Author: Staff

Senate immigration deal includes tougher border security – CNN.com

A bipartisan group of U.S. senators is proposing tougher border security measures — including doubling the current 21,000-agent border patrol — as part of a deal to get more Republican support for an immigration reform bill.Sources revealed to CNN some of the details of negotiated changes to the sweeping bill being debated in the Senate. Along with the increased border patrol agents, it would call for 700 miles of fencing along the frontier with Mexico.However, a Senate aide familiar with the talks cautioned there could be a last-minute change before the agreement is announced, which was expected Thursday afternoon.A...

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Immigrants Boost U.S. Economic Vitality through the Housing Market | AS/COA

New research by Americas Society/Council of the Americas (AS/COA) and Partnership for a New American Economy (PNAE) finds that the 40 million immigrants in the United States have created $3.7 trillion in housing wealth, helping stabilize less desirable communities where home prices are declining or would otherwise have declined. Evidence already shows that immigration helps stem the aging crisis that afflicting developed economies around the world. Since immigrants are more likely to be of working age, they help fill gaps in the labor force as the U.S. baby boom generation retires at a rate of more than 10,000 per day. But less attention has been paid to how immigration affects the housing market.Immigrant workers strengthen the housing market in three ways:They directly drive housing demand through their own purchasing power. The 40 million immigrants in the United States represent a powerful purchasing class—reflected by their demand for housing, as well as for other locally produced goods and services—that bolster the value of homes in communities across the country.They indirectly generate demand by drawing U.S.-born individuals to opportunities in growing areas. The research shows that for every 1,000 immigrants settling in a county, 250 U.S.-born individuals follow, drawn by increased economic opportunity.They shift demand for housing within metro areas toward neighborhoods that had fallen out of favor. The research finds that immigrants often contribute to the stabilization of less desirable...

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Report: Immigration Reform Will Decrease Deficit By $900 Billion | Fronteras Desk

The current immigration reform bill may reduce the federal budget deficit by roughly $900 billion over 20 years, according to a new Congressional Budget Office report on the economic benefits and cost of the Senate’s bill.The CBO report finds that direct spending and revenues under the bill would decrease federal budget deficits by $197 billion from 2014 to 2023, and an estimated $700 billion from 2024 to 2033.The report also finds that with the bill’s passage, 8 million immigrants currently living in the U.S. illegally would gain legal status. That number falls three million short of the 11 million...

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Review & Outlook: America’s Assimilating Hispanics – WSJ.com

As immigration reform moves through Congress, one claim by opponents is that this time immigration is different because the country’s latest arrivals aren’t assimilating. On the contrary, however, the evidence overwhelmingly shows that today’s immigrants are acculturating and moving up the economic ladder like previous generations.The media’s tendency to report “averages” in educational attainment, English-language skills, income and other traditional measures of assimilation can make it difficult to determine whether immigrants are making gains. Since Latino immigration continues, averaging together the poverty rates or homeownership levels of large numbers of people who arrived recently with those who have been here for decades can provide a skewed view of progress.Measuring assimilation properly requires following the same immigrants over generations. And the good news is that longitudinal studies that take this approach show that Latino immigrants have made gains similar to other groups who preceded them.via Review & Outlook: America’s Assimilating Hispanics –...

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Tequila Crisis Lessons Learned Before QE Unwind: Mexico Credit – Bloomberg

Mexico is proving to be one of the least-vulnerable countries to an increase in global interest rates by boosting the average maturity of its bonds to the highest of Latin America’s biggest economies.The Mexican government has an average of 8.25 years to pay its $158 billion of peso debt, longer than Brazil, Argentina, Colombia and Venezuela and more than developed nations including the U.S., Canada and Switzerland, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Its debt maturity is now 14 times longer than the average of about seven months in 1994, when U.S. rate increases helped spark a peso devaluation that fueled capital flight and caused the so-called Tequila Crisis.via Tequila Crisis Lessons Learned Before QE Unwind: Mexico Credit –...

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