ESSENTIAL WORKERS KEEP THE ECONOMY GROWING
What are
Essential Workers?
Essential
Workers are the unskilled and semi-skilled
workers employed in all sectors of our economy.
Essential workers include restaurant workers, retail
clerks, construction trades people, manufacturing
line workers, hotel service workers, food production
workers, landscape workers, and health care aids.
These individuals often work in the jobs that many
Americans do not choose, but which are essential
to keep our economy and our country growing.
Is there a shortage
of Essential Workers?
Yes. Over
the last several years, our robust economy has
resulted in tight labor markets in virtually all
sectors of the economy and in most areas of the
country. Unemployment nationally was at its lowest
point in 30 years, having been at 5% or below (which
used to be considered full employment)
from April 1997 through December 2000! Even with the
recent apparent slowdown of the economy, the
employers of essential workers are still looking for
employees. The service, retail, construction, health
services and other similar industries all gained jobs
while the high-tech and manufacturing sectors were
laying off employees. However, it appears that these
workers are finding other employment quickly, while
essential worker employers are still begging for
applicants.
The
shortage could hurt our economy. Chairman Alan
Greenspan of the Federal Reserve has noted repeatedly
in Congressional testimony that tight labor markets
threaten the continued growth of the economy and
could result in inflation. The Federal Reserves
Beige Book of Current Economic Conditions
reports Many Districts noted the lack of
available workers continued to hamper overall
economic growth. Companies report difficulties
retaining permanent staff and hiring replacements,
curtailing expansion plans, and many small businesses
are struggling to survive without enough employees.
Arent there
enough U.S. workers for these jobs?
The
demographics say no. By 2008, total civilian
employment is projected to be 160.7 million, but the
total civilian labor force is expected to be 154.5
million, more than six million more jobs than people.
This shortage is expected to last for two decades!
Unemployment
is below full employment rates. For
many years, economists believed the economy would be
at full employment if unemployment were
to drop below 5%. Yet within the last five years, 60%
of metropolitan areas have had unemployment rates of
4% or less, 30% have had rates of 3% or less and 5%
have had rates of 2% or less! This essentially means
that everyone who is employable is employed.
Employers
are doing the right things. Essential
Worker employers have led the way in welfare-to-work,
school-to-work and other initiatives that have been
successful in reducing welfare rolls and getting
graduates jobs, but these efforts still are
insufficient. Employers are raising wages, offering
improved benefits, signing bonuses and relocation
pay, but they still cannot find enough employees.
Isnt there
already an immigration category for essential workers
that these employers can use?
Yes and No.
The H-2B temporary visa program is useful only for
employers who can establish that their need for
foreign workers is temporary (seasonal, a one-time
occurrence, or a peak load or intermittent need). If
the employers need is year-round or does not
fall into one of the definitions used by the
Department of Labor or Immigration Service, the
employer cannot use the H-2B classification to fill
labor needs. A nonimmigrant visa category does not
exist for employers who need workers for more than
one year or for employers who have permanent or
long-term jobs, for example in the health care,
retail, hospitality and other industries. Even for
employers with truly temporary needs, the H-2B
category is fraught with bureaucratic red tape that
makes it extremely time-consuming and difficult to
use. The permanent immigrant category for
non-professionals in occupations that require less
than two years experience is virtually useless;
only 5,000 visas are available annually, and the
backlog of waiting cases is over ten years long. As a
result, employers often are forced to send their work
overseas, cut back, or close their doors.
What needs to be
done?
Chairman
Greenspan and others have called upon Congress
to reexamine our immigration policies as a means to
alleviate the worker shortages. In Congressional
testimony, Mr. Greenspan stated that tight labor
markets could be the greatest threat to our economy,
as they promote inflation. He stated that Congress
should look at the contributions that skilled and
unskilled immigrants can make to our economy.
Congress
Needs to Update Our Immigration Laws to Meet the
Needs of Our Economy. The United States needs a
regulated, workable immigration system that allows
foreign nationals to work here when there is evidence
of a shortage of available U.S. workers, and that
allows those individuals already here and working to
obtain legal status. Our laws also should allow those
individuals to obtain green cards immediately when
there is a permanent job.
What is being done?
U.S.-Mexico
Immigration Talks. Following his meeting in
February with Mexican President Vicente Fox,
President Bush announced a new, cabinet-level working
group between the two nations to discuss immigration
issues. The two sides have focused their talks on
crafting an agreement on migration and border issues.
Reports of the meeting indicate that areas reviewed
include some type of guest-worker program and a
regularization of undocumented Mexicans
living in the U.S. In addition, a bi-national working
group from the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace and the Autonomous Technological Institute of
Mexico (ITAM) has issued recommendations that call
for both countries to reach a grand bargain
on migration matters. Such a bargain
would include various legalization measures for
undocumented Mexicans in the United States, expanding
the legal work visas available to migrants,
equalizing the treatment of Mexican citizens under
NAFTA immigration provisions, cracking down on
immigrant smugglers and preventing dangerous border
crossings.
Essential
Worker Immigration Coalition (EWIC). A coalition of
employer associations from sectors of the economy
that rely heavily on essential worker, including
hospitality, retail, restaurants, construction,
recreation, transportation and others has been formed
in Washington to work toward a broad solution to the
essential worker issue. The agenda of this coalition
includes reforming the current temporary visa
category (H-2B), creating a new and longer-term
nonimmigrant visa for essential workers (similar to
H-1B), increasing the available green cards for
essential workers and providing for earned adjustment
for essential workers already in the U.S.
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