind of path to citizenship and are essentially at the mercy of their bosses for the usual reasons. It’s true that this status might be an improvement of the status quo, but I think he thinks we can (and should) do better than that. Presumably another worry is that their legal status would make employers even more likely to hire guest workers who would be, for the reasons given, easier to exploit than their native-born counterparts, since there’d be no fear of lawbreaking.

  3. Still, his arguemnt only works if there is no path to citizenship and no sort of protections for guest workers in the workplace. I have not heard of any proposal that would not include those things. There seems to be a bit of a straw man here.

  4. Hmm. You may be right – he does baldly assert that “guest workers…have no chance of ever becoming citizens.” But I seem to recall that at least some of the proposals on the table do provide for that. This calls for more looking into!

  5. The original proposal by GWB allowed for guestworkers to remain in this country legally for a maximum of six years, but they would then have to return to their own country for at least a year before they could seek a new work permit. The Bush plan, at least as originally imagined, did not include a path to citizenship. I certainly don’t believe that sort of program is off the table as GWB struggles to appease both the pro-business and anti-immigrant factions in his own party.

  6. From Googling around a bit it seems that the compromise Senate bill (currently stalled) would, roughly, create a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants who’ve been here for a certain period of time and can prove that they’ve been gainfully employed, while those who don’t meet these criteria have start over from square one.

    What’s not clear to me is what the status of future guest workers would be – I haven’t been able to find anything that spells that out.

  7. thanks anon!

    Y is correct then, when it comes to the Bush plan. But surely a guest worker plan could be envisioned where there was a way those who are in it could become citizens after a period of time and could be afforded certain basic protections, such as requiring overtime, basic safety and basic protections against abuse.

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