Manuel Carvallo immigrated from Mexico at age 40 and became a U.S. citizen at 51. The Georgia pension consultant just reached another milestone, accumulating the 10 years of U.S. work experience required to receive a small Social Security pension when he retires.
Millions of immigrants from around the world who work here illegally could get the same opportunity as Carvallo under President Obama’s executive actions on immigration, which propose to give many of them temporary legal work papers and Social Security numbers . Great uncertainty remains about where U.S. immigration policy is heading as Congress actively seeks to reverse the president’s administrative actions.
What is clear is that when undocumented immigrants – farm workers, hotel workers, and household and restaurant staff lacking green cards or other legal status – do pay into Social Security, they often have little prospect of ever receiving benefits. In 2010, some 3 million such workers with fake or expired Social Security numbers added a $12 billion bonus to the Social Security Trust Fund , the U.S. Social Security Administration estimated .
But a new study of Mexican immigration between 2005 and 2011 shows an abrupt end to what had been steady increases, year after year, in the number of these undocumented workers crossing the U.S.-Mexico border and adding to the Trust Fund.
In the wake of the Great Recession, the inflow of undocumented workers slowed sharply to about 159,000 new Mexicans migrating and seeking work in 2011, down from a 2007 peak of almost 670,000. The study was based on Mexican government surveys taken in bus depots, airports, and train stations in northern border cities.
The upshot, the authors said: “The number and dollar value of [new] Social Security contributions that cannot be attributed to a valid identity are also likely to have declined sharply.”
Meanwhile, the flows of documented workers who make numerous trips back and forth across the border increased during the same period. These immigrants are more likely to one day become eligible to collect Social Security pensions.
It’s impossible to predict how these trends will develop amid a strengthening U.S. job market and divisions over immigration policy. But as the researchers noted, it’s an interesting trend that bears watching.