For troubled Detroit, could immigration help?

Adam Allington Nov 21, 2014
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The Detroit skyline at night. An influx of immigrants has helped parts of Detroit avoid the city's larger downward spiral. (Joshua Lott/Getty Images)

For troubled Detroit, could immigration help?

Adam Allington Nov 21, 2014
The Detroit skyline at night. An influx of immigrants has helped parts of Detroit avoid the city's larger downward spiral. (Joshua Lott/Getty Images)
HTML EMBED:
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On Thursday evening, President Barack Obama announced a plan to use his executive authority to roll out major reforms to the nation’s immigration policy.

 The action would grant up to five million unauthorized immigrants protection from deportation. The president is also planning actions to direct law enforcement priorities toward “felons, not families”, as well as permitting high-skilled workers to change jobs  and move more easily.

President Obama is heading to Las Vegas today where he will outline more details of his plan  at a campaign-style rally.

In cities across the Midwest such as Cleveland, Detroit and St. Louis, immigrants have been sought after as a way to sustain metro economies winnowed by decades of out-migration.

Earlier this year, Michigan Governor Rick Snyder and Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan sent a letter to President Obama to earmark 50,000 visas for workers agreeing to live in Detroit.

Immigration is viewed as one of the few tools available to bring the city’s economy back from the brink.

“Immigrants, including those who don’t have a formal education, can really be important to the labor force and to sustaining and revitalizing Detroit neighborhoods,” says Steve Tobocman, Director of Global Detroit, and economic development non-profit.

Tobocman says immigration reform could help reverse the trends of population loss and a rapidly aging workforce. Other outcomes would directly affect future workers.

“It could have a huge impact is on kids,” says Sherrie Kossoudji, an economist at the University Of Michigan School Of Social Work.

“One of the things some of us have always argued is that immigration reform could be on the biggest anti-poverty programs we’ve ever had.”

Kossoudji says granting legal status has been shown to increase wages by 6 percent, creating all kinds of spillover benefits for families, consumer spending and tax revenue.

 

 

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