By C. David Pugh
03 March 2016 (Raleigh) – After winning seven of the eleven
Super Tuesday Primaries, Donald Trump
(R-New York) is the pre-eminent favorite to win the Republican Party
Primary battle and become the party’s nominee for President in the fall.
This is not news.
The always controversial Mr. Trump has based a good bit of
his appeal on his approach to immigration which can be summed up in seven
words: build a wall on the Mexican border. Moreover, he also said he’ll “make
them [The Mexican Government] pay for it”.
Naturally, the Mexican Government scoffed at the idea. As
recently as Thursday March 3rd, the Mexican Finance Minister, Luis Videgaray rejected the proposal,stating:
"Under no circumstance will
Mexico pay for the wall that Mr. Trump is proposing," he said.
"Building a wall between Mexico and the United States is a terrible idea.
It is an idea based on ignorance and has no foundation in the reality of North
American integration."
The Dirty Little Secret in Mexico / American relations is
that Mexican immigrants send billions of dollars a year to relatives south of
the border. In 2013, the latest figures available, it was estimated that some
$22 Billion USD went to Mexico. Taxing remittances at a 50% tax rate would
yield something like $11 billion USD.
And $11 billion will buy an awful lot of fencing.
But a significant tax on remittance would do something else:
disincentify those who come here to work just so they can send money back home.
If half of what they send ends up in Federal coffers instead of loved ones
hands, they may not come here in the first place.
To point out how just important $22 billion is to the
Mexican economy, consider this fact: PEMEX, Mexico’s state owned petroleum
monopoly generates a tick less than $70 billion in tax revenues to the
government. About 30% of the Mexican budget is funding by PEMEX. Doing the math
finds that remittances constitute something like 10% of that number.
Imagine if
American nationals sent the equivalent of 10% of the US Federal budget back to
the states every year. For 2016, that figure would be $352.5 Billion USD.
The ripple effects of such a move would be immense. For
example, it’s axiomatic when they leave, the US labor pool will shrink and
wages will need to rise. That’s an iron clad law of economics.
So I’m sure those industries and employers who pay these
people are right to be horrified that the Federal Government will actually
incentify these people to go home. And the Mexican Government is right to be
horrified that Mr. Trump wants to build a wall with money used to mollify their
impoverished citizenry. I’m sure they don’t want unemployed millions to return
home with time on their hands (and perhaps revolution in their hearts).
The Progressive Left needs a permanent underclass as
constituents, both as the foundation of their powerbase and the underpinning of
the sense of moral superiority. The Rockefeller Republican class needs cheap
labor to mow their lawns and clean their houses. Everybody else that works – or
who wants to work again – see Mr. Trump’s Wall for what it is: a mechanism to shrink
the workforce and raise wages. And if he can build it with Mexican money, so
much the better.